Labor

  • May 09, 2025

    Gov't Fights Latest Challenge To Worker Resignation Offer

    A Massachusetts federal judge should toss a renewed challenge to the Trump administration's resignation incentive program for the same reasons he tossed it before, the government argued, saying the union-brought challenge is doomed because of standing issues and because it belongs before an agency, not a federal judge.

  • May 09, 2025

    NY Forecast: X Arbitration Fees Dispute At 2nd Circ.

    This week, the Second Circuit will consider social media platform X's attempt to reverse a lower court order requiring it to pay fees for arbitration proceedings with employees who claim they were not paid the full amount of severance they were owed. Here, Law360 looks at this and other cases on the docket in New York.

  • May 09, 2025

    Souter's Clerks Remember Him As Humble, Kind And Caring

    Former clerks of retired U.S. Supreme Court Justice David H. Souter are heartbroken over the death of a man many of them remember more for his conscientiousness, humility, kindness and disdain for the spotlight than for his undeniable brilliance as a jurist.

  • May 09, 2025

    $894K Award Against Construction Co. Upheld In New York

    A New York federal court deemed an arbitration award of about $895,000 valid against a construction company that failed to comply with an audit required under a collective bargaining agreement with the New York City District Council of Carpenters.

  • May 09, 2025

    Hiker And 'Raconteur': Atty Recalls 50-Year Bond With Souter

    Behind a towering legal legacy was a man who loved to hike mountains, could recall details of things he read decades ago and was always there for those he cared about, a New Hampshire attorney said as he reflected on a lifelong friendship with U.S. Supreme Court Justice David Souter.

  • May 09, 2025

    NLRB Urges 5th Circ. To Uphold Union Certification At Nexstar

    The National Labor Relations Board defended its decision finding Nexstar Media Inc. shift leads in Denver are statutory employees who can unionize, telling the Fifth Circuit to nix the company's challenge to a union's certification and its objections to a representation election.

  • May 09, 2025

    Fisher Phillips Opens Tokyo Office Amid Regulatory Shifts

    Employer-side labor law firm Fisher Phillips has launched a Tokyo office in response to increasing client demand from American and multinational companies doing business in Japan and from Japanese companies doing business in the Americas.

  • May 09, 2025

    AFL-CIO Backs NLRB In Successor Bar Row At DC Circ.

    The D.C. Circuit doesn't need to rethink its finding that a company violated federal labor law by snubbing a union after acquiring a Puerto Rico hospital, the AFL-CIO has argued, fighting the company's challenge to both its loss and the National Labor Relations Board's successor bar doctrine.

  • May 09, 2025

    A Look At David Souter's Most Significant Opinions

    The retired Justice David Souter defied simple definition, viewed as a staunch conservative until he co-wrote an opinion upholding abortion rights in 1992. He did not hew to partisan lines, but reshaped the civil litigation landscape and took an unexpected stand in an extraordinarily close presidential election.

  • May 09, 2025

    Calif. Forecast: Petroleum Cos. $7M Wage Deal Before Court

    In the coming week, attorneys should watch for the potential initial approval of a $7.2 million deal in a proposed wage and hour class action against Marathon Refining Logistics Services and related companies. Here's a look at that case and other labor and employment matters on deck in California.

  • May 09, 2025

    Justice Souter Was An Unexpected Force Of Moderation

    Justice David Souter, who saw the high court as a moderating force apart from the messiness of politics, subverted the expectations of liberals and conservatives alike during his 19 years on the bench.

  • May 09, 2025

    Retired Supreme Court Justice David Souter Dies At 85

    Retired Justice David H. Souter, who served on the U.S. Supreme Court from 1990 to 2009, has died at 85, the court announced Friday. 

  • May 08, 2025

    5th Circ. Wipes Out Southwest Attys' Religious Training Order

    The Fifth Circuit on Thursday held that a lower court overstepped by ordering several in-house Southwest Airlines attorneys to undergo "religious liberty training" following a flight attendant's win in a wrongful termination suit, finding that the training wouldn't benefit the flight attendant or persuade Southwest to comply with an earlier order.

  • May 08, 2025

    Kroger-Owned Chain Fights Counterclaims In Strike Row

    If a United Food and Commercial Workers local wants to accuse King Soopers of violating a post-strike agreement, the union must take its argument to the National Labor Relations Board, the Kroger-owned grocery chain told a Colorado federal judge Thursday, asking her to throw the allegation out of federal court.

  • May 08, 2025

    Trump Admin Defends Gov't Restructuring As Lawful

    The Trump administration defended what it says is a lawful executive order looking to reorganize agencies and terminate workers, telling a California federal judge that unions, nonprofits and local governments "waited far too long" to seek a temporary restraining order.

  • May 08, 2025

    Full DC Circ. Restores International Media Funding, For Now

    The en banc D.C. Circuit on Wednesday restored federal grant funding to international broadcasters while the Trump administration appeals a lower court ruling blocking cuts to the agency that oversees Voice of America.

  • May 08, 2025

    6th Circ. Eyes Reviving Kellogg, FedEx Mortality Table Suits

    The Sixth Circuit on Thursday appeared open to reviving suits against Kellogg and FedEx from married pensioners who alleged their employers' outdated actuarial assumptions shortchanged their joint-and-survivor benefits, with multiple judges seeming to doubt a lower court's assertion that employers had unfettered latitude when choosing what data to use.

  • May 08, 2025

    NLRB Captive Meeting Ban Affected Union Vote, Nexstar Says

    Nexstar Media Group Inc. challenged the certification of a union representing NewsNation workers, claiming the National Labor Relations Board's ban on what are known as captive audience meetings violated the company's First Amendment rights and unfairly influenced the vote's outcome.

  • May 08, 2025

    Mass. Heating, Plumbing Co. Must Bargain, NLRB Judge Says

    A Massachusetts heating and plumbing company's response to an organizing drive violated federal labor law, a National Labor Relations Board judge ruled, saying the company illegally fired five workers for union activity, told union supporters to quit, and promised workers better job assignments if they opposed the union.

  • May 07, 2025

    Southwest Says Union Deal Makes Sick Leave Suit Irrelevant

    Southwest Airlines said Tuesday that a suit challenging its sick leave settlement with Colorado is moot because a recent collective bargaining agreement between the airline and its workers in the state already applies a 2020 law.

  • May 07, 2025

    NY Legal Aid Union Accused Of Antisemitism At NLRB, EEOC

    A United Auto Workers affiliate representing attorneys at a New York legal services organization violated federal laws when the union thwarted antisemitism measures in the workplace, a nonprofit alleged Wednesday in announcing charges it filed at the National Labor Relations Board and U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.

  • May 07, 2025

    Uncertainty In The Air As Labor Agencies Ponder Reach

    The mostly stable jurisdictional lines between the National Labor Relations Board and the National Mediation Board are in flux as the NLRB seeks the NMB's take on which agency should oversee SpaceX and the airline industry deals with an abrupt shift in the federal labor overseers' treatment of contractors.

  • May 07, 2025

    NLRB Official Says Settlement Bars Union Ouster At Glass Co.

    A National Labor Relations Board official has tossed a worker's petition to decertify a union representing workers at a Minnesota glass company, saying a settlement between the company and union in a separate case prevents the election from going forward.

  • May 07, 2025

    NLRB Judge Says Amazon Lawfully Fired Union Backer In NY

    Amazon did not violate federal labor law by firing a union supporter and unilaterally changing certain policies about cellphone use and COVID-19 tests at a New York warehouse, a National Labor Relations Board judge ruled while finding the company illegally denied union representation during investigatory interviews.

  • May 07, 2025

    USW Knocked By Judge For Causing Member's Demotion

    The United Steelworkers violated federal labor law by resolving a member's grievance in a manner that caused another member to be demoted, a National Labor Relations Board judge ruled, ordering the union to pursue another grievance on behalf of the demoted member.

Expert Analysis

  • Proposed NLRB Rule Would Vastly Expand Joint Employment

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    The National Labor Relations Board’s recently proposed rule for determining when joint employment exists would replace a 2020 standard with expansive new definitions, including the problematic addition of workplace health and safety as an essential term and condition, says Todd Lebowitz at BakerHostetler.

  • 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.

  • Prepare For NLRB Collaboration With Antitrust Agencies

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    The National Labor Relations Board's recent agreements with the Federal Trade Commission and the U.S. Department of Justice may herald increased interagency engagement on noncompete and no-poach issues, so companies that face scrutiny from one agency may well quickly be in the crosshairs of another, say attorneys at BakerHostetler.

  • Watson Discipline Case Shows NFL's Power In Labor Disputes

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    While the six-game suspension a disciplinary officer recently ordered against Cleveland Browns quarterback Deshaun Watson aligns with labor law standards, the NFL has authority to increase the punishment with little to no recourse for Watson or the NFL Players Association — thanks to the 2016 “Deflategate” case, says Michael Elkins at MLE Law.

  • Why Gig Platforms Should Be On Alert

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    The Federal Trade Commission and state attorneys general have set their sights on the gig economy and practices they view as deceptive and unfair, which will open gig platforms to more scrutiny — and past cases against gig-economy giants including Uber and Instacart are cautionary tales to keep in mind, say attorneys at Venable.

  • What New Captive Audience Law Means For Conn. Employers

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    Given a new Connecticut law that allows employees to opt out of captive audience meetings where employers share religious or political opinions, companies will need to address the liability risks posed by this substantial expansion of employee free speech rights, say attorneys at Shipman & Goodwin.

  • More Employment Regs May See 'Major Questions' Challenges

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    The U.S. Supreme Court's recent use of the major questions doctrine to strike down regulation has already been cited in lower court cases challenging U.S. Department of Labor authority to implement wage and hour changes, and could provide a potent tool to litigants seeking to restrain federal workplace and labor regulations, say Jeffrey Brecher and Courtney Malveaux at Jackson Lewis.

  • Wage Theft Bill Would Increase Risk, Severity Of FLSA Claims

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    A recently introduced bill would amend the Fair Labor Standards Act in extreme ways that go well beyond the commonsense idea that people should be paid the wages they have earned, thereby sharply increasing the threat of claims against employers, with implications for arbitration, collective bargaining and more, say Christopher Pardo and Beth Sherwood at Hunton.

  • 4 Labor Relations Lessons From Soccer League CBA

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    As a resurgent labor movement prompts employers to consider how to respond to unionization efforts, the first collective bargaining agreement between the National Women's Soccer League and the union representing its players provides important insights, says Chris Deubert at Constangy Brooks.

  • 3rd Circ. Ruling Shows Limits Of Regulating Employer Speech

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    It is clear that the current National Labor Relations Board wants to regulate employer speech more strictly in the context of union organizing campaigns, but the courts may not be ready to allow that expansion, as demonstrated by the Third Circuit's recent First Amendment decision in FDRLST Media v. NLRB, says Daniel Johns at Cozen O'Connor.

  • Memo Shows NLRB's Pro-Union Property Access Agenda

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    A recent memo from the National Labor Relations Board's Division of Advice recommended overturning two 2019 decisions that limited union access to public worksites, which could give unions an important advantage in the current wave of retail and health care organizing, say Alek Felstiner and Natalie Grieco at Levy Ratner.

  • Combating Micro-Units In The Age Of A Pro-Union NLRB

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    As the increasingly activist, pro-union National Labor Relations Board is poised to revive an Obama-era standard allowing small groups of employees to form bargaining units, employers must adopt proactive strategies to avoid a workplace fractured by micro-units, says James Redeker at Duane Morris.

  • The Prospect Of NLRB Shift On Employers' Anti-Union Speech

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    National Labor Relations Board General Counsel Jennifer Abruzzo recently urged the board to restrict captive-audience meetings that allow employers to attempt to dissuade employees from unionizing, so employers may want to prepare for that potential enforcement shift and proactively revisit their meeting and communication practices and policies, say attorneys at Nixon Peabody.

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