State and city lawmakers are expected to keep passing increased worker protections in the coming year, including expanded leave laws, salary history bans and minimum pay standards for app-based workers — signaling a sustained shift in workplace norms, attorneys said. Here, Law360 explores the legislative trends that employment law practitioners should watch out for in 2024.
The U.S. Department of Labor set the publishing date for the final rule determining employees' overtime eligibility, while missing its self-imposed November deadline for a final rule that would sort out workers' classification.
As the U.S. Supreme Court continues to weigh who qualifies for the Federal Arbitration Act’s interstate transportation worker exemption, state arbitration laws remain an option for employers and an obstacle for workers. Here, Law360 explores the state arbitration law issue in light of high court cases.
Previous
Next
State and city lawmakers are expected to keep passing increased worker protections in the coming year, including expanded leave laws, salary history bans and minimum pay standards for app-based workers — signaling a sustained shift in workplace norms, attorneys said. Here, Law360 explores the legislative trends that employment law practitioners should watch out for in 2024.
The U.S. Department of Labor set the publishing date for the final rule determining employees' overtime eligibility, while missing its self-imposed November deadline for a final rule that would sort out workers' classification.
As the U.S. Supreme Court continues to weigh who qualifies for the Federal Arbitration Act’s interstate transportation worker exemption, state arbitration laws remain an option for employers and an obstacle for workers. Here, Law360 explores the state arbitration law issue in light of high court cases.
-
December 08, 2023
A California state judge on Friday certified a class of at least 8,900 women who say The Walt Disney Co. paid them less than their male colleagues, rejecting Disney's argument that the women failed to adequately identify "substantially similar" jobs performed by the men and women.
-
December 08, 2023
A deal that will see a diagnostic imaging company pay $768,000 to technologists who alleged they were denied adequate meal breaks earned a California federal judge's final stamp of approval Friday.
-
December 08, 2023
Rocket Mortgage can't duck claims that it compelled mortgage brokers to work overtime hours without commensurate pay, as an Arizona federal judge ruled that workers' claims about their regular after-hours work were specific and plausible.
-
December 08, 2023
The U.S. Supreme Court agreed Friday to mull whether a deadline to challenge the Merit Systems Protection Board's decisions can have any wiggle room, taking up a U.S. Department of Defense worker's challenge to a Federal Circuit decision deeming his appeal untimely.
-
December 08, 2023
The U.S. Department of Labor urged a Michigan federal judge Friday to sign off on a settlement ending its suit accusing the owner of an assisted living facility of retaliating against workers who had helped the department in its investigation into the business's pay practices.
-
December 08, 2023
The House Education and the Workforce Committee's chairwoman urged the U.S. Department of Labor to commit that it will not issue its own version of a rule mulling joint employment like the National Labor Relations Board recently did.
-
December 08, 2023
Ex-servers for a pair of Manhattan eateries urged a New York federal court to certify a class of workers they say were underpaid and forced to share tips with ineligible colleagues, arguing that common proof could determine whether the restaurants' pay policies were lawful.
-
December 08, 2023
A proposed class of pilots can't invalidate 57 settlement releases in its wage and hour lawsuit against an airline, a California federal judge has ruled, saying that while the airline could have done a better job of communicating with proposed class members, the pilots are sophisticated enough to advocate for themselves.
-
December 08, 2023
A California federal judge cut a supervisor free from a former driver's suit alleging her transportation company mistreated and eventually fired her because of her older age and diabetes, ruling that the driver didn't show the discipline she faced for paperwork mistakes was harassment.
-
December 08, 2023
This week, the Second Circuit will consider a former Federal Aviation Administration employee's lawsuit claiming he was retaliated against for a race discrimination suit he filed against the agency. Here, Law360 explores this and other major labor and employment cases on the docket in New York.
-
December 08, 2023
In the coming week, attorneys should watch for a potential judgment on the pleadings in a proposed wage and hour class action against United Airlines Inc. Here's a look at that case and other labor and employment matters coming up in California.
-
December 08, 2023
A bus driver alleged a Savannah school district has been neglecting to pay drivers their full overtime wages owed by failing to factor performance bonuses into overtime premium calculations, according to a proposed collective action filed in Georgia federal court.
-
December 08, 2023
The Ninth Circuit can decide immediately whether the U.S. Department of Labor should have required employers to pay foreign harvest workers at a higher rate available, a union and a worker said, arguing the issue at stake is straightforward.
-
December 07, 2023
An attorney for a proposed class of drivers alleging Uber's ratings system is racially biased told the Ninth Circuit on Thursday that the lower court kept "moving the goalpost" through multiple amended complaints while requiring evidence not required at the pleading stage.
-
December 07, 2023
Better Mortgage's bid to revive the new arbitration and release agreements it gave to possible class members after being faced with a wage and hour class action can't stand, a Ninth Circuit panel ruled Thursday, saying it lacked jurisdiction over that challenge.
-
December 07, 2023
A North Carolina federal judge declined to revise his final decision that several partner entities of an Apple-affiliated repair company were liable for hundreds of thousands of dollars in damages in a multistate wage class action, saying he did not find any issues warranting a correction.
-
December 07, 2023
My Pillow will pay 100 current and former customer service workers nearly $37,000 in a settlement resolving claims that it violated the Fair Labor Standards Act and Minnesota wage law by compelling them to perform preshift work booting up their computers without pay.
-
December 07, 2023
The U.S. Department of Labor told a California federal court not to allow a supermarket to block discovery proceedings in a wage investigation, saying the "one-sided and ultimately undefined" pause would prevent workers from receiving back wages they're owed.
-
December 07, 2023
A North Carolina credit union forced call center workers to perform preshift activities and to wait at their workstations after their shifts without commensurate overtime pay, a former employee alleged in a proposed class and collective action in federal court.
-
December 07, 2023
Michigan's Supreme Court justices appeared aware on Thursday that employers are anxiously awaiting their ruling on the state's minimum wage and sick time laws, devoting some of the day's arguments to the practicalities of what would happen if they struck down the current laws.
-
December 07, 2023
The risk posed by COVID-19 is not specific to work performed in Amazon's warehouses, an Illinois federal judge said Thursday, ruling that coronavirus screenings mandated by the company are not compensable under federal and state laws because they are not integral to employees' work.
-
December 07, 2023
A civilian who was charged with the management of lodging services at a U.S. Air Force base was denied access to paid safety leave during the COVID-19 pandemic, he told an Arizona federal court.
-
December 07, 2023
A California elder care company will pay $5.5 million to 148 employees who were denied their full wages, the California Labor Commissioner's Office said.
-
December 07, 2023
Workers accusing translation services company TransPerfect of underpaying their overtime wages mostly endorsed a New York federal magistrate judge's recommendation to certify their class of over 200 account executives while asking the court to expand the class definition.
-
December 06, 2023
In a dispute over whether the Allegheny County Council or the county executive has the power to set the minimum wage for county employees, a Pennsylvania state court came down in favor of the executive Wednesday.