A Seventh Circuit panel on Wednesday partially reversed an Illinois federal court's decision giving the Illinois Department of Human Services a win on two former workers' claims of illegal pregnancy-related firings, saying that there are still open factual questions as to one worker.
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.
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.
Previous
Next
A Seventh Circuit panel on Wednesday partially reversed an Illinois federal court's decision giving the Illinois Department of Human Services a win on two former workers' claims of illegal pregnancy-related firings, saying that there are still open factual questions as to one worker.
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.
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 15, 2025
Two Ninth Circuit judges cast doubt on the University of Washington's defense in a First Amendment lawsuit on Thursday, questioning why the college would remove a professor's parody of a Native American land acknowledgment from his class syllabus while permitting him to broadcast the same opinions elsewhere in the academic setting.
-
May 15, 2025
The full Ninth Circuit upheld a win for BNSF Railway on Thursday in a now-deceased conductor's lawsuit alleging he was fired in retaliation for testing train cars' brakes, finding the railroad had met the high bar required for lawful firing under whistleblower protection law.
-
May 15, 2025
The Third Circuit reopened a former Philadelphia police officer's lawsuit claiming he was unlawfully transferred to a less prestigious division because he was in his 60s, saying the case needed another look based on the U.S. Supreme Court's clarification of the standard for workplace discrimination claims.
-
May 15, 2025
An Alabama federal jury has awarded $640,000 in damages to a millwright who said he was called a racist slur, demoted and then fired within months of being hired by an industrial services company.
-
May 15, 2025
A New York appellate panel has voiced doubts that a former judicial secretary's sex abuse lawsuit should have been dismissed, challenging the state system's arguments that it didn't employ her and thus can't be held liable for any harms she suffered.
-
May 15, 2025
The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission slapped a Hawaii hotel with a lawsuit Thursday accusing its owner of widespread, long-running sexual harassment that allegedly included sexual advances, inappropriate touching and demands for massages while he was naked.
-
May 15, 2025
The Fifth Circuit upheld BNSF Railway Co.'s defeat of a former conductor's suit claiming he was fired because of his color vision deficiency, saying his inability to obtain certification under railroad safety laws made him unqualified for the job.
-
May 15, 2025
A bipartisan group of U.S. House members floated a bill that aims to strike a provision from the Family and Medical Leave Act that limits leave for married couples who work for the same employer.
-
May 14, 2025
Since the U.S. Supreme Court struck down affirmative action in higher education admissions, schools around the country have been looking for innovative ways to achieve diversity on campus amid constant threats of additional litigation that could make them the next high-profile high court case.
-
May 14, 2025
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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.