Try our Advanced Search for more refined results
Employment
-
September 04, 2025
Apple Affiliate Wants To Untie Classes After Wage Verdict
A Fourth Circuit decision undoing classes of Bojangles managers is a significant change of law that should dismantle five classes in a wage and hour suit that snagged $839,000 from an Apple-affiliated repair company, the company told a North Carolina federal court.
-
September 04, 2025
Unions Defend Challenge To Federal Work Safety Agency Cuts
Unions representing nurses, teachers, miners and factory workers have asked a Washington, D.C., federal judge to preserve their challenge to the Trump administration's cuts to the National Institute of Occupational Safety and Health, saying they have standing to sue because they "rely on NIOSH's lifesaving work."
-
September 04, 2025
PBM Rule Included In DOL Benefits Arm's Regulatory Update
The U.S. Department of Labor's employee benefits arm detailed several new regulations in the works Thursday, including a new fee disclosure rule involving pharmacy benefit managers and plans to revisit retirement plan fiduciary investment advice regulations, according to the administration's latest regulatory update.
-
September 04, 2025
Appliance Co. Avoids EEOC Suit Over Worker's Long COVID
A Colorado federal judge tossed a U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission suit claiming an appliance retailer illegally fired a worker who requested more medical leave to treat her long COVID, ruling the agency failed to show how she made a formal accommodation request.
-
September 04, 2025
Purdue Pharma Approved For $17.5M In Ch. 11 Bonus Plans
Bankrupt pharmaceutical company Purdue Pharma LP received approval from a New York judge Thursday to pay more than $17.5 million in employee bonuses, mirroring the bonus structures of the last few years since the company commenced its Chapter 11 case.
-
September 04, 2025
NFL, Broncos Want Ex-Player's Reshuffled Weed Suit Tossed
A former NFL player's deletion of references to the league's collective bargaining agreement should not save his suit against the NFL over his punishment for violating its substance abuse policy, the league and his former team told a Colorado federal judge in a bid to drop the suit.
-
September 04, 2025
EEOC Hit With LGBTQ+ Bias Charge From Ex-Official
The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission's walkback on enforcing sexual orientation and gender identity discrimination protections has fostered a hostile environment for LGBTQ+ people within the agency, a former commission senior official said in a discrimination charge announced Thursday.
-
September 04, 2025
Fisher Phillips Hires Liff Walsh Employment Group Leader
The former leader of Liff Walsh & Simmons' employment and labor practice, who worked as a counselor to the solicitor of the U.S. Department of Labor and in several other public service roles, has joined Fisher Phillips as a partner in Washington, D.C.
-
September 03, 2025
TikTok, Chinese Co.'s $845M IP Fight Heads To October Trial
A California federal judge refused to fully grant TikTok Inc. summary judgment or a terminating-sanctions win in a Chinese company's $845 million lawsuit accusing the social media giant of stealing video-editing tool trade secrets and infringing its copyrights, finding that the dispute must go to an October jury trial.
-
September 03, 2025
7th Circ. Backs AbbVie's Win Against Ex-Sales Rep's FCA Suit
The Seventh Circuit declined to revive a former AbbVie employee's False Claims Act retaliation suit alleging he faced repercussions for refusing to push Vraylar's off-label use to treat major depressive disorder, ruling Wednesday he didn't put AbbVie on notice that he reasonably believed it was defrauding the government.
-
September 03, 2025
Solicitor General Defends Supreme Court's NLRB Firing Order
The federal government's top U.S. Supreme Court lawyer, speaking at a conference Wednesday, defended an emergency-docket ruling allowing the president to fire a member of the National Labor Relations Board.
-
September 03, 2025
Trump Sued Over Ending Patent Office Bargaining Rights
A union representing workers from the Office of the Commissioner for Patents, which is part of the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, sued President Donald Trump's administration Wednesday over an executive order that stripped federal workers of collective bargaining rights.
-
September 03, 2025
DOL Proposal On FLSA Home Care Rule Gets 5,000 Comments
The U.S. Department of Labor received over 5,000 comments on its plan to rescind an Obama-era rule that expanded wage protections for home care workers, with advocacy organizations arguing that the DOL didn't provide enough backup for the rescission while others saying the move is in line with the fall of Chevron deference.
-
September 03, 2025
Denver Sheriff Sergeant Urges Trial In Sex Bias Promotion Suit
A man who claims the Denver Sheriff Department violated Title VII of the Civil Rights Act by promoting three women to captain over him as part of a self-imposed quota for female officers has asked a Colorado federal judge to deny the sheriff's department summary judgment.
-
September 03, 2025
Ex-Air Force Worker Says Disability Bias Case Can't End Early
A former U.S. Air Force assistant general manager told an Arizona federal court that he supported his claims that he was denied paid safety leave during the coronavirus pandemic because of his disability, urging the court to keep his case standing.
-
September 03, 2025
Judge Backs Harvard In Suit Over Trump's $2B Fund Freeze
The Trump administration illegally froze more than $2 billion in grants earmarked for Harvard University when it failed to offer an explanation as to how cutting the funds addressed the government's stated goal of ending antisemitism on campus, a Massachusetts federal judge ruled Wednesday.
-
September 03, 2025
8th Circ. Cuts Down Challenge To Minn. Captive Audience Law
A split Eighth Circuit panel on Wednesday reversed a decision letting proceed a challenge to Minnesota's law banning mandatory anti-union meetings, saying an employer coalition doesn't have a case because state enforcers have said they don't intend to enforce the law.
-
September 03, 2025
Lack Of Notice Bars Miami Real Estate Fraud Suit, Court Told
The city of Miami told a Florida appellate panel Wednesday that a resident's lawsuit alleging a real estate fraud conspiracy by city officials should be dismissed as untimely, saying the complaint was brought more than two years past the deadline for a required pre-suit notice under the Sunshine State's sovereign immunity law.
-
September 03, 2025
Ex-Twitter Worker Fights X's Arbitration Push At 9th Circ.
X waived its arbitration rights in a $20 million severance suit and should not be able to challenge a district court's decision keeping the case in court, Twitter's former chief marketing officer told the Ninth Circuit.
-
September 03, 2025
Former TransDigm GC Launches Retaliatory Firing Suit
The former general counsel of TransDigm Group Inc., an aerospace parts manufacturer, has filed a complaint in Ohio state court alleging she was terminated in retaliation for reporting two instances of sexual harassment and antitrust compliance concerns.
-
September 03, 2025
Referee Blows Whistle On NBA's Partial Win In Vaccine Fight
A fired referee suing the NBA for religious discrimination asked a New York federal court to reconsider its ruling that denied him front and back pay, arguing the judge overlooked controlling case law that makes the decision "inappropriate."
-
September 03, 2025
Arkansas Insurance Rule Beats Union Plan's ERISA Challenge
An Illinois federal judge has tossed a Teamsters healthcare plan's challenge to an Arkansas insurance regulation that aims to protect local pharmacies from under-reimbursement for prescription drugs, saying the regulation doesn't tread on the Employee Retirement Income Security Act's territory.
-
September 03, 2025
Chatbot Or Not, Ind. Judge Urges Sanction For Bad Citation
An Indiana federal judge has recommended sanctioning an attorney representing a woman in an employment discrimination suit against a county court's juvenile detention center after the lawyer included faulty citations in a discovery brief, regardless of how the citations got there.
-
September 03, 2025
Manhattan DA To Target Wage-Fixing With Antitrust Laws
Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg said Wednesday that his office plans to be the first to use New York's criminal antitrust laws against companies that collude to keep workers' wages low.
-
September 03, 2025
Claim Mistake Dooms Flutist's Benefits Suit, 7th Circ. Says
The Seventh Circuit backed the dismissal of a musician's suit alleging an insurer wrongfully denied her long-term disability benefits claim after a COVID-19 infection caused chronic ear ringing, ruling she needs to file a new claim because she made an error in her first application.
Expert Analysis
-
Tracking FTC Labor Task Force's Focus On Worker Protection
The Federal Trade Commission recently directed its bureaus to form a joint labor task force, shifting the agency's focus toward protecting consumers in their role as workers, but case selection and resource allocation will ultimately reveal how significant labor markets will be in the FTC's agenda, say attorneys at Venable.
-
10 Arbitrations And A 5th Circ. Ruling Flag Arb. Clause Risks
The ongoing arbitral saga of Sullivan v. Feldman, which has engendered proceedings before 10 different arbitrators in Texas and Louisiana along with last month's Fifth Circuit opinion, showcases both the risks and limitations of arbitration clauses in retainer agreements for resolving attorney-client disputes, says Christopher Blazejewski at Sherin and Lodgen.
-
2nd Circ. Ruling May Aid Consistent Interpretation Of ADA
In Tudor v. Whitehall Central School District, the Second Circuit joined the majority of circuits by holding that an employee's ability to perform their job without an accommodation does not disqualify them from receiving one, marking a notable step toward uniform application of the Americans with Disabilities Act nationwide, says Michelle Grant at Wilson Elser.
-
Series
Power To The Paralegals: The Value Of Unified State Licensing
Texas' proposal to become the latest state to license paraprofessional providers of limited legal services could help firms expand their reach and improve access to justice, but consumers, attorneys and allied legal professionals would benefit even more if similar programs across the country become more uniform, says Michael Houlberg at the University of Denver.
-
11 Tips For Contractors Dealing With DOD Staff Reductions
Defense contractors should prepare for a wide range of disruptions related to procurement and contract administration that are likely amid federal workforce reductions, say attorneys at Covington.
-
GC Nominee Likely Has Employer-Friendly NLRB Priorities
President Donald Trump’s nomination of Crystal Carey as general counsel of the National Labor Relations Board indicates the administration's intent to revive precedents favorable to employers, including expansion of permissible employer speech and reinstatement of procedural steps needed for employees to achieve unionization, say attorneys at Vorys.
-
A Close Look At The Rescinded Biden-Era NLRB Memos
National Labor Relations Board acting general counsel William Cowen's recent decision to rescind several guidance memoranda from his predecessor signals that he aims to move the board away from expanding organizing rights and to provide more room for employers to protect their operations and workforce, say attorneys at Holland & Knight.
-
10 Soft Skills Every GC Should Master
As businesses face shifting regulatory and technological uncertainty, general counsel will need to strengthen certain soft skills to succeed, from admitting when they make a mistake to maintaining a healthy dose of dispassion, says Douglas Brown at Manatt.
-
6 Criteria Can Help Assess Executive Branch Actions
With new executive policy changes announced seemingly every day, several questions can help courts, policymakers and businesses determine whether such actions are proper, effective and in keeping with our democratic norms, say Marc Levin and Khalil Cumberbatch at the Council on Criminal Justice.
-
5 Key Issues For Multinational Cos. Mulling Return To Office
As companies increasingly revisit return-to-office mandates, multinational employers may face challenges in enforcing uniform RTO practices globally, but several key considerations and practical solutions can help avoid roadblocks, say attorneys at Baker McKenzie.
-
End May Be In Sight For Small Biz Set-Aside Programs
A Jan. 21 executive order largely disarming the Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs, along with recent court rulings, suggests that the administration may soon attempt to eliminate set-asides intended to level the award playing field for small business contractors that qualify under socioeconomic programs, say attorneys at Alston & Bird.
-
An Unrestrained, Bright-Eyed View Of Legal AI's Future
Todd Itami at Covington offers a bright-eyed, laughing-all-the-way, skydive look at what the legal industry could look like after an artificial intelligence revolution, which he believes may happen much sooner and more dramatically than we expect.
-
Tracking The Evolution In Litigation Finance
Despite continued innovation, litigation finance remains an immature market with borrowers recieving significantly different terms as lenders learn to value cases, which firms need a strong handle on to ensure lending terms do not overwhelm collateral value, says Robert Wilkins at Lightfoot Franklin.
-
Series
Volunteer Firefighting Makes Me A Better Lawyer
While practicing corporate law and firefighting may appear incongruous, the latter benefits my legal career by reminding me of the importance of humility, perspective and education, says Nicholas Passaro at Ford.
-
What The Minimum Wage Shift Means For Gov't Contractors
While President Donald Trump's recent executive order rescinding a 2021 increase to the federal contractor minimum wage is welcome relief to some federal contractors and settles continued disagreement about its legality, there remains significant uncertainty and pitfalls over contractor wage obligations, say attorneys at Polsinelli.