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September 24, 2024
Retail workers represented by the Communications Workers of America at an Apple store in Oklahoma City ratified a first contract, the union announced Tuesday, saying the three-year deal includes wage increases, a grievance process and weeks of severance pay.
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September 24, 2024
Bankrupt trucking firm Yellow Corp. can move forward with a deposition of Teamsters President Sean O'Brien, after a Delaware bankruptcy judge declined Tuesday to stay the discovery tied to lawsuits that were filed against the debtor over mass layoffs.
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September 24, 2024
A New York federal judge approved on Tuesday emergency medical services workers to proceed as a class in their lawsuit alleging New York City paid them less in relation to their almost exclusively white, male counterparts at the fire department, despite differences in rank and responsibility.
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September 24, 2024
A nonprofit advocating for racial equality violated federal labor law by not negotiating with a union before three rounds of layoffs last year, a National Labor Relations Board judge ruled, finding no evidence to support the organization's claim that financial issues warranted its actions.
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September 24, 2024
Amtrak lost its appeal to a ruling that ordered an arbitration board to consider whether the rail company must use union labor on a newly acquired building, with the D.C. Circuit upholding a Washington, D.C., federal judge's decision Tuesday.
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September 23, 2024
Two New York City public defenders cannot leverage the U.S. Supreme Court's Janus ruling to stop paying their union because the ruling only applies to public employees and they're technically employed by a nonprofit, argued their employer, union and the city in a motion to dismiss their lawsuit.
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September 23, 2024
The Fifth Circuit should not stop an unfair labor practice proceeding against SpaceX based on claims that the National Labor Relations Board's structure is unconstitutional, the AFL-CIO argued in an amicus brief Monday, saying the president hasn't shown that he wants to remove agency officials.
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September 23, 2024
The AFL-CIO urged the U.S. Supreme Court Monday to overturn an Eleventh Circuit order finding that the Americans with Disabilities Act doesn't protect certain retirees from disability bias, arguing it erred when finding a Florida firefighter with Parkinson's couldn't contest a policy stripping her healthcare in retirement.
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September 23, 2024
Exxon Mobil asked a Texas federal judge to stop a United Steelworkers affiliate from relitigating during arbitration proceedings an issue about the automatic granting of grievances, saying a National Labor Relations Board case is already underway about the matter.
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September 23, 2024
UPS beat back claims that it violated benefits and wage laws by depriving two union-represented workers of their seniority and related pension credits when they transferred units, with an Indiana federal judge saying that issues with the lawsuit tanked the workers' legal arguments.
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September 23, 2024
Richard M. Moss, an attorney-turned-sports-agent who won free agency for baseball players and made star pitcher Nolan Ryan the first-ever professional athlete to score a $1 million contract for a single season, died over the weekend at age 93.
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September 23, 2024
The Michigan Supreme Court has let stand a ruling that retired municipal employees in Allen Park, Michigan, are entitled to healthcare benefits on terms that outlast their collective bargaining agreements with the city.
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September 23, 2024
A security company hasn't complied with a settlement requiring the employer to pay more than $286,000 to union-represented workers at federal courthouses for a refusal-to-bargain case, the National Labor Relations Board concluded, granting agency prosecutors' default judgment motion.
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September 23, 2024
A National Labor Relations Board judge must reconsider a ruling clearing Sean Penn's nongovernmental organization of an accusation that it violated the National Labor Relations Act, with the board ordering the judge to review allegations that Penn pushed back too hard on what he perceived as worker dissent.
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September 20, 2024
The National Labor Relations Board on Friday found the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette didn't bargain in good faith with a NewsGuild affiliate and also violated federal labor law by unilaterally changing terms of employment, ordering the newspaper to pay the union for bargaining expenses.
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September 20, 2024
A Louisiana federal judge said Thursday the U.S. Department of Labor likely didn't have the authority to raise wages for H-2A farmworkers, temporarily blocking the rule from applying to sugarcane farms in Louisiana.
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September 20, 2024
The National Labor Relations Board on Friday rejected a grocer's challenge to a Teamsters local's victory in a union representation election, though a Republican board member said the case highlighted his concerns about how the board evaluates the legality of pro-union statements made by supervisors.
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September 20, 2024
The estate of Waterbury, Connecticut's union-represented fire chief cannot collect any remaining workers' compensation benefits owed to him after his 1993 heart attack, a state appeals court ruled Friday, saying that under a city law, the chief's pension had adequately compensated him.
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September 20, 2024
Starbucks must rescind a rule barring the distribution of union materials at a Seattle cafe, the National Labor Relations Board determined, backing an agency judge's conclusions that the coffee giant violated federal labor law by telling workers not to share these items and throwing union pins away.
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September 20, 2024
This week the Second Circuit will consider a janitorial company's challenge to a lower court order that allowed an arbitration award in a dispute over what a janitor alleged was the company's misclassification of janitors as independent contractors to become public. Here, Law360 explores this and another employment case on the docket in New York.
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September 20, 2024
A New York Philharmonic trumpeter accused of raping his colleague and an oboist accused of handing the woman a spiked drink can't prove that the orchestra sidelining them violated an arbitrator's ruling, the orchestra and the musicians' union told a New York federal judge, asking him to toss the musicians' suits.
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September 20, 2024
A medical center in Austin, Texas, became the latest employer to lodge a constitutional challenge against the National Labor Relations Board, alleging in federal court that the hospital's constitutional rights would be violated if an unfair labor practice proceeding against it continues.
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September 19, 2024
A Maryland federal court approved a $350,000 settlement between an Amalgamated Transit Union affiliate and a former union employee, resolving the worker's overtime claim under the Fair Labor Standards Act.
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September 19, 2024
The federal government's bid to block a proposed merger between grocers Kroger and Albertsons has put a spotlight on the increasing overlap between labor law and antitrust enforcement, and experts said the relatively new frontier is providing an opening to unions and worker advocates.
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September 19, 2024
The Sixth Circuit on Thursday affirmed a National Labor Relations Board decision that found a Michigan hospital violated federal labor law through its offer of severance agreements, but didn't weigh in on whether the board's precedent shift on pacts that include nondisparagement clauses should stand.