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You’ve got to earn it
To:Brew Readers
HR Brew // Morning Brew // Update
How to make your workplace worth the commute.

Welcome back! It might be wise to get some PTO on the books for this spring…many US workers won’t see another long holiday weekend until the end of May.

In today’s edition:

Worthwhile workplace

Petitions and protections

(A)Impact

—Mikaela Cohen, Eoin Higgins

HR STRATEGY

People walking across the street

Getty Images

Is your workplace worth the commute?

Most workers (62%) are relatively satisfied with their commutes, but some say it’s a time suck (38%), money drain (32%), or stressful (30%), according to November data from real estate analytics firm Leesman. Satisfaction also dips the longer the commute: 92% are satisfied with 15 minutes or less, 54% with 45–60 minutes, and 35% with two or more hours.

Leaders have been trying to “earn the commute” for years, Amanda Kross, head of Americas consulting at commercial real estate firm JLL, told HR Brew. But for companies wanting to improve the “workplace experience,” she said the commute has been increasingly top of mind.

HR can approach the commute with an “outside in and inside out” strategy, Kross said.

For more on how HR can make the commute worthwhile for workers, keep reading here.—MC

Presented By Equifax

HR STRATEGY

A protester with an anti-ICE sign, stands outside of the Henry Bishop Whipple Federal building on January 18, 2026 in Minneapolis, Minnesota.

Jim Vondruska/Getty Images

Over 1,000 Google employees signed a petition on Feb. 6 calling on the tech company to acknowledge and take action against the state-sanctioned “violence that workers face each day” being perpetrated by federal immigration agencies, and divulge information regarding Google’s contracts with these organizations, including Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), Customs and Border Patrol (CBP), and the Department of Homeland Security (DHS).

“We are vehemently opposed to Google’s partnerships with DHS, CBP, and ICE. We consider it our leadership’s ethical and policy-bound responsibility to disclose all contracts and collaboration with CBP and ICE, and to divest from these partnerships,” the petition said.

The Google employees who signed the petition are “appalled by the violence inflicted by the United States Immigration & Customs Enforcement (ICE) and Customs & Border Protection (CBP).” They’re not alone: 46% of US adults want to abolish ICE, according to January data from market research firm YouGov. Another 60% of US adults “disapprove” of the actions ICE is taking as part of the administration’s immigration crackdown, PBS News/NPR/Marist Poll data found, and 65% think ICE has “gone too far.”

With this petition, Google employees may be “trying to assert a greater level of control over what they do on a day-to-day basis,” Steven Nevolis, an employment attorney and partner at New York-based law firm Ellenoff, Grossman, and Schole, said. “It’s not unusual to think that some would band together and say, ‘Hey, if I’m going to be spending this much time at work and energy at work, I want to be doing work that I feel good about.”

For more on what HR needs to know about Googlers’ petition, keep reading here.—MC

RECRUITMENT & RETENTION

Humanoid robot shakes hand with human, forging a deal

Tech Brew/Adobe Stock

Tech unemployment increased in January, hinting at the industry’s uncertainty even as hiring in the overall economy showed positive signs.

According to CompTIA’s analysis of the latest numbers from the US Bureau of Labor Statistics, tech unemployment rose from 3.3% in December to 3.6% last month, with the sector losing 20,155 jobs—driven primarily by around 15,000 position losses in telecommunications.

One area of growth was IT and custom software services and systems design, which saw a bump of 800 jobs. “The turnaround in services employment may indicate a shift toward capitalizing on investments in software and hardware,” Seth Robinson, CompTIA VP of industry research, wrote in a comment accompanying the report.

Job postings citing an AI skill requirement continued to increase, while specialized AI roles dipped. Both outperformed tech hiring as a whole, however—a testament to how the technology continues to impact the IT sector.

For more on the data, and AI’s impact on the job market, keep reading on IT Brew.—EH

Together With Equifax

WORK PERKS

A desktop computer plugged into a green couch.

Francis Scialabba

Today’s top HR reads.

Stat: IBM plans to triple its hiring of entry-level employees in the US this year, its CHRO says. (Bloomberg)

Quote: “It’s not something to be proud of. If anything, it just reflects that they might be more desperate for money.”—Kathryn Anne Edwards, a labor economist and policy consultant, on labor participation for mothers of young children remaining elevated, likely because of high costs of living (the New York Times)

Read: Even in roles where chatbots can easily do the work, human touch is still appreciated. A new study found that credit union customers were more likely to accept a loan if the name and phone number of a person were included in follow-up communications after applying. (the Wall Street Journal)

Your HR HQ: Every stage of the employee life cycle has a streamlined home base with Equifax. From hire to retire, their tools help you ensure compliance and improve the employee experience. See for yourself.*

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