News

South African National Energy Development Institute (Sanedi) CEO Dr Titus Mathe reports that consultations at the National Economic Development and Labour Council (Nedlac) on the latest draft of ...
The office is also missing a manager, or the meteorologist in charge, but an acting manager has been appointed. Duluth, Minn. has 12 meteorologists on staff, compared to 13 when at full capacity.
Kentucky and U.S. mine safety offices spared from closure. Kentucky had seven that were supposed to be shuttered.
Eight of nine California agricultural field offices threatened with closure will remain open, the U.S. Department of Agriculture told Sen. Adam Schiff in a letter. The field offices are crucial to ...
FIRST ON FOX: The State Department’s reorganization plans will cut or consolidate more than 300 of the agency’s offices and bureaus as part of a massive overhaul seeking to streamline the ...
The National Weather Service office in St. Louis is short on meteorologists — by 20%. The office in Pleasant Hill is short by 40%. As a result, these Missouri offices are sharing each other's workload ...
RALEIGH The Division of Motor Vehicles will begin offering summer Saturday hours at some of its busiest driver’s license offices this weekend, including two in the Triangle that haven’t been ...
Indiana University and its regional campuses have shut down diversity, equity and inclusion offices in the wake of state executive orders and legislation that follow the lead of President Donald ...
Progressive legal organizations are suing to stop the Trump administration from winding down the Office for Civil Rights and Civil Liberties as well as two ombudsmen focused on immigration.
U.S. family offices, the private investment arms of wealthy families, had 86% of their portfolios in North America in the first quarter, up from 74% in 2020.
The government and representatives from labour, business and communities at Nedlac want to add another punishable offence to the list under the new smoking laws for South Africa.
Equally culpable are South Africa’s labour federations, who sit on the CCMA’s board through Nedlac, earning lucrative fees while workers starve. Their silence is deafening.