-
October 10, 2024
A Virginia trucking company's owner was exaggerating when he told his staff they would have gotten raises if it wasn't for a union "trying to steal money out of your paychecks," the company told the Fourth Circuit, saying the "hyperbolic" statement was protected by the First Amendment.
-
October 10, 2024
As states across the country pass new laws for college athletes to earn money for their name, image and likeness, California lawmakers are encouraging universities there to make use of the considerable NIL provisions already on the books.
-
October 09, 2024
Boeing has withdrawn its most recent wage offer to more than 33,000 employees who've been on strike for nearly a month, prolonging a labor standoff with the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers that has grounded some of Boeing's key production lines to a halt.
-
October 09, 2024
American Airlines was cleared of a customer service representative's overtime wages claim under the Fair Labor Standards Act for time spent logging in before his shift, an Arizona federal judge ruled Wednesday, finding the worker is exempt from overtime based on his job responsibilities.
-
October 09, 2024
Workers at a Georgia painting, landscaping and carpentry business can vote on removing a painters union, a National Labor Relations Board official has ruled, rejecting the union's argument that the worker who filed the petition is a supervisor.
-
October 09, 2024
An attorney known for becoming the first woman to head a major professional sports union in North America has decided to take the next step of her career at JAMS, the alternative dispute resolution service announced on Tuesday.
-
October 09, 2024
The National Labor Relations Board exceeded its powers under federal labor law when ordering Trader Joe's to pay a fired employee in Houston for "pecuniary harms," the grocery chain argued, telling the Fifth Circuit to reject the board's remedy and conclusions that the worker who raised complaints was illegally terminated.
-
October 09, 2024
Stellantis sued the United Auto Workers affiliate representing its Denver parts facility workers over their recent strike authorization vote, saying in its 11th lawsuit filed against the union in the past week that the UAW manufactured "sham grievances" to justify a mid-contract strike over a "promise" the company didn't make.
-
October 08, 2024
A new memo by the National Labor Relations Board's top prosecutor aimed at curbing contracts that impose thousands of dollars in training or other costs on workers who quit or lose their jobs sets a tough test for employers that use so-called stay or pay agreements to retain workers.
-
October 08, 2024
A National Labor Relations Board official dismissed a National Right to Work Foundation-backed effort to oust the union from the first Trader Joe's store to successfully organize, holding Tuesday that the decertification petition can't proceed while the company stands accused of nearly two dozen federal labor law violations.
-
October 08, 2024
The National Labor Relations Board's three Democratic appointees denied Amazon's request for the trio to recuse themselves from an agency case about the firing of a worker in Staten Island, New York, saying Tuesday the e-commerce giant's constitutional claims would not have justified dismissing the four-year case.
-
October 08, 2024
Yellow Corp. called on the Tenth Circuit to reverse a lower court's dismissal of the company's $137 million lawsuit against the Teamsters that claimed the union led the nearly 100-year-old company to shutter, saying the business wasn't required to exhaust the grievance process under a contract.
-
October 08, 2024
The D.C. Circuit seemed reluctant Tuesday to reopen a retired government employee's discrimination suit against a federal employee union, with several judges suggesting that her claims don't belong in federal court.
-
October 08, 2024
A Michigan federal judge should affirm an arbitration award that allowed a Coca-Cola distributor to reassign several tasks performed by its laborers to its drivers, the distributor said, saying its workers' union is wrong to argue that the award lacks a basis in the collective bargaining agreement.
-
October 08, 2024
A lawyer for a governmental workers' union challenging the constitutionality of the federal debt limit told a First Circuit panel on Tuesday that a January default is a virtual certainty under existing law, and urged the judges to avoid trying to predict whether President Joe Biden and a lame-duck Congress might extend the ceiling.
-
October 08, 2024
The Fifth Circuit gave a cool reception Tuesday to staffing companies challenging a 2022 memo the National Labor Relations Board's general counsel issued arguing so-called captive audience meetings violate federal labor law, with judges questioning whether the document is the type of board action subject to court review.
-
October 08, 2024
Colorado isn't on the hook for claims by a union representing Southwest Airlines flight attendants related to a settlement between the state and airline about a sick leave law, a state court judge ruled, finding the union lacks standing to raise its allegations.
-
October 08, 2024
The National Labor Relations Board's Brooklyn office is seeking an injunction compelling a Long Island hospital's valet parking contractor to hire nearly three dozen workers employed by its predecessor, telling a New York federal judge that the contractor illegally refused to hire the workers because they were union-affiliated.
-
October 07, 2024
A Massachusetts hospital should not be allowed to pause an administrative case accusing it of flouting federal labor law by arguing that the National Labor Relations Board is unconstitutionally structured, the agency told a Washington, D.C., federal judge, calling the argument meritless and prematurely raised.
-
October 07, 2024
The National Labor Relations Board's top prosecutor on Monday mapped out her theory for why provisions requiring employees to pay if they leave a company are presumptively illegal, giving employers 60 days to ensure any so-called stay-or-pay clauses are narrowed to limit infringement on workers' rights.
-
October 07, 2024
The National Labor Relations Board's lone Republican appointee used recent decisions to comment on how the board analyzes employer and union misconduct in elections and call for overturning a precedent on assessing pro-union supervisor comments, which experts said could indicate how a future Republican board would treat similar cases.
-
October 07, 2024
The U.S. Supreme Court asked the federal government Monday to weigh in on an employer-side petition in a fight over what actuarial assumptions multi-employer pension funds are allowed to use under federal benefits law when determining an employer's withdrawal liability.
-
October 07, 2024
The Seventh Circuit must uphold the National Labor Relations Board's decision finding Amazon had an unlawful off-duty access rule, the board argued, saying the U.S. Supreme Court's overrule of the so-called Chevron deference doctrine doesn't disturb standards for reviewing agency orders.
-
October 07, 2024
A chemical and ammunition manufacturer can keep its win in a firing dispute with a union, a Texas federal judge said Monday, standing by his decision to overturn an arbitrator's reinstatement order.
-
October 07, 2024
The U.S. Supreme Court declined Monday to review a Ninth Circuit ruling that said the National Labor Relations Board relied on ample evidence when it found a Los Angeles hotel used a renovation as cover to ditch its workers' union.