August 30, 2022
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Employee Monitoring Isn’t Just for the Factory Floor Any More

               

When Frederick Taylor first began testing his “scientific management” theories as a foreman at Midvale Steel Company in the late nineteenth century, his focus was on factory floor productivity, trying to determine how to improve the efficiency of industrial workers. Since then such productivity monitoring has filtered into low-wage service work, such as fast-food prep or warehouse sorting and now to more white collar work where employees are monitored by software that logs keystrokes, active screen time, and even whether or not a worker is in front of their laptop.

This is the story the New York Times recently took up with a large-scale survey of hundreds of workers across the country to understand their experiences with workplace monitoring, especially in white collar jobs which are increasingly going remote. What has long been known by factory workers and low-wage workers like Amazon packers the world over is now entering the work lives of the college educated “thought” workers.

The Times article profiles numerous employees, managers and software engineers behind workplace monitoring software and discovered people who were docked pay for not being at their desk or typing enough, a bereavement chaplain who had to earn performance points by attending funerals or making phone calls to grieving family members, and a many who felt they were not being compensated for work that didn’t take place on a computer where they were monitored.

As more people desire to continue remote work, these kinds of frictions are set to increase and, combined with companies desperate to get employees back in the office, these problems are likely to mount in the coming months and years.

Female Physicians Experience High Infertility Rates

October 7, 2021
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The medical profession’s apprenticeship is notoriously grueling. But for women, there has been an additional consequence attributed to the routine: infertility.

Alex Berke on LinkedIn Live: Running the Return-to-Work Marathon

September 20, 2021
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Ivy Slater, a business coach, speaker, and author, was joined by Senior Associate Alex Berke and Dr. Melba Nicholson Sullivan in a LinkedIn Live session of her “Slater Success Live” about running the return-to-work marathon.

Listen: The Fall of Andrew Cuomo

September 20, 2021
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As an employment law firm, one of our main goals is to champion change for our clients and others who experience sexual harassment in the workplace. The importance of this endeavor reached new heights when it came to light that the former governor of New York, Andrew Cuomo, had been sexually harassing women in his office (and outside) for years. Learn more from Senior Associate Alex Berke on the Delve’s Podcast.

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