Labor

  • October 21, 2024

    Retired Conn. Firefighters Sue Over Healthcare Switch

    A group of 119 retired union firefighters for the city of Stamford, Connecticut, sued the city in state court Monday, seeking an injunction preventing the city from changing their healthcare benefits.

  • October 21, 2024

    Fan-Maker Joins Other Cos. With NLRB Constitutional Claims

    A fan manufacturer is the latest employer to seek an injunction against a National Labor Relations Board case and raise allegations about the constitutionality of the agency's structure, with the company claiming the outcome of the administrative proceeding could threaten worker safety.

  • October 21, 2024

    9th Circ. Probes Bargaining Order Limits In 1st Cemex Review

    In the first court challenge to the National Labor Relations Board's landmark Cemex ruling, the Ninth Circuit grappled Monday with whether the labor board's new standard for issuing bargaining orders complies with a framework the U.S. Supreme Court set out more than 50 years ago.

  • October 21, 2024

    Boeing Machinists To Vote On New Tentative Wage Deal

    Approximately 33,000 Boeing employees represented by the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers will vote Wednesday on a tentative new labor contract that includes a 35% wage increase over four years, potentially ending a more than monthlong strike that hampered Boeing's production and cash flow.

  • October 21, 2024

    Sean Penn's NGO Challenges NLRB's Revival Of Threat Claim

    A National Labor Relations Board judge used the correct legal standard to clear Sean Penn's nongovernmental organization of allegations that Penn threatened to retaliate against employees who critiqued the disaster relief group's work, the group argued, asking the board to rethink its decision to vacate the judge's ruling.

  • October 21, 2024

    NLRB Official Signs Off On Union Vote At Vehicle Service Co.

    Technicians and other workers at an emergency vehicle maintenance company may vote on whether they want an International Association of Machinists local in Illinois to represent them, a National Labor Relations Board regional director concluded, blocking the company's bid for a larger bargaining unit.

  • October 18, 2024

    Law360 MVP Awards Go To Top Attys From 74 Firms

    The attorneys chosen as Law360's 2024 MVPs have distinguished themselves from their peers by securing hard-earned successes in high-stakes litigation, complex global matters and record-breaking deals.

  • October 18, 2024

    Spirit AeroSystems Furloughs 700 As Boeing Strike Endures

    Boeing Co. supplier Spirit AeroSystems Inc. said Friday that it will furlough 700 employees for three weeks to save costs as Boeing's production lines have ground to a halt amid a prolonged labor standoff with the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers.

  • October 18, 2024

    NLRB Official Sets Union Vote At Hotel In Buffalo, NY

    The staff of a Buffalo, New York, hotel can vote on representation by a Workers United affiliate, a National Labor Relations Board official said Friday, though she excluded housekeeping and laundry workers from the proposed bargaining unit because they do not have enough in common with the other employees.

  • October 18, 2024

    What To Expect As 9th Circ. Mulls 1st Cemex Challenge

    The Ninth Circuit will hear arguments Monday in the first challenge to the National Labor Relations Board's revised approach to ordering employers that interfere with organizing drives to recognize and bargain with unions. Here, Law360 previews the hearing.

  • October 18, 2024

    Chamber Of Commerce Seeks Stay Of H-2A Rule For Harvest

    The U.S. Chamber of Commerce pushed a Mississippi federal court to stay a policy allowing H-2A migrant farmworkers to organize, saying its members can't risk being penalized under the policy while the Chamber challenges the rule's legality.

  • October 18, 2024

    NLRB Official Approves Union Vote For Ladder Makers

    A National Labor Relations Board official ruled 18 ladder welders can vote on being represented by the International Union of Operating Engineers, rejecting a ladder manufacturer's arguments that more employees belong in the petitioned-for unit.

  • October 18, 2024

    NY Forecast: Workers Want Collective Status In Care Co. Suit

    This week, a federal magistrate judge will consider competing motions over the continuation of a collective action brought by former workers at a western New York home healthcare provider who claim they were not properly paid overtime required by federal law. Here, Law360 looks at this and another case on the docket in New York.

  • October 18, 2024

    NLRB Says Amazon's Fast 5th Circ. Appeal Disrespects Court

    Amazon manufactured an emergency to get a constitutional challenge to the National Labor Relations Board's structure before the Fifth Circuit as soon as possible, the board told the appeals court in a new brief, urging it to reject the company's tactic and refuse to hear the case.

  • October 18, 2024

    Calif. Forecast: 9th Circ. Reviews NLRB's Cemex Decision

    In the coming week, attorneys should watch for oral arguments at the Ninth Circuit in which Cemex Construction Materials Pacific LLC and the International Brotherhood of Teamsters are each seeking to undo a major National Labor Relations Board decision regarding union representation. Here's a look at that case and other labor and employment matters on deck in California.

  • October 18, 2024

    Hospital Looks To Use Loper Bright To Ax Union Dues Ruling

    The Ninth Circuit should have analyzed federal labor law instead of adopting the National Labor Relations Board's analysis when deciding whether an employer may stop deducting union dues once its union contract expires, a Nevada hospital argued, asking the U.S. Supreme Court to reverse a pair of rulings.

  • October 17, 2024

    Calif. Teamsters Local Beats Back Claim Of Organizer Threat

    A Southern California Teamsters local has defeated an anti-union truck driver's claim that a union organizer threatened him and another anti-union driver, with a National Labor Relations Board judge ruling Thursday that there's insufficient proof that the incident occurred.

  • October 17, 2024

    UAW Eyes Future With Fight Over Stellantis Investments

    Stellantis has filed nearly a dozen lawsuits accusing the United Auto Workers of trumping up claims the company abandoned investment commitments it made in a labor contract, waging a contentious and public dispute experts said shows the union's attempt to steer the industry after its strike victory less than a year ago.

  • October 17, 2024

    6th Circ. Can't Ax Captive Audience Memo, NLRB Atty Says

    A Michigan federal judge properly tossed a challenge to a memo that outlined why National Labor Relations Board general counsel Jennifer Abruzzo thinks so-called captive audience meetings are illegal, Abruzzo told the Sixth Circuit, saying the memo isn't the kind of agency action that's reviewable in federal courts.

  • October 17, 2024

    Athletes 'Easily' Clear 3rd Circ. Employee Test, Atty Says

    The lead attorney who persuaded the Third Circuit to hold that college athletes may be employees under federal wage law said Thursday that his clients are clearly employees under the test the court set out, drawing a favorable comparison to work-study participants.

  • October 17, 2024

    Starbucks Can't Disturb Threat Standard, NLRB Tells 8th Circ.

    The Eighth Circuit should reject Starbucks' "groundless" challenge to the well-established standard for determining when employers' statements constitute unlawful threats, the National Labor Relations Board has argued, asking the court to enforce the board's holding that a store manager threatened unionizing workers by saying they might not get raises.

  • October 16, 2024

    Conn. Nurses Sue To Block Forced Post-Contract Overtime

    A union representing nurses at a Hartford HealthCare-affiliated hospital in Norwich, Connecticut, has asked a state superior court judge to block mandatory overtime assignments, arguing that a 2020 union contract requiring such shifts expired over the summer and that a 2023 state statute bans the hospital's continuing practices.

  • October 16, 2024

    NLRB Judge Calls Alaska Hotel's Suit Against Union Unlawful

    An Alaska hotel violated the National Labor Relations Act when it accused a union of defamation and unlawful boycott activity in a federal lawsuit, a National Labor Relations Board judge ruled Wednesday, calling the suit baseless, retaliatory and preempted by federal labor law.

  • October 16, 2024

    As 500th Starbucks Unionizes, A Changed Campaign Persists

    The campaign to unionize Starbucks has notched its 500th win a little over three years after its public debut, reaching this milestone as a changed but potent movement that continues to expand as it inches toward its first contracts, experts said.

  • October 16, 2024

    Cleaner Fights NLRB's Strike Fund Order At DC Circ.

    An industrial cleaning company urged the D.C. Circuit to undo a National Labor Relations Board decision finding the company unlawfully fired workers as part of an aggressive anti-union campaign, saying the board exceeded its authority when ordering it to reimburse a union for payments it made to striking workers.

Expert Analysis

  • Game-Changing Decisions Call For New Rules At The NCAA

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    From a newly formed college players union to coaches transferring at the drop of a hat, the National College Athletic Association needs an overhaul, including federal supervision, says Frank Darras at DarrasLaw.

  • What Makes Unionization In Financial Services Unique

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    Only around 1% of financial services employees are part of a union, but that number is on the rise, presenting both unique opportunities and challenges for the employers and employees that make up a sector typically devoid of union activity, say Amanda Fugazy and Steven Nevolis at Ellenoff Grossman.

  • Assessing Work Rules After NLRB Handbook Ruling

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    The National Labor Relations Board's Stericycle decision last year sparked uncertainty surrounding whether historically acceptable work rules remain lawful — but employers can use a two-step analysis to assess whether to implement a given rule and how to do so in a compliant manner, say attorneys at Seyfarth.

  • A Look At Global Employee Disconnect Laws For US Counsel

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    As countries worldwide adopt employee right to disconnect laws, U.S. in-house counsel at corporations with a global workforce must develop a comprehensive understanding of the laws' legal and cultural implications, ensuring their companies can safeguard employee welfare while maintaining legal compliance, say Emma Corcoran and Ute Krudewagen at DLA Piper.

  • Employers Beware Of NLRB Changes On Bad Faith Bargaining

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    Recent National Labor Relations Board decisions show a trend of the agency imposing harsher remedies on employers for bad faith bargaining over union contracts, a position upheld in the Ninth Circuit's recent NLRB v. Grill Concepts Services decision, says Daniel Johns at Cozen O'Connor.

  • Practicing Law With Parkinson's Disease

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    This Parkinson’s Awareness Month, Adam Siegler at Greenberg Traurig discusses his experience working as a lawyer with Parkinson’s disease, sharing both lessons on how to cope with a diagnosis and advice for supporting colleagues who live with the disease.

  • What A Post-Chevron Landscape Could Mean For Labor Law

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    With the U.S. Supreme Court’s ruling on Chevron deference expected by the end of June, it’s not too soon to consider how National Labor Relations Act interpretations could be affected if federal courts no longer defer to administrative agencies’ statutory interpretation and regulatory actions, say attorneys at Morgan Lewis.

  • Eye On Compliance: Employee Social Media Privacy In NY

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    A New York law that recently took effect restricts employers' ability to access the personal social media accounts of employees and job applicants, signifying an increasing awareness of the need to balance employers' interests with worker privacy and free speech rights, says Madjeen Garcon-Bonneau at Wilson Elser.

  • Spartan Arbitration Tactics Against Well-Funded Opponents

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    Like the ancient Spartans who held off a numerically superior Persian army at the Battle of Thermopylae, trial attorneys and clients faced with arbitration against an opponent with a bigger war chest can take a strategic approach to create a pass to victory, say Kostas Katsiris and Benjamin Argyle at Venable.

  • What The NIL Negotiation Rules Injunction Means For NCAA

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    A Tennessee federal court's recent preliminary injunction reverses several prominent and well-established NCAA rules on negotiations with student-athletes over name, image and likeness compensation and shows that collegiate athletics is a profoundly unsettled legal environment, say attorneys at Pillsbury.

  • Takeaways From NLRB Advice On 'Outside' Employment

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    Rebecca Leaf at Miles & Stockbridge examines a recent memo from the National Labor Relations Board’s Division of Advice that said it’s unlawful for employers to restrict secondary or outside employment, and explains what companies should know about the use of certain restrictive covenants going forward.

  • Shaping Speech Policies After NLRB's BLM Protest Ruling

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    After the National Labor Relations Board decided last month that a Home Depot employee was protected by federal labor law when they wore a Black Lives Matter slogan on their apron, employers should consider four questions in order to mitigate legal risks associated with workplace political speech policies, say Louis Cannon and Cassandra Horton at Baker Donelson.

  • 2026 World Cup: Companies Face Labor Challenges And More

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    Companies sponsoring or otherwise involved with the 2026 FIFA World Cup — hosted jointly by the U.S., Canada and Mexico — should be proactive in preparing to navigate many legal considerations in immigration, labor management and multijurisdictional workforces surrounding the event, say attorneys at Morgan Lewis.

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