The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission puts out new word addressing workplace rights and responsibilities regarding religious dress and grooming under Title VII of the 1964 Civil Rights Act.
Common sense suggests that sprawling out on the sofa and binge-watching The Walking Dead while plowing through endless bags of potato chips and super-sized, sugar-laden sodas has got to be less healthy than, say, knocking off a couple of miles on a treadmill.
Four years ago, in the Citizens United case, the Supreme Court affirmed that corporations are people, at least when it comes to their First Amendment rights of free speech.
A health care benefits startup hopes to do no less than revolutionize the industry with its software. Of course, it's not alone in chasing that particular goal.
Return on investment in wellness, according to a growing consensus, just isn't as important as how these programs can help boost productivity, reduce absenteeism and help morale.
Knowing what to screen for, what to measure, measuring accurately, trusting the measuring process itself, addressing privacy concerns and more can approach overwhelming pretty quickly.
The Supreme Court this year will hear arguments about whether Hobby Lobby and other for-profit companies whose owners have strong moral objections to birth control can opt out of the PPACA's contraceptive requirement.