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Human Times helps you stay ahead of the latest news and trends that impact the HR industry. Every weekday, our unique blend of AI and team of expert HR and employment editors and researchers monitor 100,000s of articles, and social posts to create summaries of the most relevant and useful content to help you lead, innovate and grow. The award winning Human Times newsletter has four geographical editions with news tailored to your region.

From HR leadership to diversity and inclusion, hybrid working, organisational data, performance management, and retention strategies, Human Times is the only trusted free online news source dedicated to covering the most up to date headlines, articles, reports and interviews to make sure you’re abreast of changes in the HR industry.

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Human Times
North America
Boeing hires more than 100 factory workers a week

Boeing is hiring between 100 and 140 factory workers each week - the highest pace ‌since 2024 - as it replaces retirees and increases staffing to support higher production rates. The U.S. planemaker's unionized factory workers in the Pacific Northwest now number more than 34,000 and are "heading higher," Jon Holden told Reuters in his first interview as a vice president specializing in training and ​apprenticeships at the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers (IAM).

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Human Times
UK
Unite holds talks with Reform over Birmingham bin strike

Unite has held private talks with Reform UK about resolving Birmingham’s ongoing bin strike, amid expectations the party could gain influence on the council in next month's local elections. Discussions focused on potential solutions to the year-long dispute, which stems from job cuts linked to equal pay rulings at Birmingham City Council. Unite is engaging multiple parties to secure support for its demands. The meeting reflects shifting political dynamics in the city, where polling suggests no party may gain overall control next month. Endorsing most of the union's key demands, a Reform spokesman said: "The council has wasted £34 million already on this dispute. They have argued about the legal risks involved, but while Unite have published their legal advice on equal pay, the council has not produced any evidence or provided documents to back up their arguments."

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Human Times
Europe
Stellantis invests €100m to keep open site near Paris

Stellantis has said it plans to invest €100m to transform its plant near Paris, which will keep making cars through at least the end of 2028, and then shift to activities including auto part production, recycling, and 3D printing. The company, which currently produces the Opel Mokka and DS compact sport utility vehicles at the Poissy facility, has vowed to retain 1,000 blue-collar jobs there by 2030, with no layoffs. Bloomberg notes that Stellantis has worked closely with labour unions on the project, which “guarantees an industrial future for the Poissy site at a time of rapid change for the automotive industry,” according to Xavier Chéreau, the group’s chief human resources and sustainability officer.

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Human Times
Middle East
Investors and execs urged to 'stop hiring humans'

At the recent HumanX conference in San Francisco, 6,500 investors, entrepreneurs and tech executives gathered to address the impact of artificial intelligence (AI) on jobs. An advertisement at the entrance to the event set the tone for the four days: "Stop hiring humans." Florian Douetteau, the chief executive of Dataiku, a French company specialising in enterprise AI, told AFP that the real human added value is "capacity for judgment." He detailed a scenario whereby an AI agent works through the night and its human counterpart reviews the results in the morning. Nevertheless, he worries that "We are going to have a generation of people who will never have written anything from start to finish in their entire lives . . . That's pretty unsettling."

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