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Days after sacking 6000 employees, Satya Nadella's Microsoft lays off hundreds of workers in…, move to affect….
Days after sacking 6000 employees, Satya Nadella's Microsoft lays off hundreds of workers in…, move to affect….

India.com

time3 days ago

  • Business
  • India.com

Days after sacking 6000 employees, Satya Nadella's Microsoft lays off hundreds of workers in…, move to affect….

After companywide cuts by Microsoft in which they had cut 3% of the company's staff, now they are laying off 305 employees in company notified affected workers on Monday, according to a state Employment Security Department filing cited by media report. Microsoft also claimed that layoffs were much less than 1% of its total workforce but didn't reveal if employees outside of Washington were affected by it or not. 'We continue to implement organizational changes necessary to best position the company for success in a dynamic marketplace,' a Microsoft spokesperson said in a statement. In May, the company had laid off more than 6,000 people in a 3% cut of its workforce. Out of which 1,985 employees affected were from Washington. Microsoft justified the layoffs Monday and also earlier in May by stating that it was restructuring its workforce. The company also said it was looking to reduce management layers, but the report cited data and claimed that only non-managers were affected. The layoffs hit mostly software engineers and product managers. Less than 17% of the layoffs affected employees who were listed as managers. In two rounds of layoffs, Microsoft has fired around 2,300 employees in Washington this year. Earlier in 2023, the company had fired 3,200 people, which was the biggest layoffs round. After the COVID-19 pandemic other tech companies like Microsoft, Amazon, Meta and Google also laid off thousands of workers to reduce their staff.

Microsoft lays off more employees after huge job cut in AI era
Microsoft lays off more employees after huge job cut in AI era

Hans India

time3 days ago

  • Business
  • Hans India

Microsoft lays off more employees after huge job cut in AI era

New Delhi: Tech giant Microsoft has cut hundreds of more jobs just weeks after reducing nearly 3 per cent of its global workforce in the AI era. As per a filing with Washington state's Employment Security Department, 305 additional employees in Redmond, Washington have been asked to leave. A company spokesperson said in a statement the latest headcount reduction is in addition to the 6,000 job cuts announced last month, which is roughly 3 per cent of its global workforce. "We continue to implement organisational changes necessary to best position the company for success in a dynamic marketplace," the spokesperson was quoted as saying in reports. Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella has said that the recent layoffs were not linked to employee performance but due to organisational restructuring. Addressing staff during a town-hall meeting, Nadella said the layoffs were necessary to realign teams in accordance with Microsoft's evolving priorities, particularly its growing focus on artificial intelligence. He acknowledged the emotional toll of the decision but underscored that it was driven by strategic shifts, not shortcomings in productivity or talent. Last month, Frank X Shaw, Chief Communications Officer, Microsoft, said that 'We've entered the era of AI agents'. 'Thanks to groundbreaking advancements in reasoning and memory, AI models are now more capable and efficient, and we're seeing how AI systems can help us all solve problems in new ways. For example, 15 million developers are already using GitHub Copilot, and features like agent mode and code review are streamlining the way they code, check, deploy and troubleshoot,' he said during the 'Microsoft Build 2025' event. Hundreds of thousands of customers are using Microsoft 365 Copilot to help research, brainstorm and develop solutions, and more than 230,000 organisations — including 90 per cent of the Fortune 500 — have already used Copilot Studio to build AI agents and automations.

Employers ready to recruit at WorkSource Hiring Event
Employers ready to recruit at WorkSource Hiring Event

Yahoo

time19-05-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Employers ready to recruit at WorkSource Hiring Event

May 19—MOSES LAKE — Folks who are looking for work will stand a good chance of finding it May 30 at WorkSource's Spring Hiring Event. "In the past, we've had an average of 400 people come through for this event, and a lot of them make great connections with the employers," said Employment Security Department Business Services/Employment Development Specialist Crysie Kluth. There were 25 employers slated Wednesday to have a presence inside the hiring event, Kluth said, and a few more are expected to sign on. Outside the building will be a variety of community partners, including military recruiters, Grant County, the Department of Social and Health Services, Job Corps and more. Job seekers are encouraged to bring resumes with them, Kluth said, and if they need help polishing them up, well, nobody knows their way around a resume like the staff at WorkSource. There will be computers on hand, Kluth said, to print out resumes and so prospective employees can apply for jobs electronically before actually speaking with the company recruiters. "They're welcome to come in and sit at the computers and start applying for these employers," she said. "We will have a list of employers available so that people can go and look at the positions that they're hiring for and apply. (Then) they can come in and present their resume and talk to the employer to let the employer know that 'I've applied. I'm interested. What are the steps from here?'" Not all employers will accept resumes in person, Kluth added, so it's a good idea to come prepared to apply by either method. Job seekers should dress to impress, Kluth said. Also, those who have children under 16 should find someone to watch them for a couple of hours, just as if they were going to a job interview. One way in which the WorkSource event differs from some other job fairs is that attendees are asked to create a SecureAccess Washington account at either beforehand or at the event on the computers provided. "It takes maybe five or 10 minutes of your time," Kluth said. Just ... fill in the information with your name, your address, your phone number, fill it out the best that you can and your account will be set up, and you'll be ready to go." The first 60 job seekers who come to the event will receive a ticket for either free tacos from Mazatlan Taqueria or a free drink from Favored Farmhouse Coffee. Applicants can come early and pre-register, Kluth said, and they'll be given a ticket. That alleviates crowding when the event starts at 10 a.m., she explained. Anyone who would like more information is invited to contact Kluth at 509-766-4149 or WorkSource Spring Hiring Event May 30, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. WorkSource Central Basin 309 E. Fifth Ave., Moses Lake Employers: Columbia Basin Hospital Family Medicine The Gorge Amphitheatre Agri-Stor Company Northwest Grant County Sheriff's Office Sila Nanotechnologies International Paper Quincy Columbia Basin Irrigation District Impact Staffing Solutions Moses Lake Industries City of Moses Lake Group14 Technologies Okanagan Specialty Fruits Quincy Foods Express Employment Professionals McCain Foods Inc CBHA Moses Lake School District Transportation Genie — Terex Samaritan Healthcare JR Simplot Agri Beef FedEx Walmart — Moses Lake & Ephrata Moses Lake Community Health Center BBSI

Low-income workers should not have to give higher-income workers more of their wages
Low-income workers should not have to give higher-income workers more of their wages

Yahoo

time29-04-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Low-income workers should not have to give higher-income workers more of their wages

(Photo by) All W-2 workers in Washington state should count on continual pay decreases to pay for the state's mandatory paid-leave program — a program that doesn't pay its way and that requires low-income wage earners to supplement the life needs and wants of upper-wage earners. How's that for regressive? Employment Security Department numbers show that middle- and upper-income people use paid leave far more than those with lower incomes. In fact, people making $60 or more an hour used the fund nearly twice as much as the lowest wage earners in fiscal year 2024. Meanwhile, full-time workers of all incomes already lose hundreds of dollars a year to this tax. (Calculate your losses here: The Paid Family and Medical Leave program is no safety net. It makes most workers less able to pay for the life needs they do have. The Legislature should have considered ending it this year. Instead, lawmakers considered Senate Bill 5292, which in the end proposed taxing workers up to $2 of every $100 in earnings in the coming years for a benefit many will never see. That new, higher rate would've been more than double the current tax. The bill died, but the proposal could still be considered again next session. That's likely because the funding now available for the program doesn't cover its costs. The Joint Legislative Audit and Review Committee said that administrative costs and benefits exceeded revenue for the paid-leave program in two of its first four years. And in 2023, the program got a $200 million bailout from the state's general fund to deal with higher-than-expected claims. The fix was temporary, however. A state consultant forecasts that the program will likely see negative net income again in three of the next five years. That's not hard to understand. People like it when other taxpayers help pay for their life wants and needs — especially when a portion of their wages has contributed to a pool of money during their working years. This year, the tax for the program is already 92 cents on every $100 a worker earns — up to the 2025 Social Security cap of $176,100. That's more than twice the amount when the tax began in 2019 at 40 cents per $100 of earnings. (Employees pay about 72% of this tax. Employers contribute about 28% on behalf of their employees. That's money that then can't go toward increased worker pay or other benefits.) The most recent version of Senate Bill 5292 outlined increases in the 1.2% Paid Family and Medical Leave tax rate cap. The bill called for raising it to 1.4% in 2027 and 2028, 1.6% in 2029 and 2030, 1.8% in 2031 and 2032, and 2% for 2033 and subsequent years. While some supporters of this harmful worker tax brag that thousands have been helped by it, they fail to mention that millions of workers have not. And for some of those workers, making ends meet is more difficult because of it. The paid-leave tax penalty state lawmakers have placed on workers puts self-sufficiency further out of reach for some Washingtonians and should end. Federal law already allows workers 12 weeks of job-protected, unpaid family leave. It doesn't pay people not to work while taxing those who do work but don't have the luxury of taking weeks off, even with paid leave.

Washington joins lawsuit to stop probationary federal employee cuts
Washington joins lawsuit to stop probationary federal employee cuts

Yahoo

time06-03-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

Washington joins lawsuit to stop probationary federal employee cuts

Mar. 5—OLYMPIA — The Washington State Attorney General's Office has joined a lawsuit seeking to block the Trump administration's efforts to terminate probationary federal employees. It anticipates more Washingtonians will lose their positions if the plan moves forward. In a filing Wednesday, the Attorney General's Office said the state government believes at least a thousand federal employees in Washington have been terminated as part of President Donald Trump's plan to downsize federal offices. According to the state Employment Security Department, the state is home to roughly 76,000 federal employees. "Many of the president's power grabs have this problem in common — they're illegal," Washington State Attorney General Nick Brown said in a statement Wednesday. "These firings don't save the public a dime, but they do make government less responsive, particularly in the communities across the nation where these employees live and serve." The lawsuit was initially brought by a collection of union groups who represent federal employees against the Office of Personnel Management. A federal judge issued a temporary restraining order on Friday and directed the Office of Personnel Management to rescind its guidance to federal agencies to identify probationary employees, typically those who are in the first year of their position. Following the ruling, Everett Kelley, president of the American Federation of Government Employees, said the ruling was an "important initial victory for patriotic Americans across this country who were illegally fired from their jobs by an agency that had no authority to do so. "These are rank-and-file workers who joined the federal government to make a difference in their communities, only to be suddenly terminated due to this administration's disdain for federal employees and desire to privatize their work," Kelley said in a statement Monday. "OPM's direction to agencies to engage in the indiscriminate firing of federal probationary employees is illegal, plain and simple, and our union will keep fighting until we put a stop to these demoralizing and damaging attacks on our civil service once and for all." On Tuesday, the Office of Personnel Management amended a Jan. 20 memo and added a paragraph that said the agency "is not directing agencies to take any specific performance-based actions regarding probationary employees." "Agencies have ultimate decision-making authority over, and responsibility for, such personnel actions," the updated memo states. In February, the Washington State Governor's office said that the state's Employment Security Department had seen an uptick in federal employees filing for unemployment in the new year. As of Feb. 21, an average of 14 federal employees filed for state unemployment benefits per day. Between Feb. 13 and 18, 156 federal employees filed for unemployment in Washington, with 63 employees filing on Feb. 18. "My administration is standing at the ready to support all Washington workers — including federal government employees impacted by chaos in the federal government," Gov. Bob Ferguson said in a Feb. 21 statement. "We will help you get back on your feet." Spokane County is home to roughly 5,000 federal employees, according to data from the Employment Security Department. The largest concentration of federal employees in the state is in King, Pierce and Kitsap counties, which are home to large military installations, among other facilities. In a filing Wednesday, the Washington Attorney's General Office argued that staff reductions in federal agencies would have far-reaching impacts, past the immediate impact on those who have lost their jobs. "Reduced staffing at any of the federal agencies on which the State relies and interacts with every day will directly impact the State, far beyond the immediate harm to federal employees based in Washington who have lost their livelihood and benefits," the filing states. The filing highlights many cooperative efforts between the federal government and the state that could be impacted by the staffing cuts. "The State relies on partnerships with the federal government to fight wildfires, contain outbreaks of communicable diseases, keep its waters clean, and respond to natural disasters," the filing states. "Without sufficient federal staffing, the State's workload and costs will increase, forest fires within the State will be harder to fight, diseases will be harder to control, and emergency response times will drop."

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