Labor

  • September 05, 2024

    Minn. Health System Wants Union's Arbitration Award Axed

    A Minnesota healthcare system urged a federal court to throw out an arbitrator's award in favor of a union, saying the arbitrator ran afoul of a collective bargaining agreement by penalizing the system under state law for recouping wages it overpaid to several employees.

  • September 05, 2024

    2nd NLRB Official Says Amazon Jointly Employs Drivers

    A second National Labor Relations Board official has determined that Amazon jointly employs delivery drivers who work for a contractor, setting up a potential complaint accusing the company of threatening workers over unionization efforts.

  • September 05, 2024

    Worker Illegally Demoted For Pay Complaints, NLRB Rules

    A commercial truck driver training company violated federal labor law by demoting a worker who complained about a lack of timely pay, a divided National Labor Relations Board panel determined in granting default judgment, while one board member found that evidence didn't show the business was served board prosecutors' complaint.

  • September 04, 2024

    LinkedIn Speech Not Covered By Labor Law, 5th Circ. Told

    A logistics company told a Fifth Circuit panel during oral arguments Wednesday that an employee who was fired for allegedly disparaging comments made over LinkedIn wasn't protected under labor law, although the panel pointed out that an employee can take protected wage complaints to outside parties.

  • September 04, 2024

    Union Discriminates Against Blacks, Latinos, Technician Says

    An entertainment industry union local's admissions and job referral practices make it harder for Black and Latino applicants to secure union membership and positions at production studios like HBO and CBS, an electrical technician alleged in a proposed class action filed in New York federal court.

  • September 04, 2024

    NLRB Says Deference Not Needed In Solo Protest Case

    The U.S. Supreme Court's recent decision abandoning its long-standing deference to administrative agencies should not affect the Third Circuit's review of a National Labor Relations Board order broadening when individual employees engage in protected actions, the agency argued in a brief to the appeals court.

  • September 04, 2024

    SEIU Unit Asks 8th Circ. To Grant It Reading Remedy

    A Service Employees International Union affiliate told the Eight Circuit that the National Labor Relations Board wrongly decided not to award a notice reading for a Missouri hospital, arguing that the hospital engaged in widespread labor law violations.

  • September 04, 2024

    Concrete Co. Owes Workers $370K, Wash. Panel Says

    A Washington appeals court refused to overturn a state agency's determination that a concrete company owes workers more than $370,000 in wages for working at a disposal site, saying the work was sufficiently related to a public works project to trigger the state's prevailing wage law.

  • September 03, 2024

    NLRB Office Reaches $200K Settlement With Aluminum Co.

    The National Labor Relations Board's Indianapolis office announced Tuesday that it approved a $200,000 settlement with back pay and benefits to resolve an unfair labor practice case alleging an aluminum windows company helped circulate a decertification petition.

  • September 03, 2024

    3rd Circ. Preview: Starbucks Firing, Liquor Law In September

    Two National Labor Relations Board cases grace the Third Circuit's September session, when panels will probe the agency's suits against Starbucks Corp. for firing Philadelphia workers attempting to unionize and a plastic company accused of firing a safety whistleblower.

  • September 03, 2024

    Amazon Calls For NLRB Members Recusal In NY Firing Spat

    Three NLRB members should recuse themselves after they voted to allow the agency's general counsel to seek a federal court injunction involving a fired worker at a Staten Island, New York, warehouse, Amazon argued to the board, saying the administrative case should be dismissed given due process concerns.

  • September 03, 2024

    Union-Backed 'Captive Audience' Bill Heads To Calif. Governor

    The California Senate voted in favor of a union-backed bill that would bar employers from requiring employees to attend meetings related to religious or political matters — including company-organized meetings used to discourage union-formation — sending the so-called captive audience bill to the governor's desk.

  • September 03, 2024

    UAW Loses Bid To Include Casinos In NJ Smoking Ban

    A New Jersey state court judge on Friday tossed the United Auto Workers' complaint claiming a law excluding casino workers from secondhand smoking protections violates the state constitution, reasoning that the law doesn't inhibit the employees' right to pursue safety.

  • September 03, 2024

    Apartment Co. Asks 9th Circ. To Toss NLRB Wage Talk Ruling

    An Arizona property management company has urged the Ninth Circuit to reverse a National Labor Relations Board decision finding the company unlawfully fired a worker who talked about wages, joining a chorus of employers arguing the labor agency is unconstitutionally structured.

  • September 03, 2024

    Calif. Eyes New Heavy-Duty Autonomous Truck Testing Regs

    California is forging ahead with plans to test and deploy more heavy-duty autonomous trucks, at the same time that state lawmakers are seeking to ban autonomous trucks from operating without a human driver behind the wheel.

  • September 03, 2024

    NLRB Official Permits Union Vote At Marathon Calif. Terminal

    Workers at a Marathon terminal in California can vote on whether they want the United Steelworkers to represent them, an NLRB regional director determined, while rejecting the union's request for an election to let the employees join an existing bargaining unit.

  • September 03, 2024

    Labor, Employment Ballot Questions May End Up In Court

    Voters this fall will consider ballot questions asking them to pass laws raising the minimum wage and expanding rights to sick leave and collective bargaining, potentially kicking off litigation that will give courts a chance to weigh in.

  • August 30, 2024

    Wheeling & Appealing: The Latest Must-Know Appellate Action

    Appeals courts have awakened from summertime slumber and crammed their early autumn calendars with arguments of national significance, which Law360 previews in this edition of Wheeling & Appealing. We're also recapping August's top appellate decisions, exploring new polling about U.S. Supreme Court opinions and testing your knowledge of Fifth Circuit history.

  • August 30, 2024

    Teamsters Eye Game-Changing Win At Amazon 'Crown Jewel'

    The Teamsters have launched an ambitious organizing campaign at Amazon's premiere air cargo facility in Kentucky, hoping to draw on the experience of representing thousands of UPS workers in the state to notch a win that experts said could be the breakthrough the union has been seeking at the e-commerce giant.

  • August 30, 2024

    NLRB Official Nixes Union Ouster Attempt At Red Rock Casino

    A worker's bid to decertify a union representing maintenance employees at Red Rock Casino Resort & Spa in Las Vegas can't proceed, a National Labor Relations Board regional director determined, finding the petition should be dismissed because the board recently issued a bargaining order.

  • August 30, 2024

    UPS Gets NLRB Info Request Redo From 11th Circ.

    The Eleventh Circuit reversed on Friday part of a National Labor Relations Board ruling that UPS illegally refused to provide information to the Teamsters, directing the board to analyze the company's argument that the parties' contract precluded the union's request for workers' phone numbers.

  • August 30, 2024

    NLRB Says Nexstar Must Bargain With Union In Upstate NY

    The National Labor Relations Board ordered Nexstar Media Inc. to bargain with its workers' newly installed union, ruling that the media conglomerate violated federal labor law by refusing to work with a Communications Workers of America affiliate at its Rochester, New York, television station.

  • August 30, 2024

    NY Forecast: Hotel Bid To Toss Workers' WARN Act Suit

    This week a New York federal judge will consider attempts from the operators of Four Seasons Hotel New York to toss a class action that claims the hotel violated state and federal law by furloughing them without notice.

  • August 30, 2024

    3 Atty Takeaways On What's Ahead As ERISA Turns 50

    As the Employee Retirement Income Security Act turns 50 years old this Labor Day, attorneys reflecting on five decades of development of the federal employee benefits law see a complex path ahead for both litigation and policy. Here are three key takeaways from top attorneys on what’s next for ERISA on its golden anniversary.

  • August 30, 2024

    Calif. Forecast: $5M Walmart COVID Deal Up For Approval

    In the coming week, attorneys should keep an eye out for the potential final approval of a $5.2 million deal in a wage and hour class action against Walmart alleging the retail giant failed to pay for time workers spent in COVID-19 health screenings. Here's a look at that case and other labor and employment matters coming up in California.

Expert Analysis

  • The TEAM Act Brings Us Back To The Future Again

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    The recently introduced Teamwork for Employees and Managers Act — which would legalize employee involvement committees, an employer-friendly alternative to unions — is likely dead on arrival and revives a legislative effort from the '90s, typifying the pingpong jurisprudence that has come to define U.S. labor law, says Daniel Johns at Cozen O'Connor.

  • BIPA Ruling May Limit Employer Liability Under Labor Law

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    An Illinois appeals court’s recent decision in Walton v. Roosevelt University, holding that federal labor law preempted an employee’s Biometric Information Privacy Act claims, creates a precedent for employers with unionized workplaces to direct such claims to arbitration and possibly regain some leverage in settlement discussions, say attorneys at Thompson Coburn.

  • Revisiting Calif. 'Right To Recall' As In-Person Work Resumes

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    With many businesses returning employees to in-person work, certain hospitality employers in California face an increased risk of being penalized for noncompliance with a state law that provides job recall rights to workers who were laid off during the pandemic, say Lauren Gafa and Amber Healy at Atkinson Andelson.

  • NLRB History May Hint At Future Of Work Rule Test

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    Given that the National Labor Relations Board may soon overturn its employer-friendly standard for reviewing workplace rule and handbook provisions, companies can look to the past two decades of shifting policies to surmise that the next framework will likely force them to defend reasonable rules, says Patrick Depoy at Bryan Cave.

  • Justices Must Apply Law Evenly In Shadow Docket Rulings

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    In recent shadow docket decisions, the U.S. Supreme Court has inconsistently applied the requirement that parties demonstrate irreparable harm to obtain injunctive relief, which is problematic for two separate but related reasons, says David Hopkins at Benesch.

  • Employer's Agenda

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    In this Expert Analysis series, in-house employment attorneys discuss the most important issues companies and counsel should plan for amid the current business landscape, and offer practical advice for how to address the year's unique challenges.

  • Cos. Must Brace For More NLRB Scrutiny On Arbitration Pacts

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    In its recent invitation to file briefs on its 2016 Ralphs Grocery ruling, the National Labor Relations Board signaled its desire to restrict arbitration agreements, so employers may want to revisit their contracts with employees and implement training programs to avoid discrimination claims regardless of forum, say attorneys at Husch Blackwell.

  • Contractor Compliance Hurdles In USDA Labor Rule Proposal

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    Given the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s recent proposal to revive the so-called blacklisting rule requiring certification of compliance with certain labor laws, federal contractors may want to revamp their processes for tracking violations and conducting due diligence in order to avoid the potential for making false representations to the government, says Jack Blum at Polsinelli.

  • How Health Care Employers Can Minimize Threat Of Strikes

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    The COVID-19 pandemic, safety and staffing issues, and the ongoing battle for health care talent mean that worker strikes may become a substantial threat to business operations, but industry employers can reduce the risk of job actions by building employee trust and fostering a culture of respect, say attorneys at Husch Blackwell.

  • Employer's Agenda: IHG Counsel Talks Remote Investigations

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    The pandemic and shift to remote work have drastically altered workplace investigations, making it imperative for in-house counsel to ensure interim actions, witness interviews and attorney-client privilege are addressed in accordance with the unique challenges posed by the telework landscape, says Sherry Nielsen, senior corporate counsel for labor and employment at IHG Hotels & Resorts.

  • Employer's Agenda: Allied Universal Counsel Talks Synergy

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    Compliance with continually evolving local, state and federal employment laws has become a central focus for in-house legal teams, which means regular communication and collaboration with departments like human resources, finance, IT and field operations are essential, says Deborah Pecci, global employment and litigation counsel at Allied Universal.

  • Judge Jackson's Employment Rulings Embody Pragmatism

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    U.S. Supreme Court nominee Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson’s body of work on employment and labor law issues as a district court judge suggests she would defy stereotypical political descriptions and offer nuanced, pragmatic opinions if confirmed to the high court, say Stephanie Adler-Paindiris and Stephanie Lewis at Jackson Lewis.

  • Problems For Nonunion Contractors In Biden's Labor Mandate

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    President Joe Biden’s recent order mandating the use of project labor agreements for large-scale federal construction projects is a welcome development for organized labor, with potentially expensive consequences for nonunion contractors and subcontractors, say Michael Schrier and Adam Doerr at Husch Blackwell.

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