Optimas
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The Last Word: ChildNet, Ketchup and a Comeback
Six Sigma’s debut in Florida’s social-services circles was as well-received as, well, ketchup on ice cream.
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OSHA Orders Burlington Northern to Pay Whistle-Blower $300,000
The agency said railroad managers followed the employee to the hospital and received an injury report, but later accused the worker of failing to furnish adequate information about the injury.
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OSHA to Strengthen Whistle-Blower Protections, Review Program
A provision in the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act that gives financial incentives to corporate whistle-blowers could result in headaches for corporate directors and officers.
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Optimas Award Videos
See and hear what winners from 2010 are saying as they explain what the Optimas Award means to their company.
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Allstate Agents Group Hopes to Affiliate With AFL-CIO
The National Association of Professional Allstate Agents Inc., formed more than two decades ago to protest Allstate’s move to shift more overhead costs to agents, will begin soon to solicit votes from its members on joining the Office and Professional Employees International Union as a guild.
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Employers Get More Time to Comply with 401(k) Fee-Disclosure Rule
The centerpiece of the regulations is a requirement that plan sponsors develop and distribute to participants a comparative chart with investment-related information, including fees and expenses.
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The Last Word Cultural Awareness
Many people yearn to belong to an organization whose principles they share and can embrace in their daily work. And if corporate stewards tend the culture well, they can count on an engaged and committed workforce for many years to come.
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Workplace Regulations Provide Relief to Pregnant Women and Breastfeeding Moms
The American with Disabilities Act Amendments took effect in January 2009, but the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission guidelines for the legislation were not issued until this past March.
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Wedbush Ordered to Pay $3.5 Million for Reprehensible Failure to Compensate Worker
Financial regulatory panel says the brokerage stiffed a municipal sales trader who was owed years worth of incentive compensation.
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Lesser-Known Defined Contribution Providers Tops in Service Study
While brands like Fidelity Investments, Charles Schwab and Vanguard Group topped the list as recognized leaders in the defined contribution industry, smaller firms were better able to distinguish their brands on service and support.
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Aon Alleges Employee, Client Poaching by Another Firm
In a chancery suit filed June 15 in Cook County Circuit Court in Chicago, Aon Risk Services Cos. Inc. and Aon Risk Insurance Services West Inc. alleged that the former executives violated their employment agreements with Aon.
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Firing of Tweeting Newspaper Reporter Upheld By NLRB
The National Labor Relations Board noted that even though the paper did not have an internal policy addressing social media communications, its actions were not illegal because the messages themselves were not protected by the law.
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Trendy Topics Grab Ink, but HR Hot Line Reveals Basic Workplace Worries
While workplace issues such as bedbugs, social media and background checks have been heavily covered in the mainstream and business media, a recent top 10 list indicates that HR frets about such day-to-day issues as FMLA, performance management, discipline and termination.
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Ford, again, adds $300 million to pension plan
Ford contributed the same amount in the first quarter of 2010 to its automotive division, and the company expects to contribute a total of $1.6 billion to its worldwide pension plans in 2011.
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Labor Department Stiffens Incentive Pay for Flex Workweek Employees
The new regulations, which amend the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938, will likely lead employers using this method to eliminate all incentive rewards such as commissions, bonuses or prizes, a labor attorney notes.
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University Head Says Big-Picture Collaboration Is Key
Nancy Zimpher, chancellor of the State University of New York, aims to bring together community leaders, not-for-profits, unions and businesses to improve the city’s ‘cradle to career’ education.
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Winners Gather in Chicago for 20th Annual Workforce Management Optimas Awards
This year’s event, held March 24 in Chicago at the Mid-America Club located in the Aon Center, took on a global perspective, as Mumbai, India-based Tata Consultancy Services won General Excellence honors.
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Agency Eyes Revamp of All California Employee Pension Programs
The Little Hoover commission recommended a cap of $80,000 to $90,000 in the amount of salary that can be used to calculate an employee’s pension benefit, a ban on retroactive benefit increases, and setting benefit eligibility ages that do not encourage early retirement.
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Auto Company's Pension Plans Funding Level Improves
At year-end 2010, the plans were underfunded by $11.5 billion, a sharp improvement from year-end 2009, when the plans had $16.2 billion in unfunded liabilities, GM disclosed Feb. 24 in reporting its fourth quarter and 2010 financial results.
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Financial Advisers Get More Time to Work Up Bios of Staff
Part of their difficulty has been collecting the education, business background and disciplinary information about all the individuals.
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Lawsuit Against Co-Worker Not Barred By Workers Comp Law
The court case stems from alleged injuries Juana Fanders suffered when security guards were instructed by a human resources director to ‘86’ her, or remove her from the premises, after a dispute over her conduct at work, court records show.
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Va. State Workers Would Contribute 5% of Pay Under Proposal
State employees have not made contributions since 1983, when the state agreed to cover employee costs in lieu of an employee pay raise, according to a spokeswoman.
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Planned Cos. Optimas Award Winner for Vision
For its commitment to career training in an unglamorous, high-turnover industry not known for employee enrichment, Planned Cos. is the recipient of the 2010 Optimas Award for Vision.
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IBM Corp Optimas Award Winner for Global Outlook
For creating a career development and learning initiative that reaches employees in most of the 170 countries where the company operates, IBM is the 2010 winner of the Optimas Award for Global Outlook.
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Ultimate Software Group Inc. Optimas Award Winner for Financial Impact
For its ability to hire a galaxy of autonomous stars capable of swiftly helping to increase the company’s competitive advantage, Ultimate Software is the 2010 winner of the Optimas Award for Financial Impact.
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Protective Life Corp. Optimas Award Winner for Partnership
For working with Virgin HealthMiles to develop a wellness strategy that effectively engages employees in their health and well-being, Protective Life is the winner of the 2010 Optimas Award Partnership.
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Infosys Technologies Optimas Award Winner for Competitive Advantage
For its innovative approach to tackling a daunting hurdle and beating the competition in the race for India's top IT talent, Infosys wins the Optimas Award for Competitive Advantage.
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U.S. Navy Optimas Award Winner for Service
For creating an outreach program that will help the recruitment efforts of the entire organization, the U.S. Navy is the winner of the 2010 Optimas Award in the Service category.
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GameStop Corp. Optimas Award Winner for Innovation
For solving an HR challenge with originality and having a clear understanding of its employees, GameStop wins the Optimas Award for Innovation.
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Oppenheimer Funds Inc. Optimas Award Winner for Managing Change
For its ability to swiftly respond to the economic downturn, restore customer confidence and increase employee skills with a new corporate model, OppenheimerFunds is the winner of the 2010 Optimas Award for Managing Change.
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Tata Consultancy Services Optimas Award Winner for General Excellence
Tata Consultancy Services, part of India's largest industrial conglomerate, is the winner of the 2010 Optimas Award for General Excellence for its ability to recruit and train a huge, multilingual workforce and to align its workforce strategy with swiftly changing business demands.
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Study Finds 90 Percent of Marketers Use Social Media for Professional Purposes
Those marketers use such social networking tools as Facebook, LinkedIn, blogs and wikis for professional purposes.
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Lobbyist Warns About Potential Health Care Reform Pitfalls
Executive vice president for ACE Group Holdings Inc.
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Number of Uninsured Adults Climbs
Thirty million adults went without coverage for more than 12 months, up from 28 million in 2008.
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Survey Notes Few Firms Plan to Drop Coverage After Health Reform
Employers who terminate plans will face an annual $2,000 penalty for each employee working at least 30 hours a week. With annual health insurance costs averaging about $9,000 per employee, the savings would dwarf the penalties paid.
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Staffing Firm Volt Target of SEC Probe
Volt is presently in the process of restating financial statements because of errors that affected the timing of recognition of revenue.
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Push for High-Deductible, HSA Plans Gain During Benefit-Enrollment Season
Since HSAs were signed into law in 2003, small-business owners have been driving the increase. Yet experts say large employers comprise the fastest-growing market for these accounts.
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Illinois CFOs Mull Cutting Health Benefits, Survey Says
Employees in the state could be earning more than their national counterparts, according to a Grant Thornton survey. Thirty-four percent of Illinois survey participants said they would raise salaries compared with 21 percent nationally.
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North Carolina Workers' Comp Loss Costs to Increase 0.6 Percent
The state’s rate bureau had requested an average increase of 1.2 percent in loss costs.
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Wide Pay Gap Persists Among Doctors
A national study, conducted by researchers at the University of California at Davis, compared wages of more than 6,300 physicians practicing in 41 specialties in 60 communities in 2004 and 2005.
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Ford Revs Up Pension Plans with $100 Million Contribution
Later this week, Ford will use cash to pay off the remaining $3.6 billion of debt it owes to the $45 billion UAW Retiree Medical Benefit Trust.
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Lodging per Diem Rates Fall in Many Locales
In the past few years, per diem rates typically increased, but with the rates going down this year, it could catch some firms off guard.
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FedEx to Pay $2.3 Million Over Independent Contractors
The settlement follows a yearlong investigation by Montana that found FedEx Ground drivers are employees, not independent contractors, and that FedEx owed unemployment taxes, penalties and interest, according to the attorney general’s office.
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Retirement Issues Likely a Hot Topic in New Congress
Enforced savings at the workplace eyed by legislators as unemployment is linked to pension gap.
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Aon to Cut at Least 1,500 Positions as Part of Hewitt Integration
While Aon Consulting and Hewitt in 2009 each generated just over $1 billion in consulting revenue, Hewitt’s $2 billion in outsourcing revenues were about 10 times that of Aon Consulting.
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IRS Delays W-2 Health Cost Reporting Requirement
Under the relief, health care cost information will have to be reported on the 2012 W-2s, which are issued in 2013.
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White House Defends Mini-Med Plan Waivers
Without such waivers, it would be difficult or impossible for the plans, which typically have low annual dollar limits, to meet a key health care reform requirement.
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McDonald's Mini-Med Plan puts Health Reform Under Microscope
The fast-food giant drew attention last week for a memo it sent the Department of Health and Human Services, warning that its so-called mini-med plan would not comply with a section of the new health reform law requiring 80 percent to 85 percent of premiums to be paid out in benefits.
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Report Workers Comp Premiums Drop for Fifth Straight Year
Economic conditions and a jobless recovery are contributing to sluggish premium growth, meaning an industry rebound will be slow.
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GM, Union Cut Historic Deal to Make Subcompact Car Profitably in U.S.
About 900 of the 1,200 to 1,500 laid-off workers at the Michigan plant will be able to return at full wages and benefits. The remaining laid-off workers will have the option of coming back with Tier 2 wages and full benefits or seeking a transfer to another GM plant.
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Premiums to Rise 7.3 Percent in Federal Employees Health Program
Like the private sector, the federal program also will expand coverage next year to meet mandates in the new health reform law.
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Aon Completes Acquisition of Hewitt
Chicago-based Aon will integrate Hewitt and its Aon Consulting unit and has changed its name to Aon Hewitt Inc. A decision has not yet been made on where Aon Hewitt will be based.
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McDonalds Health Coverage Draws Capitol Hill Attention
The senator asked for information on coverages, deductibles, premiums, copayments and other “out-of-pocket” costs that McDonald’s workers pay, and how much they have received in benefits over the past five years, with a deadline of Oct. 15.
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Senate Rejects Canceling Grandfathered Plan Rules
The vote could be a ‘harbinger of what may happen in the new Congress.’
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Early Retiree Reimbursement Program Exclusions Released
Under the Early Retiree Reimbursement Program established as part of the health reform law, the federal government will reimburse employers for claims incurred by retirees at least age 55 and not yet eligible for Medicare as well as their dependents, regardless of age.
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Hewitt Analysis Says Group Health Costs Projected to Rise 8.8 Percent in 2011
The study is based on information from 325 large employers, which mainly self-fund their health care programs.
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Kelly Strikes New Deal With Nissan
The staffing firm had already been acting as managed service provider for Nissan North America. The extension calls for Kelly to provide recruitment process outsourcing as well.
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Labor Department Guidance Clarifies Health Care Law
Reacting to the guidance, one expert said it means that ‘employers will be able to continue to impose their own requirements.’
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Bloomberg Freezes New York Hiring as Layoffs Become Likely
In a couple of years, one out of every eight dollars the city spends will go to providing health care benefits to retirees, says one leading administrator.
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Census Bureau Reports Number of Uninsured Tops 50 Million
The percentage of people covered through employer-sponsored plans fell to 55.8 percent in 2009 from 58.5 percent in 2008, also a record low.
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AT&T Optimas Award Winner for General Excellence, 1994
Today, AT&T's workforce totals 276,000. It is ranked seventh on the Fortune 500 by revenue and is now the 11th largest employer in the world.
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Staffing Firm Owner Accused of Forced Labor on Hawaii Farms
Workers had their passports confiscated and were allegedly threatened with arrest and being sent back to Thailand if they did not comply, according to the indictment. In Thailand, the workers would have faced recruitment debts they could not pay off.
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IRS Says Flexible Spending Accounts Cant Reimburse OTC Drugs Without Prescription
The rules issued September 3 involve a section of the health care reform law that sharply restricts FSA reimbursements for over-the-counter medications such as nonprescription pain relievers, cold medicines, antacids and allergy medications.
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HHS Lists Approvals for Early Retiree Reimbursements
Approved applicants can begin submitting claims later this month for health care bills incurred on June 1 or later. The government will begin issuing reimbursement checks in October.
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Survey Notes More Health Care Costs Will Shift to Employees
The survey also details how expensive COBRA health care continuation coverage has become. For example, this year the median monthly COBRA premium charged for single coverage in a preferred provider organization plan was $449, while the median monthly premium for family coverage was $1,310.
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Court OKs Bias Suit by Worker Who Was Demoted, Replaced
The plaintiff filed suit in May 2008 alleging that the school district she worked for violated the Age Discrimination in Employment Act.
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Fatalities Decline Among Solid Waste and Recycling Firm Workers
Total fatalities for all waste management and remediation service employees—including collection, landfill workers and other jobs—fell from 74 to 43 from 2008 to 2009.
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IT Services Firm to Pay $1 Million for Visa Violations
According to the Department of Labor, a Wage and Hour Division investigator found that some workers were not paid wages at the beginning of their employment, were paid on a part-time basis despite being hired under a full-time employment agreement, or were paid less than the prevailing wage for the...
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Ohio Court Finds Harassment Allegations Do Not Bar Comp Benefits
The claimant had been under investigation concerning ‘numerous’ sexual harassment allegations for acts allegedly occurring between 2004 and 2008, the records state.
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Illinois Program for High-Risk Uninsured Launches
State officials expect the program to cover 5,000 uninsured residents under a preferred provider organization plan with a $2,000 deductible.
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Analysis COBRA Premium Subsidy Doubled Enrollment
From March 1, 2009, when the subsidy first generally became available, through May 31, when the program ended for employees laid off after that date, monthly enrollment rates for laid-off employees averaged 38 percent.
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Employers Expect 9 Percent Rise in Health Plan Costs
The National Business Group on Health survey of 72 member employers found that 70 percent will have to amend their plans to eliminate lifetime limits, 26 percent will have to remove annual dollar limits and 13 percent will have to remove pre-existing condition exclusions for children under age 19...
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Unions Win Round in 2003 California Grocery Strike
The grocers had formed a multiemployer bargaining unit to negotiate an expiring labor contract that sought to reduce health care coverage expenses, court records show. They also responded to the strikes by agreeing to share profits from sales among themselves.
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Chambers of Commerce Unite to Urge Congress to Repeal Health Care Laws 1099 Provision
Currently there are bills before Congress to repeal the 1099 provision, but such bills should not seek to make the repeal revenue-neutral by increasing taxes or removing tax incentives from business, according to a letter from the coalition.
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Fees Increase for H-1B, L Visas
The increase applies to companies with 50 or more employees in the U.S. and that have more than 50 percent of their U.S. workforce on H-1B or L visas.
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Court Says Filming Injured Worker at Prayer Did Not Violate Privacy
The claimant described a portion of the Islamic center as a mosque and sued for intrusion of seclusion.
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Illinois Bars Job Discrimination Based on Credit History
Businesses that are exempt from the law include insurers, banks and law enforcement agencies.
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Wages for New York Women Outpace National Average
But the Empire State’s working women show little progress in closing the wage gap, taking home only 84 percent each week of what local men earn, new labor statistics show.
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Potential Pandemic Still Could Cost Nearly $300 Billion
A report by the Society of Actuaries stresses the need for disaster planning and pandemic preparedness, particularly on the part of health insurers.
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CalPERS Reviews Benefits of Employees Making More Than $400,000
Last week, agency officials expressed surprise at a 47 percent raise given to Bell, California, City Administrator Robert Rizzo and other top city officials in 2005, but press reports indicated that CalPERS officials knew of the increases after an audit in 2006.
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30 Percent Workers Comp Rate Increase Proposed for California
Rising medical costs and the state Department of Insurance’s past rejections of increases prompt the call for higher policy rates starting January 1, a spokesman says.
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Ford Puts $400 Million Into Worldwide Pension Plans in Second Quarter
A spokesman says the automaker isn’t breaking out the amount contributed to U.S. plans. For 2010, Ford expects to contribute $1.5 billion to its worldwide plans.
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Retirement Plan Value Down Over 10 Years, Study Shows
Among the industries analyzed, retail and wholesale contributions were down 33 percent for the 10-year period; manufacturing, down 29 percent; and energy, natural resources, gas and electric, down 24 percent.
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Obama Nominates Gotbaum Again as PBGC Director
By renominating him, the president makes it clear he wants Joshua Gotbaum to run the PBGC through the end of his term.
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Survey Shows Injured Workers Pharmacy Costs Up 6.5 Percent in 2009
The increase was driven by a 4.7 percent rise in prescription prices and a 1.7 percent uptick in utilization, according to Tampa, Florida-based PMSI.
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Toyota Dealer Picketing Begins, UAW Leader Says
When union president Bob King revealed plans last month to picket Toyota dealerships, Cody Lusk, president of the American International Automobile Dealers Association, said ‘attacking small businesses’ is detrimental to helping the UAW increase its membership.
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Google to Reimburse Tax on Domestic Partner Benefits
To equalize benefits available to same-sex partners of employees, the technology firm also is eliminating a one-year waiting period to qualify for infertility benefits and including domestic partners in its family leave policy.
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ADP Announces Deal to Acquire Workscape
Marlborough, Massachusetts-based Workscape serves more than 3.5 million users in more than 180 companies, according to ADP.
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Tennessee Law Allows English-Only Workplaces
The law also requires employers to provide notice to employees of the policy and the consequences of violating it. The law becomes effective immediately.
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Unions No Chicago-Like Wal-Mart Deal for New York
The nation’s top retailer is said to have agreed to near-prevailing-wage minimums for a new Chicago store, but labor leaders in Gotham scoff. ‘This is New York; this is not Chicago,’ a union official says.
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Obama Signs Pension Funding Relief Bill
The measure would give employers temporary alternatives to the basic requirement—embedded in a 2006 law—that requires employers to amortize pension funding shortfalls over seven years.
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Revised Tax Bill Does Not Include COBRA Subsidy Extension
While Senate Democratic leaders had discussed reducing the extension to November 30, a tax bill that Sen. Max Baucus unveiled last week omitted the subsidy, while a subsidy extension also is not in the latest version.
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Statutory Remedy Prevails in Sexual Harassment Case
A jury found in a former Waffle House waitress’s favor on both a statutory sexual harassment claim under the Texas Commission on Human Rights Act as well as common-law negligent supervision and retention claims.
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Study Wall Street Compensation Took a Nose Dive in 2009
Real average annual wages in the city’s securities industry dropped 21.5 percent to $311,279 last year from 2008.
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Walgreen Cuts Ties With CVS Caremarks Pharmacy Benefit Manager
The pharmacy giant, which has more than 7,500 stores, said it concluded that the partnership wasn’t in the best interest of its customers, pharmacists and shareholders.
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Innovation Contest Draws HR Tech Ideas
In a sign that people management is a priority these days, three of the 10 finalist entries in a business innovation contest co-sponsored by the Wharton School involve human resources.
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Knowing Auto Features in DC Plans Doesnt Mean Theyre Used
Of those using automatic enrollment, 58 percent enrolled only new hires when first adopted, and 35 percent automatically enrolled all nonparticipating employees upon adoption.
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Obama Administration Dont Review San Francisco Health Care Law
The law, challenged by a restaurant trade association, has attracted national attention from employer groups that said if the law is allowed to stand, it would lead other cities and states to pass health care spending measures and result in multistate employers having to comply with a hodgepodge of...
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7.7 Percent Workers Comp Rate Hike Proposed for New York
The state Insurance Department says it will hold a public hearing June 23 to consider the increase.
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House OKs Increase in Manager Tax, Defined-Benefit Funding Relief
The funding relief provision would allow DB plans to stretch out amortization periods for investment losses for two of the years between 2008 and 2011 over a period of either 15 years or nine years, at the option of the plan sponsor.
