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  1. President Donald Trump signs an executive order in the Oval Office at the White House on September 19, 2025 in Washington, DC.
  2. A now hiring sign is posted in the window of a Chipotle restaurant on June 05, 2026 in Los Angeles, California.
  3. The Bank of Canada building in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, on Thursday, May 8, 2025.
  4. Hiring sign
  5. U.S. journalist Scott Pelley attends a celebration of the announcement of CBS's new fall schedule at Paramount Studios in Hollywood, 2024.
  1. In this file photo taken on October 28, 2021, a person walks past a newly unveiled logo for "Meta," Facebook's parent company, outside Facebook headquarters in Menlo Park, California.
  2. Canada's job market is changing as the population ages and businesses hold back amid economic uncertainty.
  3. law concept, lawyer woman hoding pen with contract or agreement document to customer for signing in courtroom legal.
  4. Metro Inc. chief executive Eric La Flèche addressing shareholders during the company’s virtual annual meeting in 2022.
  5. Canada Post employees back to work in Ottawa on Tuesday.

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  1. Modern corporations face legitimate pressures that barely existed a generation ago: workplace harassment liabilities, whistleblower protections, mental health obligations, social media exposure, activist employees, ESG scrutiny and reputational risks.
  2. Young woman using computer for video call
  3. A BP Plc logo sits on a totem sign outside a gas station operated by BP Plc in London, U.K., on Feb 2., 2016.
  4. Employees likely do not realize the extent to which their work can now be monitored, measured and analyzed.
  5. Job postings
  1. Signage for BP Plc at the company's booth during the Gastech Exhibition & Conference in Singapore, on Sept. 5, 2023.
  2. Tim Hortons restaurants owners' use of the Temporary Foreign Worker Program has already declined steadily since 2024, it said.
  3. A close-up view of a "CEO" nameplate on a polished wooden desk, with a blurred executive chair and office background.
  4. Crop cartoon hand of employer holding desk offering workplace and hiring new worker on blue background
  5. A man walks past a "now hiring" sign posted outside of a restaurant in Arlington, Virginia on June 3, 2022.
  1. workplace
  2. The modern executive exit is replacing the dramatic public firing.
  3. Susie Sheffman plays pickleball with friends at The Jar Pickleball Club on May 1, 2026.
  4. The JPMorgan Chase & Co. headquarters in New York, U.S.
  5. job board
  1. Before an executive is removed, there is almost always a calculation, writes Howard Levitt.
  2. job seeker
  3. What employers once dismissed as routine workplace stress is now forming the backbone of constructive dismissal claims, human rights applications and occupational health and safety complaints.
  4. A worker welds a dump body cargo bed at a manufacturing facility in Vars, Ontario May 4, 2026.
  5. A tank at Imperial's oil refinery in Sarnia, Ont.
  1. Canada’s highest-paid executives tend to negotiate hard — except over what is most critical, writes Howard Levitt.
  2. Robert Half said 62 per cent of Canadian workers are feeling burnt out at work, compared to 47 per cent in 2024.
  3. Layoffs are not a neutral holding pattern. They are a legal minefield.
  4. Thousands of Canadian seniors have more than one job.
  5. Rogers Communications Inc. signage at Bloor Street East and Ted Rogers Way in Toronto, Ont.