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Wage & Hour

  • October 07, 2022

    Texas Justices Say Officials Can Cut Judge's Extra Work Pay

    County commissioners in Texas are within their rights to refuse supplemental salary to a statutory probate court judge that also serves a local administrative statutory probate court judge, the Texas Supreme Court ruled Friday.

  • October 07, 2022

    Calif. Joins List Of States Tackling Paid Leave Requirements

    California's recent enactment of expanded leave protections allowing employees to care for individuals who aren't a legal relative comes as many other states have taken action to expand access to paid leave, adding a new wrinkle to a nationwide patchwork of policies that have always challenged employers.

  • October 07, 2022

    Chipotle To Arbitrate Unpaid OT, Late Wages Claims

    Chipotle and a worker who accused the company of illegally compelling off-the-clock work without pay will take their dispute to an arbitrator, the parties told a New York federal court.

  • October 07, 2022

    Verizon Retailer's $90K Wage Deal Gets Final Nod

    A Verizon Wireless authorized retailer will pay about $90,000 to a group of workers who claimed they were stiffed on minimum wage and overtime, ending a 10-year-old lawsuit in New York federal court.

  • October 07, 2022

    Postmates Can't Arbitrate Wage Suit, Drivers Tell 1st Circ.

    A group of Postmates couriers told the First Circuit that they, like Amazon last-mile delivery drivers, were engaged in interstate commerce and were exempt from arbitrating claims that they were misclassified as independent contractors.

  • October 07, 2022

    DOL Says Cos.' Owner Assaulted Worker Who Demanded Pay

    The owner of a furniture business and a moving company punched and stuck his fingers into the eyes of a former employee after the worker demanded to be paid, the U.S. Department of Labor alleged in a suit in Massachusetts federal court Friday.

  • October 07, 2022

    Barton Expands Employment Practice With Partner Hire

    Barton LLP is building its employment and labor credentials by grabbing another firm's leader in that practice as a new partner, it announced recently.

  • October 07, 2022

    1st Circ. Weighs Authority To Hear FedEx Wage Tax Fight

    The First Circuit considered whether it could hear a case by FedEx drivers who claimed their wages were stolen, questioning during oral arguments whether the drivers were actually injured when their employer failed to remit their taxes to the government.

  • October 07, 2022

    Calif. Forecast: Red Cross Wants Bias Suit Evidence Barred

    In the coming week, attorneys should watch for a potential barring of evidence in a former American Red Cross account manager's race and gender discrimination lawsuit. Here's a look at that case and other labor and employment matters coming up in California.

  • October 07, 2022

    Greyhound Faces Wage Suit From Bus Drivers

    Bus company Greyhound Lines stiffs drivers on wages by paying them based on time estimates for their routes instead of actual time worked, according to a proposed class action in California federal court.

  • October 07, 2022

    NY Forecast: 2nd Circ. Hears Power Co. Union Arbitration Row

    The Second Circuit this week will consider a power company's bid to undo a lower court judge's decision ordering it to arbitrate a union's grievance regarding retiree benefits. Here, Law360 looks at that case and other major labor and employment cases on the docket in the Empire State.

  • October 07, 2022

    Va. Staffing Co. Owes $278K In Back Pay, DOL Says

    A construction staffing agency in southern Virginia is on the hook for more than $278,000 for wrongly classifying employees as independent contractors and shorting them on overtime wages, the U.S. Department of Labor said.

  • October 06, 2022

    OT-Seeking Building Material Workers Want Collective Cert.

    A pair of building product manufacturing workers urged a Georgia federal court Thursday to conditionally certify a collective of hundreds of hourly employees, telling the court that they were all the victims of a companywide policy to round hours down and underpay for overtime.

  • October 06, 2022

    9th Circ. Mulls Asking Wash. Justices For Wage Law Weigh-In

    Two Ninth Circuit judges on Thursday indicated interest in hearing from the Washington Supreme Court on whether the state's minimum wage law covers detainees at a Geo Group-run immigration facility, but the company argued that input isn't necessary to overturn $23.2 million in judgments against it.

  • October 06, 2022

    SEIU Helps NY AG Get $3M Settlement For Underpaid Workers

    The New York attorney general helped obtain $3 million from a real estate developer after a Service Employees International Union local alleged that the company violated the city's tax credit program at properties in Queens and Brooklyn, according to an announcement Thursday.

  • October 06, 2022

    Workers Say Furniture Co. Punishes Them For OT Demands

    A trio of furniture and workspace installation specialists in Georgia accused their employer of illegally refusing to pay Fair Labor Standards Act-mandated time-and-a-half pay, punishing those who complain and discriminating against Black employees.

  • October 06, 2022

    Ore. Hemp Cos. Face $388K Fine For Ignoring Migrants' Suit

    A trio of Oregon hemp businesses should pay their migrant workers $388,000 after refusing to respond to their lawsuit alleging the workers were underpaid and kept in unsafe and unsanitary housing, an Oregon magistrate judge recommended.

  • October 06, 2022

    Elder Care App Workers Land Collective Cert. In OT Wage Suit

    A California federal judge found that arguments that workers for a chore help and companionship app for seniors were misclassified as independent contractors warranted conditional collective certification in an overtime pay suit.

  • October 06, 2022

    OFCCP Rounds Out Fiscal Year With Hiring, Pay Bias Deals

    The U.S. Department of Labor's federal contractor bias watchdog released several agreements with federal contractors that agreed to cover back wages and damages for workers the agency said were affected by discrimination in pay and the hiring process.

  • October 06, 2022

    Companies' Litigation Caseloads Grow Faster Than Spending

    In a reversal from last year, the number of cases companies are litigating is growing faster than the amount of money being spent on that litigation, according to a new report published Thursday.

  • October 06, 2022

    DOL Fines Va. Health Care Co. $703K For Underpaying Wages

    A home health care company in southern Virginia is liable for more than $703,000 in back wages and damages after it underpaid workers and interfered in the U.S. Department of Labor's investigation into its pay practices, according to the agency.

  • October 05, 2022

    Staffing Co. Can't Dodge Forced Labor Claims In Nurse's Suit

    A New York federal judge has allowed a registered nurse scouted from the Philippines to proceed with her forced labor claims under the Trafficking Victims Protection Act against a nurse staffing agency, finding sufficient allegations that the staffing agency threatened to force her to pay $33,320 if she left her job.

  • October 05, 2022

    Supreme Court Orders Redo Of Calif. Cases After Viking River

    The U.S. Supreme Court vacated two separate California appellate court rulings in light of the justices' Viking River decision that shuffled the cards for arbitrating Private Attorneys General Act suits, remanding the cases back to the Golden State's courts.

  • October 05, 2022

    Lighting Co., Ex-Manager To Mediate Parental Leave Suit

    A lawsuit in which a former product manager alleged a lighting company fired him for taking parental leave after his child was born will go into mediation, a Massachusetts federal judge ordered Wednesday.

  • October 05, 2022

    Emirates Airline Unit Accused Of Illegal Biweekly Pay

    A former baggage handler accused an Emirates Airline affiliate of violating New York labor law by paying its baggage handlers and ramp agents on a biweekly basis rather than weekly.

Expert Analysis

  • A Look At Recent Service Contract Act Compliance Challenges

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    Complying with the Service Contract Act and potential U.S. Department of Labor audits have grown tougher due to the rise of remote work and increasing inflation, but certain best practices can help manage compliance risks, say Eric Leonard and Craig Smith at Wiley.

  • Worker Misclassification Poses Large Perils For NJ Cos.

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    Considering the New Jersey Legislature’s and governor’s recent focus on worker misclassification — as well as the state supreme court’s recent interpretation of the so-called ABC test — the dangers of noncompliance for businesses that use independent contractors cannot be understated, say Brent Bouma and Peter Shapiro at Lewis Brisbois.

  • All Employers Must Heed Md. Paid Commuting Time Ruling

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    The Maryland Court of Appeals’ recent ruling that federal pay carveouts for preliminary work don't apply to state wage laws is a wake-up call for employers nationwide, who should proactively review their employees' pre- and post-shift activities, analyze state laws, and take steps to avoid liability, say Kirsten Eriksson and Elisabeth Hall at Miles & Stockbridge.

  • Why FLSA Settlement Reviews May Be Increasingly Unneeded

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    While most federal courts have followed the Eleventh Circuit's 1982 holding in Lynn's Food v. U.S. that Fair Labor Standards Act claims may be settled only with approval by a court or the U.S. Department of Labor, more courts are beginning to question — or outright challenge — that obligation, say attorneys at Jackson Lewis.

  • Key Takeaways From Calif.'s Sweeping Fast-Food Wage Law

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    California Gov. Gavin Newsom recently signed a controversial wage bill that will have a major impact on fast-food employers and employees, will likely shape how the state regulates other industries in the future, and represents a radical step toward sectoral bargaining, says Pooja Nair at Ervin Cohen.

  • Forecasting A Rise In 11th Circ. State Court Class Actions

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    Two recent opinions from the Eleventh Circuit have created an unusual landscape that may result in a substantial increase of class action litigation in state courts, particularly in Florida, that will be unable to utilize removal tools such as the Class Action Fairness Act, says Alec Schultz at Hilgers Graben.

  • Key Employer Takeaways From DOJ's Poultry Antitrust Case

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    The U.S. Department of Justice’s settlement with three major U.S. poultry processors for allegedly conspiring to fix employee wages and benefits may signal an uptick in antitrust violation investigations and serves as a reminder to companies of the risks they face when managing employee personal data, say attorneys at Akin Gump.

  • Recent Employer Lessons On Facing Calif. Labor Hearings

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    A California state appeals court in Elsie Seviour-Iloff v. LaPaille recently set forth multiple important holdings expanding the potential relief available to employees pursuing administrative relief for wage claims with the Division of Labor Standards Enforcement, and they offer crucial takeaways for employers, says Tyler Bernstein at Sheppard Mullin.

  • Poultry Sector Wage-Fixing Case Shows Info Exchange Risks

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    The nearly $85 million settlement of a U.S. Department of Justice case accusing Cargill and other poultry processors of conspiring to suppress worker pay should prod employers and trade groups to scrutinize all exchanges of potentially competitive sensitive information for compliance with labor market antitrust rules, say attorneys at Mintz.

  • Beware Employee Tracking As A Response To 'Quiet Quitting'

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    "Quiet quitting" — a recent trend that encourages a bare-minimum work ethic — may prompt employers to electronically monitor worker productivity, but this response raises concerns about discrimination, employee classification, labor law compliance, overtime pay and workplace morale, says Chris Deubert at Constangy Brooks.

  • 9th Circ. Class Cert. Move Illustrates Individual Claim Issues

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    The Ninth Circuit's recent class certification decision in Bowerman v. Field Asset Services illustrates the challenges presented when a defendant argues that not all putative class members have been injured or that damages must be determined on a claimant-by-claimant basis, says Robert Fuller at Robinson Bradshaw.

  • What Proposed Contractor Rule May Mean For Wage Litigation

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    The Biden administration's proposed independent contractor rule could have major implications for wage and hour litigation, but comparing it to the Trump administration's rule could help employers prepare for the next phase of employee classification disputes, say Jessica Scott and Frederick Yarger at Wheeler Trigg.

  • A Calif. Employer's Guide To Telework Expense Obligations

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    As the COVID-19 pandemic recedes and California employers face an increase in workplace reimbursement lawsuits from remote employees, it’s imperative to know what expenses must be covered — and how repayment should be administered — under state law, says Eric Fox at Gordon & Rees.