A home heating oil company fielded tough questions at the First Circuit on Tuesday as the company defended its termination of a service technician with a bad knee, with one judge pressing the company's attorney on why the organization hadn't reassigned the worker instead of letting him go.
Law360 has launched its U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission amicus brief tracker, providing an interactive map to keep lawyers up to date on the EEOC's views on cutting-edge areas of discrimination law, as well as where the agency is focusing its efforts.
U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission general counsel Karla Gilbride told Law360 in an exclusive interview that "breaking new ground" in evolving legal arenas, like pregnant worker protections and artificial intelligence, is a top priority for her.
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A home heating oil company fielded tough questions at the First Circuit on Tuesday as the company defended its termination of a service technician with a bad knee, with one judge pressing the company's attorney on why the organization hadn't reassigned the worker instead of letting him go.
Law360 has launched its U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission amicus brief tracker, providing an interactive map to keep lawyers up to date on the EEOC's views on cutting-edge areas of discrimination law, as well as where the agency is focusing its efforts.
U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission general counsel Karla Gilbride told Law360 in an exclusive interview that "breaking new ground" in evolving legal arenas, like pregnant worker protections and artificial intelligence, is a top priority for her.
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November 05, 2024
Ohio-based roller bearing manufacturer Timken has defended its decision to terminate a plant supervisor who claimed his beliefs about diversity, equity and inclusion led to his dismissal, saying the former boss was fired for poor leadership and that his DEI discussions fell outside Connecticut legal protections.
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November 05, 2024
Harvard University must face allegations that it was indifferent to antisemitic behavior on its campus in the wake of Hamas' Oct. 7, 2023, attack on Israel, a federal judge ruled Tuesday.
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November 05, 2024
Ascension Health Alliance will provide back pay for employees who were denied religious exemptions from its COVID-19 vaccine policy and suspended without pay, under a revamped settlement approved by a Michigan federal judge.
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November 05, 2024
A Boston television station may have been justified in firing a Hearst videographer who refused to get a COVID-19 vaccine during the pandemic even if the worker's religious objections were sincere, the First Circuit hinted during arguments Tuesday.
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November 05, 2024
Employment firm Littler Mendelson PC announced that a former deputy attorney for the City of Fresno joined the firm's office in the city, adding that his government along with employment law experience will help its employer clients.
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November 05, 2024
The Fifth Circuit shut down a race bias suit from a worker who said his supervisor referred to him by a racial slur, finding that the ex-worker filed his pre-suit U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission charge too late.
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November 05, 2024
A Black female insurance and construction law attorney is urging a Manhattan federal judge not to toss her suit against her former firm, Fabiani Cohen & Hall LLP, arguing that though she was an equity owner, she was still an employee who could bring claims.
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November 05, 2024
SLOTTING---The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission said Tuesday that an attorney who has been with the federal bias watchdog for nearly three decades will oversee the agency's 53 field offices.
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November 05, 2024
Attorneys are working tirelessly Tuesday to support citizens and election workers on the final day of voting in what is expected to be one of history's closest and most contentious presidential contests.
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November 04, 2024
A Pennsylvania federal judge on Monday freed a personal injury firm from a former paralegal's claims that it unlawfully publicized her COVID-19 vaccination status, saying the paralegal herself made her vaccination status public when she opposed the vaccine outside the confines of an employer-initiated medical inquiry.
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November 04, 2024
A Maine federal judge ruled Monday that the U.S. Department of Defense's denial of healthcare coverage for two transgender women's gender-confirmation surgeries violates the Fifth Amendment's equal protection clause, finding that the way the department applied a statutory exclusion discriminated based on sex and transgender status.
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November 04, 2024
A former executive at Curaleaf is suing the cannabis dispensary giant for discrimination and sexual harassment, claiming in Massachusetts federal court the company paid her white C-suite peers more money and ultimately sidelined her after she spoke out about male colleagues' lewd and racist remarks.
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November 04, 2024
The Eleventh Circuit refused to reopen a former nurse practitioner's lawsuit claiming the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs demoted her because she's Black, finding she neglected to file a formal discrimination charge within the time limit specified by federal law.
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November 04, 2024
A California federal judge on Monday recused herself from a hostile work environment and retaliation suit brought by a group of former SpaceX employees, saying she owns Tesla stock and is friends with a SpaceX human resource executive's mother-in-law.
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November 04, 2024
The former finance director of Norcross, Georgia, has slapped the city, its mayor and a city council member with a complaint in Georgia federal court alleging he was subjected to "vicious retaliation" and fired after disclosing the mayor's "fraud, waste, abuse and violations of the law."
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November 04, 2024
A Washington federal judge paused the state from enforcing its anti-discrimination statute against a Christian nonprofit, saying the organization is likely to succeed in a lawsuit revived by the Ninth Circuit claiming it has a constitutional right to hire only like-minded employees who abstain from sex outside of heterosexual marriage.
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November 04, 2024
The U.S. Department of Labor announced Monday that McKesson Medical-Surgical Inc. has agreed to pay nearly $450,000 to resolve the agency's claims that it gave hiring preferences to Asian job applicants over Black, Hispanic and white job hopefuls.
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November 04, 2024
Religious broadcasters are asking the Fifth Circuit to step in and stop the Federal Communications Commission from making them turn in diversity data, a recently reinstated policy that they say tramples on their First Amendment rights and pressures them to "engage in race- and sex-conscious employment decisions."
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November 04, 2024
A former staff attorney with a mortgage company has accused the business of "bad faith" for purportedly trying to renegotiate the terms of a settlement to resolve her Texas state lawsuit alleging she was fired after she witnessed inappropriate sexual behavior by a deputy general counsel.
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November 04, 2024
Labor and employment firm Ogletree Deakins Nash Smoak & Stewart PC is expanding its Texas team, announcing Monday it is bringing in a Steptoe & Johnson PLLC litigator as a shareholder in its San Antonio office.
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November 01, 2024
A New York federal judge affirmed the court's call to uphold an arbitration pact in an executive's sex bias suit claiming social media company Meetup fired her for taking maternity leave, backing his initial ruling that a law halting arbitration of sex harassment disputes didn't apply to her claims.
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November 01, 2024
A Mississippi federal judge said he won't allow a former nuclear engineer for Entergy Operations Inc. to proceed with a wrongful termination lawsuit accusing the company of tampering with drug tests as retaliation for his refusing to falsify safety reports, decrying his arguments as "conjecture, speculation" and "conclusory allegations."
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November 01, 2024
A suspended police chief in a New Jersey borough has filed a lawsuit in state court against the borough's mayor and other officials, alleging he has been subjected to harassment and retaliation in violation of the New Jersey Conscientious Employee Protection Act and Civil Rights Act.
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November 01, 2024
A Michigan federal judge has refused to disqualify Gordon Rees Scully Mansukhani LLP from representing an upscale Detroit hotel in a retaliation suit filed by three fired employees, but flagged the firm for being "negligent" in its handling of discovery in the case.
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November 01, 2024
The Fourth Circuit on Friday appeared receptive to giving a former pediatric nurse a second chance at her suit alleging she was illegally fired for declining COVID-19 inoculation because of her Christian beliefs, with several judges trying to pinpoint if the case was tossed too soon.