Wage & Hour

  • August 29, 2025

    Wage & Hour Features Revisited: Leave Laws, ABC Test Watch

    From a look at a pending ABC independent contractor test in New Jersey to discussions of changes to paid leave in Missouri and New York, catch up on Law360 Employment Authority's wage and hour coverage from August.

  • August 29, 2025

    Elevance Says Worker Seeking 'Bizarre' Payout In Late Suit

    A former Elevance utilization representative's proposed class suit claiming the company owes her damages for paying her last paycheck late would lead to a "bizarre" conclusion, the entity told a Connecticut state court, arguing that she is potentially owed only $1.18.

  • August 29, 2025

    Calif. Forecast: NLRB Fights Co. With Union-Busting Claims

    In the coming week, attorneys should watch for arguments in a National Labor Relations Board case against an environmental and engineering consultant. Here's a look at that case and other labor and employment matters on deck in California.

  • August 29, 2025

    How Mo. Employers Should Handle Paid Leave Law Repeal

    Missouri employers that are updating paid sick leave policies after the governor repealed a leave requirement voters had passed should notify workers about changes and watch for a future ballot measure on the issue, a St. Louis attorney told Law360. Melissa Pesce of Ogletree Deakins spoke with Law360 about the rollback.

  • August 29, 2025

    Wage And Hour Laws To Look Out For This Fall

    Workers in Maine will get extra wages if their employer cancels or cuts back their shift last minute, and employers in Cleveland will have to abide by new salary history and pay transparency requirements. Here, Law360 looks at these and other wage and hour and equal pay laws coming in the fall.

  • August 29, 2025

    Orkin Pest Control Overtime Case Put On Hold

    A Georgia federal judge agreed to pause a suit accusing pest control giant Orkin of automatically deducting time for unpaid breaks from thousands of employees who did not take the breaks and requiring unpaid training sessions.

  • August 28, 2025

    Trucking Cos. Fight Drivers' Collective Cert. Bid In Wage Suit

    Drivers accusing a trucking company, its owner and a related entity of misclassifying them as independent contractors should not pursue their wage claims as a collective because their claims would trigger individualized inquiries, the companies told an Oklahoma federal court Thursday.

  • August 28, 2025

    School Union Inks $110K Deal To End EEOC Race Bias Suit

    A school district labor union has agreed to pay $110,000 to resolve a U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission suit claiming it discriminated against a Black custodian by challenging his promotion, according to a filing Thursday in Illinois federal court.

  • August 28, 2025

    Ga. Atty Sues Former Firm For Failing To Pay Final Wages

    A Georgia attorney has filed suit against her former employer, John Foy and Associates PC, over "threatening emails" she said she received after she was fired and a final paycheck that she reportedly never got.

  • August 28, 2025

    SkyWest Flight Attendants Want To End 10-Year Wage Case

    SkyWest Airlines' flight attendants urged an Illinois federal court to dismiss the remainder of their suit accusing the airline of not paying them overtime and other wage violations, saying it would be the best way to end their almost 10-year-long case.

  • August 28, 2025

    Labor Atty Rejoins McGuireWoods After Food Company Stint

    McGuireWoods LLP announced Wednesday that it has welcomed an alumnus back to its labor and employment team following his stint as an associate general counsel for packaged meat company Smithfield Foods Inc.

  • August 28, 2025

    Delta's $12M Wage Deal Gets Initial Greenlight

    A $12 million settlement between Delta Air Lines and a class of about 5,000 workers who claimed wage and hour violations can go forward, a California federal judge ruled, finding the deal to be fair and reasonable.

  • August 27, 2025

    Target Warehouse Workers Sue Over Unpaid Walking Time

    Target didn't pay its warehouse employees for time spent walking to and from their assigned areas where they must clock in and out for shifts, amounting to between $1,000 and $2,000 per year in unpaid wages for each worker, according to a proposed class action in New York federal court.

  • August 27, 2025

    Ex-Software Co. Execs' Win Upheld In Retirement Plan Fight

    The Eleventh Circuit has ruled software company NCR Corp.'s "top hat" retirement plans didn't allow the company to issue lump-sum payments to plan participants as alternatives to promised life annuities, affirming former company executives' win in the contract breach suit alleging they were shortchanged payouts from the plans.

  • August 27, 2025

    Campbell's Seeks Toss Of Worker's Donning Time Suit

    Campbell's sought dismissal of a former employee's proposed collective action alleging the soup producer didn't compensate workers for time spent putting on personal protective equipment, telling a New Jersey federal judge the claims must first be assessed in the grievance process under a labor contract.

  • August 27, 2025

    Solar Co. Failed To Give Proper Layoff Notice, Suit Says

    Solar energy company PosiGen failed to provide proper notice before terminating hundreds of employees as part of a mass layoff affecting workers at sites in Pennsylvania, Louisiana and other states, according to a proposed class action filed in Delaware federal court.

  • August 27, 2025

    Bloomberg Campaign Seeks To Ax Wage Collective, Classes

    Michael Bloomberg's 2020 presidential campaign told a New York federal court that pretrial filings by field organizers claiming unpaid overtime show that it would be impossible for a jury to reach a blanket conclusion for about 1,000 workers across a collective and several classes.

  • August 27, 2025

    A Look At 1 Year Without Biden's Tipped Credit Rule

    It's been a year since the Fifth Circuit struck down the Biden administration's tipped credit rule, and attorneys say that the tipped minimum wage landscape feels at once settled with the return to a long-standing prior rule and yet in flux with states continuing to drive the conversation.

  • August 27, 2025

    South Florida Goodwill Reaches Settlement In Wage Case

    A former Florida Goodwill employee agreed to settle her suit accusing the network of automatically deducting time for unpaid lunch breaks that workers were unable to take.

  • August 27, 2025

    Wage Suit Against AutoZone Will Stay In Wash. Federal Court

    A former AutoZone delivery driver's wage and hour suit won't go back to a Washington state court because the company supported its calculations for how much the suit could involve, a federal judge said, adding that its removal was not late.

  • August 26, 2025

    Uber Eats To Pay Couriers $15M To End Seattle's Wage Claims

    Uber Eats has inked a $15 million settlement to end allegations that it flouted the city of Seattle's worker protection laws by failing to pay drivers what they were promised, including bonus earnings and minimum payments for canceled fares. 

  • August 26, 2025

    7th Circ. Won't Compel Arbitration In Uber Driver's Pay Suit

    Uber was correctly ordered to litigate a driver's pay claims in a lawsuit which three other plaintiffs must arbitrate, the Seventh Circuit said Tuesday, agreeing with a lower court that found the issue had already been decided in the driver's state court case.

  • August 26, 2025

    Meta Fired Worker For Being Older White Male, Bias Suit Says

    A former Meta Platforms Inc. employee filed an age bias suit in California state court Tuesday, alleging the company prioritized non-white, non-male workers and applicants for job opportunities, bonuses and promotions, before it eventually executed a "reduction in force" that disparately affected older workers who ended up being terminated.

  • August 26, 2025

    Calif. Justices Raise Bar For Good Faith Wage Case Defense

    California employers now face a higher burden to make a good faith defense to liquidated damages in minimum wage suits in the wake of a recent California Supreme Court ruling, attorneys said, though disagreement remains about the extent of the opinion.

  • August 26, 2025

    Ex-Case Manager Says Maryland Law Firm Failed To Pay OT

    A former case manager told a Virginia federal court Tuesday that a law firm failed to pay her for the overtime she regularly worked, especially after the firm's manager was accused of mishandling clients' files.

Expert Analysis

  • Employers Need Clarity On FLSA Joint Employer Liability

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    A judicial patchwork of multifactor tests to determine joint employment liability has led to unpredictable results, and only congressional action or enactment of a uniform standard to which courts will consistently defer can give employers the clarity needed to structure their relationships with workers, say attorneys at Seyfarth.

  • Calif. Independent Contractor Lessons From Grubhub Suit

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    California courts have been creating little in the way of clarity when it comes to the employment status of gig workers — and a recent federal court decision in Lawson v. Grubhub illustrates how status may change with the winds of litigation, offering four takeaways for businesses that rely on delivery drivers, say Esra Hudson and Marah Bragdon at Manatt.

  • Labor Collusion Loss Will Shape DOJ's Case Strategy

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    Following the U.S. Department of Justice’s recent loss in United States v. Manahe, tallying its trial score record to 0-3 in labor-related antitrust cases over the past year, defendants can expect that the DOJ will try to exclude defense evidence and argue for more favorable jury instructions, say attorneys at Sheppard Mullin.

  • Staffing Company Considerations Amid PAGA Uncertainty

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    The impending California Supreme Court decision in Adolph v. Uber is expected to affect staffing companies, specifically how the proliferation of nonindividual Private Attorneys General Act claims are handled when the individual claim is compelled to arbitration, say Sarah Kroll-Rosenbaum and Harrison Thorne at Akerman.

  • Eye On Compliance: Joint Employment

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    Madonna Herman at Wilson Elser breaks down the key job conditions that led to a recent National Labor Relations Board finding of joint employment, and explains the similar standard established under California case law — providing a guide for companies that want to minimize liability when relying on temporary and contract workers.

  • How Unions Could Stem Possible Wave Of Calif. PAGA Claims

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    Should the California Supreme Court hold in Adolph v. Uber that the nonindividual portions of Private Attorneys General Act claims survive even after individual claims go to arbitration, employers and unions could both leverage the holding in Oswald v. Murray to stifle the resurgence in representative suits, say attorneys at Greenberg Traurig.

  • Tips For Defending Employee Plaintiff Depositions

    Excerpt from Practical Guidance
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    A plaintiff cannot win their employment case through a good deposition, but they can certainly lose it with a bad one, so an attorney should take steps to make sure the plaintiff does as little damage as possible to their claim, says Preston Satchell at LexisNexis.

  • Predictions On Salary Levels In Proposed DOL Overtime Rule

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    In May, the U.S. Department of Labor is expected to propose new salary thresholds for overtime exemptions for both executive, administrative and professional employees and highly compensated earners under the Fair Labor Standards Act, and based on methodologies used in recent DOL rules, it will likely increase both thresholds, says Stephen Bronars at Edgeworth.

  • Water Cooler Talk: Whistleblowing Insights From 'Dahmer'

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    Tracey Diamond and Evan Gibbs at Troutman Pepper chat with DS Smith's Josh Burnette about how the show "Dahmer – Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story" provides an extreme example of the perils of ignoring repeat complaints — a lesson employers could apply in the whistleblower context.

  • Retail Employer Strategies For LA Fair Work Week Ordinance

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    The recently effective Los Angeles Fair Work Week Ordinance changes how employers in the retail trade industry approach scheduling and hiring employees, so they should consider creating new standardized forms and procedures to maintain compliance and avoid penalties, say Thomas Petrides and Charlie Wang at Vedder Price.

  • AI For Advancing Diversity In The Workplace: Friend Or Foe?

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    In the wake of calls for increased workplace diversity, employers are turning to artificial intelligence to automate hiring and cut costs to reach environmental, social and governance objectives, but this technology requires human oversight to minimize biases and discrimination, say Consuela Pinto and Dawn Siler-Nixon at FordHarrison.

  • Handbook Hot Topics: Attendance Policies

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    Employee attendance problems are among the most common reasons for disciplinary action and discharge, which is why a clear policy neatly laid out in an employee handbook is necessary to articulate expectations for workers and support an employer's position should any attendance-related disputes arise, says Kara Shea at Butler Snow.

  • Noncompete Ban Is Key To Empowering Low-Wage Workers

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    The Federal Trade Commission's proposed ban on noncompete clauses is needed because limitations alone have very little practical value to low-wage workers, who will continue to be hurt by the mere existence of these clauses unless they are outlawed, says Brendan Lynch at Community Legal Services of Philadelphia.