Americans Are Breaking Up With Their Work Friends and Why You Can Blame Florida for Bad Air Travel
Are you friends with the people you work with? After going through the Great Resignation or starting to work remote more and more are saying that work friendships are harder to form and are also less of a priority. In a survey of U.S. employees, relationships with co-workers tied at the very bottoms as a factor for job satisfaction. Compensation and work-life balance ranked the highest. What’s more, half of workers aged 18-25 said workplace friendship were not at all important. Lindsay Ellis, careers reporter at the WSJ, joins us for how Americans are breaking up with their work friends.
Next, there’s one place in the country that is a constant factor in why airline travel can get so bad… Florida. The airspace in Florida can serve as an obstacle course for airlines and the effects of delays cascade throughout the rest of the country, even if you’re not flying through the area. Bad weather, military exercises, space launches, and being short-staffed at air traffic control, all contribute to the woes of flyers. Micah Maidenberg, space and aviation reporter at the WSJ, joins us for why you can blame Florida for making air travel so miserable.
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