
Goldman Sachs asking returning workers to say if they've been vaccinated
CBSN
Goldman Sachs is requiring that bankers and other employees tell the financial firm whether they are vaccinated before returning to the office.
The investment bank has started bringing some of its 20,000 U.S.-based employees back, with most workers expected to return by June 14. Employees who had not yet submitted their vaccination status received a memo earlier this week explaining that "registering your vaccination status allows us to plan for a safer return to the office for all of our people as we continue to abide by local public health measures." The memo said it is "mandatory" that workers indicate if they've gotten their shots via a company app by noon on June 10.
Americans are continually encouraged to sock away money in a 401(k) or other retirement plan to ensure a comfortable, if not cushy, life in their later years. Yet about half of all U.S. workers in the private sector lack access to an employer-sponsored retirement plan, a huge obstacle in building enough wealth to retire, a recent study finds.

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