Rishi Sunak refuses to answer whether he uses a private GP three times
Rishi Sunak refuses to answer whether he uses a private GP three times during an interview with BBC's Laura KuenssbergBBC
Rishi Sunak refuses to answer whether he uses a private GP three times during an interview with BBC's Laura KuenssbergBBC
Essex Highways has revealed the names of five of their new gritters
A Tube driver was removed from his role after opening the train doors on the wrong side of the platform, a tribunal heard. The driver, identified only as Mr I Odewale, was demoted to a Customer Services Assistant in 2017 after the safety incident. It came to light after Mr Odewale took London Underground to tribunal, claiming a refusal of his bid to retrain as a train operator in 2021 was racial discrimination.
Shah Dhandharia audited the accounts of Adani Total Gas and Adani Enterprises. It only had 11 employees, with partners just 28 years old, per Hindenburg.
Wyre Forest in the West Midlands has seen a huge jump in the ‘economically inactive’, many of them affluent older people, but the dearth of workers is a real problem for employers
Highclere Castle has no wedding bookings for 2023 and just one small event scheduled for 2024
Business Secretary Grant Shapps has hit out at Ofgem for listening to energy company bosses over customers, following the forceful installation of prepayment meters. Mr Shapps accused the energy regulator of having "the wool pulled over their eyes" and told it to toughen up on suppliers after "vulnerable" customers struggling with their energy bills had pay-as-you go gas and electricity meters wrongfully installed in their homes. It follows an investigation by the Times, which showed that a company used by British Gas to pursue debts, Arvato Financial Solutions, was forcing its way into homes to fit the devices, despite signs that children and disabled people were living there.
BENGALURU, India (Reuters) -Oil producers may have to reconsider their output policies following a demand recovery in China, the world's second-largest oil consumer, the International Energy Agency's Executive Director Fatih Birol said on Sunday. China, the world's largest crude importer and No. 2 buyer of liquefied natural gas, has become the biggest uncertain factor in global oil and gas markets in 2023 as investors bet on the speed of its recovery after Beijing lifted COVID restrictions in December. "We expect about half of the growth in global oil demand this year will come from China," Birol told Reuters on the sidelines of the India Energy Week conference.
It has been a good few months for Rolls-Royce shares but let's not get carried away, the company still has a long, long way to go. The post Rolls-Royce shares are up 30% in 3 months. Here’s why I wouldn’t touch them today appeared first on The Motley Fool UK.
Chanting “Retirement before arthritis,” more than a million people poured into the streets in cities across France on Tuesday in protest of government plans to boost the country’s retirement age from 62 to 64.
Company criticised for allegedly forcing ‘vulnerable’ customers to accept pay-as-you-go devices
A Spanish court has ruled that Amazon broke labor laws by forcing more than 2,000 delivery drivers to use an app that the company controlled for scheduling work and payments and requiring them to use their own cars and cellphones on the job. Amazon could not treat workers using its Flex app as self-employed because the e-commerce giant's Spanish subsidiary “assumes the authority to make all decisions regarding the service, setting the conditions of execution and remuneration, and the circumstances of the day, time and duration” of labor, according to the Madrid labor court's decision released Friday. Amazon stopped using the Flex app in Spain in 2021.
A FASHION retailer with branches in Dorset and the New Forest has been rescued out of administration – but its 170 stores are still at risk.
Workers who avoid lay-offs need “survivor guilt” support, HR experts have suggested.
Samsung Electronics Co has agreed to pay $150 million to British nanotechnology company Nanoco Technologies to settle patent lawsuits over technology used in Samsung's LED televisions, Nanoco and an investor in its cases said Friday. Nanoco and Chicago-based litigation funding firm GLS Capital said in a release that the settlement, which includes a license agreement and the "transfer of certain patents," resolves litigation in the United States, Germany and China. Samsung and Nanoco told a Texas federal court on the eve of a trial last month that they had agreed to settle the dispute, but no terms were disclosed at the time.
‘Stay where you’re at,’ she says
Workers between18 and 25 already had $33,000 socked away in their retirement accounts.
A HEREFORD fish and chip shop has been handed a top rating in its latest food hygiene inspection
Huge new schemes at Canada Water and Brent Cross help power London’s continued growth
Financial watchdog warns over rise of ‘fin-fluencers’ targeting younger people on social media
Move over quiet quitting, career cushioning is the big next workplace trend that employees are jumping to help them navigate uncertain times.