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How Bank of America built an ‘emergency task force’ to help employees in crisis. On Jan. 15, 2009, U.S. Airways flight 1549 struck a flock of birds over the skies of New York City and lost ...
Bank of America created the Life Event Services (LES) team in 2014, hiring 50 full-time staffers—professionals with backgrounds in 911 assistance, social work, medical care, and law enforcement ...
Wall Street bosses are saying enough is enough. Bank of America has joined the growing list of banks putting their foot down and forcing workers to comply with its return-to-office mandates—or ...
The Bank of America Corporation (often abbreviated BofA or BoA) is an American multinational investment bank and financial services holding company headquartered at the Bank of America Corporate Center in Charlotte, North Carolina, with investment banking and auxiliary headquarters in Manhattan. The bank was founded by the merger of NationsBank ...
The Bank of America Corporate Center is an 871 ft (265 m) skyscraper in Uptown Charlotte, North Carolina. [1] Designed by Argentine architect César Pelli and HKS Architects, and best known as the headquarters of the namesake Bank of America, it has been the tallest building in North Carolina since its 1992 construction, the 56th-tallest building in the United States, and the 174th-tallest ...
Bank of America Corp. On March 30, 2010, three female employees launched a class action gender discrimination lawsuit against Bank of America and Merrill Lynch. The suit, which was filed by Judy Calibuso, a Miami financial adviser in Merrill Lynch, and Julie Moss and Dianne Goedtel, former financial advisers at Bank of America, inculpated the ...
The demanding work environment of Wall Street bank’s was thrust back into sharp relief, after a Bank of America employee died in May. Leo Lukenas III, who was a former Green Beret, ...
The company was founded on January 6, 1914, when Charles E. Merrill opened Charles E. Merrill & Co. for business at 7 Wall Street in New York City. [11] A few months later, Merrill's friend, Edmund C. Lynch, joined him, and in 1915 the name was officially changed to Merrill, Lynch & Co. [12] At that time, the firm's name included a comma between Merrill and Lynch, which was dropped in 1938. [13]