A medical software company won't have to face a fired salesperson's disability and age bias claims in court, after the Ninth Circuit ruled that a severability clause in an arbitration agreement didn't nullify language saying questions about the pact's validity should be decided by an arbitrator.
The nation's highest court's rejection of a doctrine calling for judges to defer to federal agencies will likely mute any impact that a proposed U.S. Department of Labor independent contractor has on app-based companies like Uber, according to wage and hour attorney Shannon Liss-Riordan of Lichten & Liss-Riordan PC. Here, Liss-Riordan speaks with Law360 about how the proposed rule will affect app-based companies.
The Illinois Supreme Court ruled Thursday that the state's minimum wage law doesn't incorporate the limitations on compensable preshift activities found in federal law, answering the Seventh Circuit's call for help determining whether Amazon must pay workers for time they spent undergoing preliminary COVID-19 screenings.
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A medical software company won't have to face a fired salesperson's disability and age bias claims in court, after the Ninth Circuit ruled that a severability clause in an arbitration agreement didn't nullify language saying questions about the pact's validity should be decided by an arbitrator.
The nation's highest court's rejection of a doctrine calling for judges to defer to federal agencies will likely mute any impact that a proposed U.S. Department of Labor independent contractor has on app-based companies like Uber, according to wage and hour attorney Shannon Liss-Riordan of Lichten & Liss-Riordan PC. Here, Liss-Riordan speaks with Law360 about how the proposed rule will affect app-based companies.
The Illinois Supreme Court ruled Thursday that the state's minimum wage law doesn't incorporate the limitations on compensable preshift activities found in federal law, answering the Seventh Circuit's call for help determining whether Amazon must pay workers for time they spent undergoing preliminary COVID-19 screenings.
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March 20, 2026
The White House directed Congress to preempt "burdensome" state laws on artificial intelligence in a legislative framework released Friday.
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March 20, 2026
Sen. Cory Booker, D-N.J., reintroduced a bill that would allow incarcerated workers to receive the minimum wage under the Fair Labor Standards Act, a push that the senator said would end "exploitative practices in correctional facilities."
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March 20, 2026
In the next week, attorneys should keep an eye out for Ninth Circuit en banc oral arguments in a jurisdictional dispute involving two unions, the National Labor Relations Board and the precedent known as Kinder Morgan. Here's a look at that case and other labor and employment matters coming up in California.
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March 20, 2026
An Arizona trucking company shorted drivers on overtime pay by deducting time from the hours they spent conducting vehicle inspections and repairs before and after their trips, according to a proposed collective action filed in Arizona federal court.
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March 19, 2026
The Chan Zuckerberg Initiative LLC run by Meta Platforms Inc. CEO Mark Zuckerberg and his wife Priscilla Chan discriminated against women by routinely paying them less than men and promoting them with less frequency, according to a proposed class and collective action removed Wednesday to California federal court.
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March 19, 2026
An Illinois federal judge on Thursday declined to dismiss a suit from drivers alleging Risinger Bros. Transfer Inc. misclassified them as independent contractors, saying the complaint sufficiently alleges they had an employer-employee relationship.
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March 19, 2026
A U.S. Court of Federal Claims judge certified a class of military reservists who sued the U.S. government to recover the difference between active duty pay and pay received for their federal civilian jobs, finding there are enough reservists with common claims.
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March 19, 2026
A Delaware federal court ruled Thursday that six former Twitter employees cannot subpoena five law firms that represented the social media company in connection with its acquisition by Elon Musk, rejecting the employees' "conclusory allegations" that the company and Musk used the firms to make false promises of severance benefits.
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March 19, 2026
An Ohio federal judge rejected a proposed $30,000 settlement to a wage and hour suit against a group of home care staffing agencies Thursday, saying the settlement paperwork isn't clear enough to determine whether the deal is fair.
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March 19, 2026
Performers accusing an adult livestreaming site of misclassifying them as independent contractors and underpaying them can proceed as a class, a federal judge has ruled, and attorneys with McOmber McOmber & Luber PC and Hayber McKenna & Dinsmore LLC will serve as class counsel.
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March 19, 2026
The Delaware Supreme Court has revived key claims brought by a former investment firm banker, ruling that a lower court went too far in blocking his case based on earlier findings that he was not a partner at the firm.
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March 19, 2026
New Jersey wage and hour protections require employers to pay employees regardless of their immigration status, the state Supreme Court ruled Thursday, finding that state law doesn't clash with federal immigration law prohibiting the employment of immigrants living in the country without legal permission.
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March 19, 2026
A maintenance worker launched a proposed class action alleging wage violations in Colorado state court against a major meatpacking company as a strike against the employer continues.
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March 19, 2026
A Columbus-area home health services company will pay $975,000 to end a lawsuit accusing it of misclassifying its program managers as exempt from overtime, according to an Ohio federal court filing.
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March 19, 2026
University of Colorado Health urged a federal judge to dismiss a proposed class and collective action alleging that its time-rounding policy shorted workers on pay, saying it was not the former workers' employer and its policy complies with the law, according to a federal court filing.
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March 18, 2026
A Connecticut sushi restaurant has told a federal judge that it should win a chef's lawsuit alleging unpaid overtime, because he is a serial filer of baseless claims, working with his attorneys at Troy Law Group PLLC to try to secure unjustified payouts from multiple employers, and he was actually overpaid.
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March 18, 2026
An Illinois appellate court had choice words Tuesday for the Illinois Department of Labor's argument that an amendment to the Wage Payment and Collection Act deems certain corporate officers "employers" that can be held personally liable for employees' unpaid wages, calling the agency's interpretation "legally unsound" and "unjust."
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March 18, 2026
The operator of 40 IHOPs in California can push workers' individual wage and hour claims into arbitration, a California federal judge ruled Wednesday, rejecting the employees' arguments that they didn't remember signing the pact or that it was only in English.
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March 18, 2026
A North Carolina federal judge agreed to transfer a former C-suite executive's unpaid wages case against a Canadian cancer testing and treatment company to Virginia, where its U.S. headquarters are, finding the Old Dominion is the better venue.
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March 18, 2026
A long-running suit seeking to recover wages from Home Depot over its now-defunct time-rounding practice can partially continue despite the company sending payments to employees, an Oregon federal judge said, ruling there is an open question over whether some workers were fully repaid.
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March 18, 2026
An oil field services company failed to pay workers for extensive travel and off-the-clock work, according to a proposed class and collective action filed in Pennsylvania federal court.
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March 18, 2026
Taft Stettinius & Hollister LLP has brought on seven lawyers at its Colorado Springs office from Bryan Cave Leighton Paisner to enhance its sports law, intellectual property, employment and litigation practices.
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March 18, 2026
A staffing company and an urgent care tapped to provide services at New York City migrant facilities will pay $12,000 to end a proposed class and collective action brought by two hourly employees claiming they were improperly paid, according to a federal court filing.
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March 18, 2026
The U.S. Department of Labor has sent a proposed rule laying out the Trump administration's test for joint employer status to the White House for review, teeing up the regulation for release.
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March 17, 2026
K&L Gates LLP has added a labor and employment partner with experience at Protection Law Group and Littler Mendelson to its Labor, Employment and Workplace Safety practice in Los Angeles, according to an announcement Tuesday.