If you hold a remote job and already call Texas home, you might just want to stay put.
TEXAS -- The meaning of"going to work" is swiftly changing. The Ladders career platform forecasts that one-fourth of all professional jobs in North America will be remote by the end of 2022."This change in working arrangements is impossible to overhype. As big as it is, it's even bigger than people think," Marc Cenedella, CEO of The Ladders,
in December."Hiring practices typically move at a glacial pace, but the pandemic turned up the heat, so we're seeing a rapid flood of change in this space. It's really rather amazing."
Australia Latest News, Australia Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
Analysis: Texas’ new standard is abortions for those who can afford to leave Texas.rossramsey writes: The Texas ban on abortions after six weeks effectively makes abortions illegal for most pregnant people – but not everyone. Just those who can afford to travel out-of-state or to other countries.
Read more »
Under Texas’ strict abortion law, McAllen clinic sees patients seeking medication across the borderThe law went into effect in September, a week before Mexico’s Supreme Court dissolved a Coahuila state law that made abortion a crime. Now some Texans further along in their pregnancies are going there for abortion-inducing drugs.
Read more »
State prepares to execute oldest inmate on Texas death rowThe oldest inmate on Texas death row is set for execution on April 21. Carl Wayne Buntion faces lethal injection for killing a Houston police officer nearly 32 years ago during a traffic stop.
Read more »
Dallas-Fort Worth home sales surpassed by another Texas metroDallas-Fort Worth home sales were surpassed in the first quarter by another Texas metro area.
Read more »
A key Texas bridge lost $1 billion per week during governor's slowdownGov. Greg Abbott's rule imposing safety inspections at the border did 'nothing to stop the flow of illegal immigration or illegal drugs,' Texas Agriculture Commissioner Sid Miller told NPR.
Read more »