#hiringpractices
3️⃣ Take-Home Tests = Lost Knowledge
Take-home tests don’t prove skill—they signal confusion. If you need free labor to find direction, your org forgot what “good” looks like.
#HiringPractices #TeamCulture
October 14, 2025 at 2:54 PM
Danvers officials are rethinking residency rules for their next town manager, sparking a heated debate on the balance between local ties and a diverse candidate pool.

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#TownofDanversEssexCounty #MA #CitizenPortal #DanversTownCouncil #HiringPractices #MunicipalGovernance
Town Council Discusses Residency Requirements for Future Town Manager Candidates
Council members explore implications of residency rules on town manager selection process.
citizenportal.ai
September 26, 2025 at 5:41 PM
Holyoke City Council is shaking up hiring practices by adjusting salaries to attract top talent for the crucial Director of Public Works position!

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#HolyokeCityHampdenCounty #MA #CitizenPortal #HolyokeCityCouncil #HiringPractices #SalaryAdjustments #PublicWorks
City Council Passes Salary Adjustments for Director of Public Works Position
Council adopts salary increase measures for Director of Public Works amid hiring challenges.
citizenportal.ai
September 5, 2025 at 5:17 PM
Holyoke City Council just approved major funding for school upgrades and debated new hiring powers that could reshape the city's future!

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#HolyokeCityHampdenCounty #MA #CommunityAccessibility #CitizenPortal #HolyokeCityCouncil #HiringPractices #EducationFunding
Holyoke City Council debates hiring authority changes and residency waiver for purchasing director
Council discusses hiring authority for department heads and residency exemption for purchasing director.
citizenportal.ai
September 4, 2025 at 8:13 PM
A shocking revelation from a Tennessee POST Commission meeting exposes potential biases in the promotion process within the narcotics division, raising serious questions about fairness and transparency.

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#TN #CitizenPortal #HiringPractices #CivicAccountability
Smyrna Narcotics Division Faces Promotion Controversy Over Hispanic Officer Selection
Smyrna chief Davis rejects promotion of Hispanic officer despite board's recommendations.
citizenportal.ai
September 1, 2025 at 1:13 AM
The Talawanda Board is facing a critical dilemma: should they prioritize safety with thorough background checks, or risk leaving vital positions unfilled due to long processing delays?

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#OH #CitizenPortal #BackgroundChecks #StaffingChallenges #HiringPractices
Board Member Opposes Contracts Without Completed Background Checks Amid Delays
Board discussions highlight challenges and delays in processing background checks for hires.
citizenportal.ai
August 30, 2025 at 12:44 PM
Massachusetts is taking a bold step to ensure transparency in hiring by mandating that employers notify candidates about the use of automated decision tools and their effects.

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#MA #CitizenPortal #WorkplaceFairness #HiringPractices
Employers Required to Notify Candidates About Automated Employment Decision Tools
Bill mandates advance notice about the use of automated hiring tools and their impacts
citizenportal.ai
August 29, 2025 at 9:36 PM
#Leadership #Workplace #HiringPractices Hey Recruiters, I prepared a Self Checklist to assist fairness in hiring, you can find it at ☕️👉🏽https://ko-fi.com/s/b736f3591e
For Recruiters: Zee's No Nonsense Self-Checklist for Recruiters - Zee Cayenne's Ko-fi Shop
Fair interviews aren’t just ethical — they help you hire the best talent. When recruiters focus on experience and merit, everyone wins. Zee’s No-Nonse...
ko-fi.com
August 28, 2025 at 4:47 PM
Broward County Public Schools faces scrutiny as outdated job descriptions for technology positions raise serious questions about candidate qualifications and hiring practices.

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#FL #CitizenPortal #HiringPractices #JobQualifications #EducationReform
Council Raises Concerns Over Outdated Job Descriptions for Systems Analyst Positions
Council members question inconsistencies in systems analyst job requirements and candidate qualifications.
citizenportal.ai
August 22, 2025 at 8:03 PM
Concerns are mounting over illegal hiring practices and rising suspensions within New York City's Department of Probation, putting staff morale and livelihoods at risk.

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#NY #CitizenPortal #NewYorkProbation #EmployeeRetention #HiringPractices #WorkforceIssues
Labor Union Raises Concerns Over Hiring Practices and Work Conditions in New York City
Union leaders address illegal hiring and increased suspensions impacting city workers' livelihoods.
citizenportal.ai
July 29, 2025 at 12:51 AM
The Pine-Richland School Board just approved key GATE teacher hires and new policies to enhance educational excellence for the upcoming school year!

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#PA #CitizenPortal #HiringPractices #PolicyUpdates #EducationReform #PennsylvaniaSchools
Pine Richland School Board Approves GATE Teacher Hires and New Policies
Board approves GATE teacher positions and several policy updates with unanimous votes.
citizenportal.ai
July 23, 2025 at 7:01 AM
Debate heats up in Florida as educators demand clarity on the vague "good cause" criteria for teacher nomination rejections that could impact hiring practices!

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#FL #CitizenPortal #TeacherRetention #HiringPractices #TransparencyInGovernance
Debate Erupts Over Subjective Criteria for Nomination Rejections
Participants discuss the ambiguity of defining good cause for nomination rejections.
citizenportal.ai
July 22, 2025 at 8:22 AM
The Putnam School Board is taking a hard look at hiring practices, questioning if candidates truly meet the qualifications needed to shape the future of education.

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#FL #CitizenPortal #EthicalRecruitment #QualificationsCheck #HiringPractices
School Hiring Practices Scrutinized Over Qualifications and Employment Checks
Discussion highlights concerns over hiring qualifications and verification processes within schools.
citizenportal.ai
July 22, 2025 at 8:18 AM
The Berkeley County Board of Education is making crucial changes to staffing and safety protocols that could reshape the future of student security and education in West Virginia.

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#WV #CitizenPortal #SchoolSafety #PersonnelUpdates #HiringPractices #BerkeleyCountySchools
School Board addresses hiring process for safety officers and service personnel updates
School district reviews safety officer hiring protocols and reports staffing changes.
citizenportal.ai
July 10, 2025 at 5:26 AM
Companies Are Outsourcing Job Interviews to AI. What Could Go Wrong?
In May 2024, Adam applied for a UX designer role at the US-based grocery chain Kroger (he asked to be identified only by his first name to protect his identity). Adam heard back from a company called HireVue. After emailing him a brief set of instructions—“Show passion!!” “NO headphones can be used”—the AI-based HR management platform invited him to do a recorded one-way interview online. The bot asked Adam five questions about his work experience. He was given exactly three minutes to answer each. “I had to prepare, focus and concentrate, repress my anxiety, and force a smile to gain the approval of a machine,” he recalls. The lack of a human on the other side, the need to maintain constant eye contact with his webcam, and the overt analysis of his verbal responses unnerved Adam, who felt like he “needed to meet or exceed the system’s criteria without knowing what that criteria was.” Toward the end of the interview, Adam was presented with “brain teaser” questions, including matching and memory games. The software gave him a combination of shapes, colours, and symbols and challenged him to memorize the patterns. “None of the brain-teaser games had anything to do with the role,” he says, adding that the entire process felt unfair and a waste of time. Even though he scored 97 percent on the test, he was not invited for a follow-up interview. To date, he does not know why. * AI Is a False God * Matchmakers in India Now Have Competition: AI * Hello, I’m Phoenix. Would You Like Your House Cleaned? Kroger is just one of the 98 percent of Fortune 500 companies that now use algorithms and artificial intelligence in their hiring processes. According to a recent survey by Indeed Canada, 87 percent of HR personnel are currently using AI-powered systems and tools at different stages of the hiring funnel, from generating job descriptions to scanning résumés, conducting background checks, and interviewing candidates. The statistics are equally telling on the job seekers’ side—about two-thirds of surveyed Americans would not want to apply for a job if AI were used to help make hiring decisions, according to a 2023 report by Pew Research Center. Like Adam, many job seekers have felt demoralized, dehumanized, and discouraged trying to appeal to algorithms, or even impress or be one up on them. “It had flayed me alive and exposed my greatest fears for my career and the future of my industry,” one job seeker, who was met with an automated personality assessment, told the _Guardian_. Their fear seems valid, given that many employers are now outsourcing high-stakes decisions, like hiring, to bots. The professional futures of millions of human beings are being treated like just another constellation of data points. Critics warn that hiring algorithms can be biased, opaque in their goals, or just plain junk, causing real harm to candidates and preventing qualified people from getting jobs. At the forefront of the AI hiring revolution is HireVue, a company founded in 2004 that has completed more than 70 million one-way job interviews. HireVue uses an analysis of candidates’ body language, word choice, and voice tone to generate an employability score, which is then passed on to its clients. Other popular AI-driven hiring tools include Plum and Harver, platforms that offer gamified tests to gauge applicants’ problem-solving skills, personality traits, and social intelligence. And then there’s a gamut of intelligence and background screening software promising hiring managers hidden insights into candidates’ social media footprints, their online history, as well as their predicted future behaviours. A cursory glance at these websites’ marketing materials gives a resounding message—they’re here to remove human bias from hiring, democratize it, and unlock untapped potential. Their audience? Companies looking to cut labour costs through automation and HR teams overwhelmed by mountains of applications. Yet, the lawsuits and criticisms they now face signal that the tools are perpetuating the same issues they promise to solve. Hilke Schellmann is the author of _The Algorithm: How AI Decides Who Gets Hired, Monitored, Promoted, and Fired and Why We Need to Fight Back Now_. She says, “If a company uses a résumé parser to screen all incoming applications—potentially millions of résumés—and that parser has a defect, biased keywords, or isn’t working properly, it could discriminate against thousands or even hundreds of thousands of people.” Schellmann, who tested several AI hiring tools for her book, explains how such algorithms tend to develop meaningless correlations or proxies for discriminatory variables, such as gender and race, which can lead to statistical misfires. “Maybe statistically, a lot of people in the job share the same hobby because you’ve hired people from your old high school baseball team. So now, many people in the job play baseball—but that has nothing to do with being an accountant. It doesn’t matter whether you play baseball or not.” Though some lawsuits against HR software companies deal with privacy concerns, a lack of informed consent over the collection of biometric data, or deceptive practices, many lawsuits have focused on discrimination. For example, forty-year-old Derek Mobley, who is Black and lives with depression and anxiety, has taken HR tech giant Workday to court, accusing its AI-driven applicant-screening tool of repeatedly rejecting him for more than a hundred jobs and alleging discrimination based on race, age, and disability. A few years ago, Amazon’s experimental AI recruiting system internalized proxies for gender and discriminated against women (it eventually abandoned the product). LinkedIn faced a similar reckoning when its job-matching algorithms subtly favoured men, factoring in details like the number of skills listed on a résumé or engagement levels on the platform. A 2020 investigation by the Center for Democracy and Technology reveals that most vendors’ websites fail to acknowledge that their employee selection tests may be inaccessible to certain users, or to mention the legal obligation for employers to provide reasonable accommodations to those unable to take the test. Since many one-way interview tools rely on text-to-speech transcription, those individuals with speech impairments—or those who might have an accent, such as international students seeking entry-level jobs—are concerned that automated systems might unfairly penalize them. In face-to-face interviews, they might have the opportunity to disclose their impairment, but this isn’t an option in one-way AI interviews. Even among the few vendors that do address this requirement, there is little consideration of the full range of accommodations that might be necessary. Using the case study of Pymetrics (which has since been acquired by Harver), Schellmann explains how standard hiring algorithms are engineered to identify statistical patterns among “high-performing” employees. Since individuals with disabilities are underrepresented in many companies due to historical biases, the algorithm often lacks training data from these demographics. Algorithmic bias and a lack of decision-making transparency—or “black box AI”—are the most pressing concerns for researchers and ethicists when it comes to AI hiring tools. Like Adam, many job seekers feel helpless, frustrated, and defeated when coming up against mysterious systems that determine their career trajectories. According to Matthew Scherer, senior policy counsel at the Center for Democracy and Technology, United States federal law typically does not mandate companies to disclose the AI systems they use, nor does it require AI hiring vendors to reveal details about how their systems function or what kind of anti-bias testing they have conducted. In some instances, when AI is used to evaluate résumés or analyze recorded video interviews, applicants may be completely unaware of its presence. Users are then left to rely on claims from vendors and client companies that the technology functions properly and makes fair decisions, despite the fact that some vendors themselves do not fully understand how their tools arrive at those decisions. “Having the course of your career driven by hidden, inscrutable algorithms would be a dystopian situation even if those algorithms were perfectly fair—and there is plenty of evidence that hiring algorithms tend to be far from fair,” Scherer says. Algorithmic hiring has the potential and tendency to flatten or diminish candidates to their skill set and past experience rather than realizing their potential. Jodi Kovitz, chief executive officer of Ontario’s Human Resource Professionals Association, argues that bots lack the necessary emotional intelligence, judgment, and critical thinking skills to gauge nuanced indicators of leadership potential. “Folks need to be open to adaptation, reskilling, and retraining. And while AI can detect patterns, it currently misses these intangibles, which we need humans to assess—like the instinct to evaluate leadership potential, team dynamics, and an individual’s likelihood to succeed,” she says. Schellmann’s book also points to research that indicates many résumé scanners automatically dismiss candidates with a full-time employment gap longer than six months, even though such gaps have no bearing on a candidate’s actual qualifications. Currently, any guardrails and remedies to the ethical, legal, and privacy concerns around algorithmic hiring tools are limited to patchwork legislation, which in turn has been largely ignored by companies, according to Scherer. Last March, Ontario passed Bill 149, the Working for Workers Four Act, which obliges employers to disclose the use of AI in hiring decisions. But legal experts have called out the ambiguous terminology and lack of clear definitions around key terms like “artificial intelligence” or “publicly advertised job posting”—loopholes that employers are likely to use to their advantage. New York City’s Local Law 144—a 2023 legislation mandating bias-testing for AI recruitment tools and requiring companies to disclose their use to applicants—has received similar critique: advocates point out the narrow definitions of AI hiring tools, the lack of enforcement and adherence by lawmakers and companies, and the heavy onus on job seekers to parse through the inaccessible fine print in employer disclosures. Similar criticisms have been launched at the AI bias-mitigation guidelines implemented by the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission in the US, some of which have now been removed under the Donald Trump administration. The excision followed a January 2025 executive order directing federal agencies to roll back AI regulations “that act as barriers to American AI innovation.” With fewer guardrails, AI hiring systems could become even more opaque and discriminatory, leaving applicants with even fewer recourse options if they feel unfairly rejected. To level the playing field, job seekers in turn have started using generative AI tools to craft résumés and cover letters, and even using tools that apply to thousands of jobs at a time on their behalf. Schellmann condemns the robot circle jerk. “How can hiring be meaningful if everyone is just joining this AI rat race, copying what’s in the job description? That’s really worrisome, and there isn’t a clear solution on the horizon.” She warns about a future without applications or interviews. “We’re just classified—like, ‘this person should do this, and this one should do that’—and there’s no appeals process.” Hiring could become a closed loop of machines evaluating machines—one where algorithms, not people, determine career paths. Mihika Agarwal Mihika Agarwal is a journalist, editor, and fact checker based in Vancouver. Her work has appeared in various publications, including the _New York Times_ , _Vox_ , The Walrus, _Vogue_ , and _Vice_.
thewalrus.ca
June 11, 2025 at 7:45 PM
We’re not fixing hiring.
We’re sharing the truth about it.
It's coming soon.
community.werqai.com
#WerQAI #HiringPractices #JobSearchReality #CareerReviews
Join the WERQ AI Discord Server!
Finding a job in this market is made more difficult because hiring platforms were not made with job seekers in mind. | 307 members
community.werqai.com
May 20, 2025 at 3:56 PM
Missouri lawmakers are stepping up to protect job seekers by introducing a bill that bans the use of credit scores in hiring decisions!

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#MO #EconomicJustice #CitizenPortal #MissouriEmployment #WorkplaceFairness #HiringPractices
Missouri lawmakers introduce bill limiting employer use of credit scores in hiring
House Bill 1187 prohibits employers from using credit scores for hiring decisions.
citizenportal.ai
May 17, 2025 at 4:31 AM
Tennessee's Education Committee just took a bold step towards enhancing diversity in hiring practices by amending a key bill—find out how this change could reshape educational equity across the state!

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#TN #DiversityInclusion #CitizenPortal #HiringPractices #EducationalEquity
Tennessee House committee debates amendment on demographic representation in education bill
House committee votes to amend education bill by adding the word similar for clarity.
citizenportal.ai
April 10, 2025 at 7:56 AM
Tennessee lawmakers are locked in a heated debate over a new bill that aims to redefine diversity, equity, and inclusion in hiring practices—could this reshape the future of education in the state?

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#TN #DiversityEquityInclusion #CitizenPortal #HiringPractices
Representative Mayberry criticizes misconceptions on DEI in hiring practices bill
Mayberry emphasizes the importance of merit and equity in discussions on DEI policies
citizenportal.ai
April 10, 2025 at 7:41 AM
Montana lawmakers clash over House Bill 638, sparking a heated debate on the role of diversity statements in hiring that could reshape the future of state employment.

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#MT #CivicAccountability #CitizenPortal #SocialInclusion #HiringPractices #MontanaDiversity
Montana legislators debate House Bill 638 on diversity statements in hiring processes
Committee reviews House Bill 638 regarding mandatory diversity statements in state hiring.
citizenportal.ai
March 28, 2025 at 10:08 AM
Ari Melber reports on the data on gender and racial diversity across U.S. institutions, providing a factual and historical lens ....
#DEI #Meritocracy #HiringPractices #LevelPlayingField #AffirmativeAction #Racism #VotingRights #TrumpAdministration #WomenInTheWorkplace #Nepotism #MSNBC
Facts on Trump's 'DEI crackdown' from nepo hires to CEO data: Melber's nonpartisan breakdown
YouTube video by MSNBC
www.youtube.com
March 17, 2025 at 7:30 PM