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Northwell Health is creating talent pipelines through high school partnerships.

Happy Monday! It’s National Procrastination Week! For everyone who puts things off until the last minute, this is your time to shine…or you can wait until next week to celebrate.

In today’s edition:

School is in session

Unanswered questions

World of HR

—Theresa Agovino, Kristen ParisI

TOTAL REWARDS

Medical professionals dressed in scrubs are pictured from the waist down.

Moyo Studio/Getty Images

The severe shortage of healthcare workers is one reason that Jason Naidich is happy that the Northwell School of Health Sciences will open in September.

Naidich is the chief learning and innovation officer at Northwell Health, the healthcare system that helped develop the brand-new high school’s curriculum. The hope is that it will prepare and train students for healthcare careers, and that some students will one day work at Northwell, which employs 89,000 people at its 21 hospitals and roughly 900 outpatient facilities. Yet, the school’s mission goes beyond creating an employee pipeline to create a path to good-paying jobs for New York City residents.

“We do a lot of work in underserved communities. And when you talk to the high school students there, most don't know these opportunities even exist,” Naidich said, adding that part of Northwell’s mission is to improve the health of the people it serves, and that good-paying jobs help people take better care of themselves.

The new school is an extension of Northwell’s partnership with the New York City Board of Education, through which it already provides various services, such as mentoring and internships, to four city high schools, and the opportunity to earn college credit and professional certifications.

Keep reading here.—TA

Presented By Sana

DEI

Close up of Keith Sonderling, wearing a jacket and tie, looking to the side, with his lips pursed

Win Mcnamee/Getty Images

President Trump’s picks to lead the Department of Labor sat for questioning from the Senate last week, but his deputy labor secretary nominee, Keith Sonderling, didn’t appear to have all the answers.

Sen. Patty Murray (D-WA) asked Sonderling, who spent four years as a commissioner of the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, a series of questions about what’s considered DEI under the Trump administration’s executive orders. She first asked if training for people with disabilities is considered DEI. Sonderling said the government is still required to abide by the Americans with Disabilities Act, and that under his leadership, he would continue providing that training.

“So that is not DEI?” Sen. Murray asked. “That is a civil rights statute that the department enforces to make sure that disabled people can prosper in the workplace,” Sonderling replied.

Sonderling isn’t the only one who doesn’t know exactly what programs are considered DEI.

Keep reading here.—KP

Together With Paychex

HR STRATEGY

The top of a globe with a phone, notebook, laptop, glasses, iPad and coffee cup floating above it

Francis Scialabba

Love is Blind asks a simple question: Is love truly blind? But imagine if it asked: Would you marry some rando just to keep your job?

Where in the world? That’s essentially what Shuntian Chemical Group, a company based in eastern China, asked its employees recently. The company recently garnered attention for telling its single workers ages 28–58 that they had until Sept. 30 to start a family, NBC News reported. Employees were also told their relationship status would be evaluated by the company.

The directive apparently violated China’s labor laws, which prohibit employers from asking potential employees about their family plans. Fittingly, Shuntian Chemical Group withdrew the directive on Valentine’s Day, just one day after local officials visited the company.

Satellite view. While we can’t imagine other employers doing something this off the wall, companies and countries in East Asia are providing more incentives—from on-site daycare to four-day workweeks—to encourage people to have children amid falling birth rates, HR Brew previously reported.

Keep reading here.—KP

Together With Remote

WORK PERKS

A desktop computer plugged into a green couch.

Francis Scialabba

Today’s top HR reads.

Stat: Some 43% of senior executives in global business hubs would rather work for an “environmentally and socially responsible” employer than have a higher salary. (Economist)

Quote: “I recommend being in the office at least every weekday...60 hours a week is the sweet spot of productivity.”—Sergey Brin, co-founder of Google, in a memo to employees on what’s needed for the company to lead AI development (the New York Times)

Read: Employers are checking workers’ documents and assessing their risk as they prepare for ICE raids. (NPR)

Desks are filling up: And so are accommodation requests. Remote work requests are multiplying faster than Monday morning coffee runs. Overwhelmed? Tune in to AbsenceSoft’s on-demand webinar for expert strategies to manage the surge.*

*A message from our sponsor.

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