Employees of the N.Y. Met were told to brace for a lockout. Two days later, the musicians’ union issued a news release backed up by an 84-page attack.
Rhetoric Flies as Metropolitan Opera Lockout Looms Large
Employees of the N.Y. Met were told to brace for a lockout. Two days later, the musicians’ union issued a news release backed up by an 84-page attack.
PETA must be admired for its vigilance about a communications opportunity, however odd and unpalatable. Here’s their offer to the people of Detroit.
A CEO of a local medical charity is leaving. Some hope that this may mean a bit more spending of its increasing assets.
NGOs’ two threats to India’s economy are their multitude and their foreign origin.
As Ebola spreads across Africa, medical personnel working with those infected are contracting the disease, which can be spread even once a victim has died.
The U.S. is culturally bound to secrecy about salaries, but some feel that more openness is a critically important step in taking on accountability and inequity.
With all the talk about the need for nonprofit leadership and “leaderful organizations,” few have set out to so clearly lay out a set of practices to create one.
Faced with a declining endowment and a business model that no longer works, the Met is attempting to restructure primarily by cutting workforce costs.
A study looks at the growth and relative health of the nonprofit sector in Milwaukee.
Social media outlet Twitter has released its diversity figures. Like tech competitors elsewhere, they’re solidly male and largely white and Asian.
Every scandal has its silly season where the news leaves one shaking their head in disbelief. The IRS scandal has hit such a point.
In October 2013, there were an estimated 5600 abandoned homes in Flint, Michigan. A $20 million grant will allow many of those buildings to be razed.