Discrimination

  • May 14, 2025

    11th Circ. Won't Reopen White DOD Worker's Race Bias Suit

    The Eleventh Circuit refused to revive a commissary worker's lawsuit claiming the U.S. Department of Defense threatened to suspend her over a Black colleague's false accusations that she'd used a racial slur, ruling Wednesday that she failed to show the agency proposed the discipline because she's white.

  • May 14, 2025

    8th Circ. Raises Safety Questions In Deaf Driver's EEOC Case

    An Eighth Circuit panel fired off questions to a U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission lawyer Wednesday about the agency's trial win on behalf of a deaf truck driver applicant, homing in on the trucking company's contention that safety concerns were behind its decision not to hire him. 

  • May 14, 2025

    7th Circ. Judge Skeptical Of Bias In Exxon Worker's Firing

    A Seventh Circuit judge on Wednesday questioned what evidence a former employee asking the court to revive her discrimination and retaliation lawsuit against ExxonMobil had to refute the company's assertion that it fired her after she behaved unprofessionally and stormed out of a negative performance review.

  • May 14, 2025

    Black Worker Says GM, UAW Failed To Stop Harassment

    General Motors and United Auto Workers failed to step in after a Black employee complained that a white colleague began stalking her after she started dating her ex-boyfriend and instead forced the Black worker to move departments, a lawsuit filed in New York federal court said.

  • May 14, 2025

    USPS Must Cough Up Discipline Data, NLRB Judge Says

    The U.S. Postal Service violated federal labor law by withholding disciplinary records that a union needed to resolve a grievance at a facility in Benton Harbor, Michigan, a National Labor Relations Board judge has ruled, ordering the Postal Service to hand over the records within two weeks.

  • May 14, 2025

    6th Circ. Backs Children's Hospital In Suit Over COVID Testing

    The Sixth Circuit declined Wednesday to reinstate a pharmacist's suit claiming she was illegally fired for refusing to undergo COVID-19 testing on religious grounds, stating she would have put immunocompromised children at risk if her pediatric hospital let her dodge testing.

  • May 14, 2025

    Ex-Paralegal's Bias Claims Still Thin, Pennsylvania Firm Says

    A former Zator Law LLC's paralegal's amended complaint claiming that the firm fired her on the basis of her panic disorder condition lacks specific details about her disability that would support her discrimination and retaliation claims, according to a motion to dismiss recently filed by Zator Law.

  • May 14, 2025

    NJ Firm Blume Forte Seeks To Arbitrate Disability Bias Claims

    New Jersey personal injury firm Blume Forte Fried Zerres & Molinari PC is seeking to force the arbitration of claims from a former staffer regarding her dismissal after being hospitalized for a seizure.

  • May 14, 2025

    Union Pacific Beats Bias Suit Over Color Vision Tests

    Union Pacific defeated a lawsuit claiming it pushed out three conductors because they failed its color vision tests, as a California federal judge ruled the workers couldn't show they were qualified for the jobs or were removed because of a perceived disability.

  • May 14, 2025

    Fisher Phillips Opens Alabama Office With 6 Attorneys

    Employer-side labor law firm Fisher Phillips announced Tuesday the opening of a new six-attorney office in Birmingham, Alabama, its second office opening this month.

  • May 14, 2025

    EEOC Wants Court's Help Getting Info In Race Bias Probe

    The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission has turned to a Chicago federal judge after a packaging company refused to divulge information the agency asked for in an investigation into whether the company made hiring decisions for specific facilities based on workers' race, age or gender.

  • May 14, 2025

    Jewish Worker Says Charter Targeted Her For Flagging Pay

    Charter Communications questioned a Jewish worker's faith after she took time off to treat a kidney infection and threatened to fire her after she fixed workers' time cards to ensure they were paid for all their hours, she alleged in a complaint filed in New York federal court.

  • May 14, 2025

    Monitor Says Okla. Pot Agency Fired Her For Blowing Whistle

    A former contract monitor for the Oklahoma Medical Marijuana Authority is suing the agency, alleging she was wrongly fired and had her file marked "no rehire," preventing her from finding other government work, in retaliation for reporting on a conflict of interest.

  • May 13, 2025

    Ex-Twitter Staff Move To Force Musk's X Corp. Into Arbitration

    Laid-off Twitter Inc. employees in Washington state asked a federal judge to make their ex-employer arbitrate claims that it stiffed them on severance and bonuses, saying the company now known as X Corp. has "refused to proceed with arbitration, despite having successfully blocked employees from pursuing their claims in court."

  • May 13, 2025

    EFAA 'Election' Question Remains After 6th Circ. Ruling

    A Sixth Circuit ruling Monday sending a harassment case to arbitration skirted the issue of how plaintiffs must invoke the shield of a 2022 law barring mandatory arbitration of sexual harassment and assault claims, but experts say it's unlikely workers would have to use any "magic words" to keep their cases in court.

  • May 13, 2025

    Planned Parenthood Wants Teen Program Fund Rule Blocked

    Planned Parenthood on Monday urged a D.C. federal judge to vacate the U.S. government's "unlawful" requirements to "align" with President Donald Trump's executive orders lest risk losing Teen Pregnancy Prevention Program funding, arguing its facilities will suffer staff cuts and loss of medically accurate, age-appropriate education services absent an injunction.

  • May 13, 2025

    1st Circ. Rejects New Trial Bids In Ex-Worker's Retaliation Suit

    The First Circuit said Tuesday that neither an ex-worker nor a demolition company are owed a new trial in a suit alleging the employee was unlawfully fired for requesting a lighter workload following a hip injury, finding his $10,000 jury win was supported by evidence.

  • May 13, 2025

    Judge Trims Ex-Law Student's Bias Suit Against Northwestern

    An Illinois federal judge on Tuesday pared down a lawsuit brought by a Palestinian Muslim ex-law student who claims Northwestern University failed to protect her from the publication of false allegations of assault and harassment that cost her a job at DLA Piper, allowing her discrimination claim to move forward but tossing her claim of a hostile education environment.

  • May 13, 2025

    The Man Who Ended Affirmative Action Is Just Getting Started

    Nearly two years after the U.S. Supreme Court struck down affirmative action in college admissions, the legal strategist who brought the landmark case is using the ruling in a bid to end race-based programs in the public and private sectors, bolstered by allies in the executive branch.

  • May 13, 2025

    Celebrity Doctor Can't Duck WWE Accuser's Info Demand

    A Connecticut judge has refused to throw out a former World Wrestling Entertainment legal staffer's effort to obtain documents from a celebrity doctor who treated her amid alleged sexual abuse by Vince McMahon, finding that the state-level court has subject-matter jurisdiction over her petition for pre-litigation information. 

  • May 13, 2025

    6th Circ. Clears Teacher To Fight Exclusion From Rehire List

    The Sixth Circuit breathed new life into a teacher's lawsuit claiming a Tennessee school district unlawfully failed to place her on a reemployment candidate list after it eliminated her position, saying a trial court took too narrow a view of whether omission from the list caused harm.

  • May 13, 2025

    11th Circ. Backs Paper Co. Win In Worker's Equal Pay Suit

    An environmental engineer who accused her former employer of paying her less than men cannot get a new trial, the Eleventh Circuit ruled Tuesday, saying the lower court's decision to exclude certain evidence was harmless.

  • May 13, 2025

    3rd Circ. Says Worker's Pre-Suit EEOC Filings Are Inadequate

    The Third Circuit refused to revive an age bias suit from a former community college employee who claimed she was mistreated by a younger supervisor, rejecting her argument that a U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission intake form and other documents qualified as her required pre-suit discrimination charge.

  • May 13, 2025

    Ex-Defender Can't Block Mystery Info In Sex Bias Case Appeal

    The federal government can submit additional documents from a district court case record in an appeal by a former assistant public defender in North Carolina who accused the federal judiciary of sex bias, the Fourth Circuit ruled Tuesday over the assistant public defender's objections.

  • May 13, 2025

    Democracy Forward Picks Up 4 More Ex-DOJ Attys

    The legal advocacy group Democracy Forward has brought on four former U.S. Department of Justice litigators, adding to a string of hires the organization has made from the federal government as it takes on the Trump administration in court.

Expert Analysis

  • Water Cooler Talk: Insights On Noncompetes From 'The Office'

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    Troutman Pepper’s Tracey Diamond, Evan Gibbs, Constance Brewster and Jim Earle compare scenarios from “The Office” to the complex world of noncompetes and associated tax issues, as employers are becoming increasingly hesitant to look to noncompete provisions amid a potential federal ban.

  • High Court's Job Bias Questions May Predict Title VII Ruling

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    Employers may be able to predict — and prepare for — important changes to workplace discrimination laws by examining the questions the U.S. Supreme Court asked during oral arguments for Muldrow v. St. Louis, where several justices seemed to favor a low threshold for Title VII suits, says Wendy LaManque at Pryor Cashman.

  • 2 Cases Highlight NJ Cannabis Employment Law Uncertainties

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    More than two years after its enactment, the employee protections and employer obligations in New Jersey's Cannabis Regulatory, Enforcement Assistance and Marketplace Modernization Act remain unsettled, and two recent lawsuits draw attention to the law's enforceability and its intersection with federal law, say Ruth Rauls at Saul Ewing and David White at Seton Hall.

  • 3 Compliance Reminders For Calif. Employers In 2024

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    As we enter into the new year, several recent updates to California employment law — including minimum wage and sick leave requirements — necessitate immediate compliance actions for employers, says Daniel Pyne at Hopkins & Carley.

  • Sex Harassment Arbitration Exemption: Devil Is In The Date

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    A Federal Arbitration Act amendment that exempts workplace sexual harassment claims from arbitration is muddled in ongoing confusion about its chronological reach — and as many such cases begin to run up against applicable statutes of limitations, the clock is ticking for claimants to bring their actions in court, says Abe Melamed at Signature Resolution.

  • Top 10 Employer Resolutions For 2024

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    From technological leaps to sea changes in labor policy to literal sea changes, 2024 provides opportunities for employers to face big-picture questions that will shape their business for years to come, say Allegra Lawrence-Hardy and Lisa Haldar at Lawrence & Bundy.

  • Lessons Learned From 2023's Top FMLA Decisions

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    This year’s most significant Family and Medical Leave Act decisions offer lessons on the act's technical requirements, including the definition of serious health condition, compliance with notice requirements and whether it is permissible to give an employee substantial extra work upon their return from leave, says Linda Dwoskin at Dechert.

  • Artificial Intelligence Is In Need Of Regulation — But How?

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    Since most of the artificial intelligence-related laws in 2023 were part of more extensive consumer privacy law, the U.S. still has a lot of work to do to build consensus on how to oversee AI, and even who should do the regulating, before moving forward on specific and reasonable guidelines as AI's capabilities grow, say Nick Toufexis and Paul Saputo at Saputo Toufexis.

  • Lessons Learned From 2023's Top ADA Decisions

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    This year saw the courts delving into the complexities of employee accommodations under the Americans with Disabilities Act in the post-pandemic workplace, going beyond bright-line rules with fact-intensive inquiries that are likely to create uncertainty for employers, says Linda Dwoskin at Dechert.

  • What's Ahead For Immigrant Employee Rights Enforcement

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    The U.S. Department of Justice’s increased enforcement related to immigration-based employment discrimination is coupled with pending constitutional challenges to administrative tribunals, suggesting employers should leverage those headwinds when facing investigations or class action-style litigation, say attorneys at Jones Day.

  • Top 10 Whistleblowing And Retaliation Events Of 2023

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    The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission and federal and state courts made 2023 another groundbreaking year for whistleblower litigation and retaliation developments, including the SEC’s massive whistleblower awards, which are likely to continue into 2024 and further incentivize individuals to submit tips, say attorneys at Proskauer.

  • 10 Steps To Reduce Risks From AI Employment Tools

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    In light of the White House’s recent executive order on responsible use of artificial intelligence, companies using AI tools to make employment decisions should take steps to understand and mitigate the legal risks posed by these products and keep up with the rapidly evolving regulations that govern them, say attorneys at Cooley.

  • What Employers Can Learn From EEOC's 2023 ADA Priorities

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    Between a spike in Americans with Disabilities Act suits filed by the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission in 2023 and the agency’s newly released priorities, the EEOC has provided employers a preview of several ADA issues — like web accessibility, pregnancy discrimination and inflexible policies — it will likely focus enforcement on next year, says Stacy Bunck at Ogletree.