January 7, 2022
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Middle Management Has Millennials Singing the Blues

   

It’s been a tough road for Millenials. From one side they’ve been pilloried for eating too much avocado toast and saving too little money. On the other, many entered adult life and the workforce smack in the middle of a profound global recession when loans for the very things they were excoriated for not buying, homes and equities, dried up. 

This has created a generational culture of over-work. Millennials are the “hustle” generation. And, just as they are discovering about the treacherous slopes of homeowning, those who are entering middle management are learning that extreme striving doesn’t necessarily lead to a satisfying work life.

That is, according to a recent profile from BBC’s “Worklife,” the subject of which is the rock and hard place between which middle managers, many of whom are “Millennials,” find themselves. For some, it’s their first foray into management, often being picked to lead a department or group for which they currently work. 

Suddenly those who were so recently their co-workers are to be overseen and scrutinized for productivity and keeping on task. Middle managers become the gatekeeper of and messenger for upper management, sandwiching them between workers and bosses. They often feel like they have little control and incur the resentment of those below them for relaying the will of upper management. 

It is not the only place Millennials are sandwiched, with some calling them a “sandwich generation” responsible for care of parents as well as of their own children, something the Global pandemic made even more stressful.

The cumulative effects can lead to burnout, stress and other mental health issues, with middle managers reporting much higher levels of depression than either upper management or “blue collar workers.” 

The Worklife profile offers few structural solutions, hewing mostly the psychology of the individual finding ways to lower stress levels and create healthy work/life boundaries, such as accepting and keeping separate their different working identities. What might help more is things like paid family leave, universal childcare and a stronger social safety net, but with little traction in the halls of Congress, band-aids for the individual might be the best we can muster for the moment.

Annual Law360 Survey Shows Gender Gap in the Legal Profession Remains Wide

October 21, 2020
Gender Discrimination
Increased awareness and focus on gender disparity at law firms has done little over the last year to make gains within the profession, especially at its highest levels, reports Law360 in its annual glass ceiling survey.

Princeton to Settle in Gender Pay Inequity Case

October 13, 2020
Gender Discrimination
Officials at Princeton University have agreed to settle a case regarding pay inequities for 106 full current and former female professors as part of the conclusion of a nearly decade long federal investigation into pay disparities at the university.

Employers Should Heed Doctor’s Advice When Accommodating Workers

October 6, 2020
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According to Peeples v. Clinical Support Options, Inc., No. 3:20-CV-30144-KAR, 2020 WL 5542719 (D. Mass. Sept. 16, 2020), providing the plaintiff with a mask was insufficient accommodation, holding “a majority of these so-called accommodations are workplace safety rules rather than an individualized accommodation to address Plaintiff’s disability.”

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