March 21, 2023
Amazon Flex drivers steering a class action accusing the company of wrongly classifying them as independent contractors rather than full employees told a Washington federal judge their suit should not be combined with three other similar suits, saying two are "copycat" lawsuits and the other should proceed in tandem.
February 28, 2023
A group of Amazon delivery drivers suing the company for wage violations are pushing a Washington federal judge for class certification, saying their medley of state and federal claims pivot on a singular legal question: whether the company wrongly called them independent contractors.
February 16, 2023
Amazon urged a Washington federal judge to toss a group of drivers' suit alleging they were misclassified as independent contractors, saying that their "scattershot complaint" falls short in supporting their claims seeking unpaid wages and overtime.
July 20, 2022
The U.S. Supreme Court's recent ruling on arbitration and transportation workers is already beginning to make an impact on cases in the judicial pipeline. Here, Law360 looks at three cases where the holding is already making a difference.
July 06, 2022
Wage and hour litigation in the latter half of 2022 will break ground on issues of first impression, like the compensability of remote work expenses, and contend with foundational issues, such as what constitutes a salary and who should be considered an interstate transportation worker. Here are seven cases to keep an eye on.
July 01, 2022
A group of Amazon Flex drivers told a Washington federal judge that it's time to grant them class certification in their misclassification suit now that the U.S. Supreme Court has decided two cases that are expected to impact the outcome of the dispute.
January 14, 2022
Amazon has been citing the U.S. Supreme Court's decision to consider federal arbitration law this term in requests to pause its own wage and hour cases, highlighting motions for a stay as an option defense counsel may consider.
January 07, 2022
A Washington federal judge agreed Friday to further pause a closely watched legal challenge from Amazon Flex drivers seeking to gain employee status, saying the U.S. Supreme Court will soon weigh two disputes addressing the scope of federal arbitration requirements that could affect the Amazon case.
May 10, 2021
An Amazon Flex driver fired back at the e-commerce giant's "frivolous" argument that California's new gig-economy law, Proposition 22, retroactively nullifies his Private Attorneys General Act claim in a proposed class action in Washington federal court challenging the company's driver classification practices.
April 24, 2019
A Washington district court ruling that Amazon's independent contractor drivers are exempt from the Federal Arbitration Act creates new potholes in the once-smooth path paved for transportation employers to shield themselves from employment disputes, experts say.