Monday, May 14, 2018

Virgin Gorda’s Unique Baths National Park in the Virgin Islands


A respected Saint Louis entrepreneur, Craig Nowotny has served as general manager with Arthur Wright and Associates and guided client-focused recruiting activities since the late 1980s. Passionate about boating, Craig Nowotny is a longtime yachtsman who has taken trips from Florida to Caribbean destinations such as the Bahamas and the Virgin Islands. 

Among the popular boating spots are St. John and St. Thomas, with Tortola and Virgin Gorda in the British Virgin Islands offering marinas and active yacht clubs. Virgin Gorda is also home to The Baths National Park, which features dramatic granite boulders along the edge of sandy beach. These create sheltered sea pools and an ecosystem for coastal marine life.

As large as forty feet across, these boulders originated from molten rock that seeped upward through volcanic rock layers. Not quite reaching the surface of the existing volcanic layer, the rock gradually cooled, which created a hard layer of crystalline granite. The blocks were exposed over the millennia as the softer volcanic rock was lost to erosion, and today the boulders are sea-weathered into distinctive rounded shapes.

Tuesday, May 1, 2018

An Introduction to Minimizing Bias During Hiring and Staffing


The general manager of Arthur Wright and Associates in St. Louis, Missouri, for nearly three decades, Craig Nowotny successfully led the staffing firm through the 2008 recession without laying off any staff. In addition to his work, Craig Nowotny engages with professional organizations such as the Society for Human Resource Management (SHRM).

SHRM represents the interests of 285,000 HR professionals in nearly 170 countries around the world, providing members with a wide range of services and engagement opportunities, including access to articles on important industry topics, such as minimizing bias during hiring and staffing.

SHRM has reviewed research regarding biases and other injustices that exist in the hiring process. A few of the more effective methods of minimizing the influence of bias when searching for a new employee include reviewing the mechanics of hiring prejudices through specialized training, using inclusive language when composing and publishing job descriptions, and implementing blind resume vetting and interviews. Similarly, employers should formally standardize job interviews, as unconscious biases can steer interviews in various directions for different applicants. Employers may also consider establishing diversity goals for hiring.

For a more in-depth look at the impact of biases on hiring, please visit SHRM online at www.shrm.org.