Current commentary on HR, compliance, and operations.
Practical analysis of regulatory developments, workforce trends, and accreditation updates affecting employers in regulated and unregulated industries.
EEOC and DOJ Signal Heightened Scrutiny of DEI Programs
The EEOC and DOJ jointly issued guidance cautioning employers that certain diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives may violate Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Employment actions motivated even in part by an individual's race, sex, or other protected characteristic could constitute unlawful discrimination. In January 2026, the EEOC voted 2-1 to revoke anti-harassment guidance previously approved in 2024, signaling a broader shift in federal enforcement priorities. The agencies warned that quota-based hiring, race-conscious promotions, and mandatory DEI training that attributes traits to protected groups may face legal challenge. Employers should review their DEI-related employment practices and ensure all programs are lawful under current enforcement posture.
New AI Hiring Regulations Take Effect Across Multiple States
States including Illinois, Colorado, and California have adopted new requirements governing employer use of artificial intelligence in hiring and workplace decisions. Illinois HB 3773 amends the Human Rights Act to apply anti-discrimination standards to AI-driven employment decisions. Colorado's AI Act, effective June 30, 2026, requires employers using "high-risk" AI systems to exercise reasonable care to prevent algorithmic discrimination. New York City's Local Law 144 enforcement continues to expand, and several additional states have introduced similar bills targeting automated decision-making in employment contexts.
Delaware, Maine, and Minnesota Launch Paid Family Leave Programs
Three additional states are launching paid family and medical leave programs in 2026, with registration and contribution requirements for covered businesses. Delaware requires employer contributions beginning January 1, 2026, with benefits available starting 2027. Maine's program follows a similar phased structure. Minnesota's program, signed into law in 2023, begins payroll contributions this year. This brings the total number of states with fully active paid leave programs to sixteen, and employers operating across state lines face an increasingly complex patchwork of leave obligations.
OSHA Updates Heat Emphasis Program with Expanded Enforcement
On April 10, 2026, OSHA updated its National Emphasis Program for heat hazard prevention, adding twenty-two industries to the list targeted for enforcement. Compliance officers are now authorized to conduct random inspections on heat advisory days. Industries including construction, manufacturing, retail, and warehousing face heightened scrutiny for heat illness prevention measures. The updated program also requires employers in covered industries to maintain written heat illness prevention plans and document employee acclimatization procedures for new hires and returning workers.
Pay Transparency Requirements Continue Expanding Nationally
Nearly twenty states have implemented minimum wage increases in 2026. Massachusetts now requires employers with 100 or more employees to submit pay data reports. The EU Pay Transparency Directive takes effect in June 2026, affecting employers with European operations. Multiple states continue expanding pay range disclosure requirements for job postings and internal transfers. New Jersey, Vermont, and Illinois have enacted or strengthened pay transparency mandates, requiring salary ranges in job advertisements and prohibiting pay history inquiries during hiring.
Retention Remains Top Priority as Workforce Fragmentation Peaks
SHRM's 2026 State of the Workplace report indicates that 89% of HR leaders now rank retention as their top priority. With 76% of workers willing to consider leaving if remote options are removed, employers face pressure to balance operational needs with flexibility. SHRM projects workforce fragmentation will peak in 2026 as organizations navigate hybrid policies, multi-state workforces, and competing employee expectations. The report also identifies manager burnout and insufficient people-management training as accelerating factors in voluntary turnover.
DOL Proposes New Joint Employer Liability Rule
The U.S. Department of Labor announced a proposed rule on joint employer liability with detailed guidance on how businesses would be evaluated when determining responsibility for wage and hour violations under the FLSA, FMLA, and MSPA. The rule expands the criteria for identifying joint employment relationships, potentially increasing liability exposure for businesses using staffing agencies, franchisors, and subcontractors. The proposed framework considers factors including the power to hire and fire, supervision of work schedules, determination of pay rates, and maintenance of employment records.
States Tighten Independent Contractor Classification Standards
Several states have introduced or strengthened independent contractor classification tests in 2026, moving closer to ABC-test standards that presume worker status as employment unless the hiring entity can demonstrate specific criteria. California continues aggressive enforcement under AB 5, while states including New Jersey, Massachusetts, and Illinois have expanded misclassification penalties. The IRS has increased audit activity targeting 1099 arrangements in industries with historically high misclassification rates, including healthcare, construction, and transportation.
Workplace Violence Prevention Laws Expand Beyond California
Following California's SB 553, which required nearly all employers to implement workplace violence prevention plans by July 2024, several additional states have introduced or enacted similar legislation in 2026. New York, Washington, and Oregon have proposed bills requiring written workplace violence prevention programs, incident tracking and reporting, and employee training. Healthcare and behavioral health employers face particular scrutiny, as OSHA data consistently shows these sectors experience the highest rates of workplace violence incidents.