The Ninth Circuit seemed inclined Wednesday to strike down a trial court win for patients who challenged Blue Cross Blue Shield of Illinois' administration of their employer-provided health plans containing gender-affirming care exclusions, with two judges questioning why those employers weren't part of the case.
Mastercard Inc. has agreed to shell out $26 million and change its hiring practices to put to rest a proposed class and collective action alleging sex, gender, race and ethnicity-based employment discrimination, according to a motion filed Tuesday, the same day the workers sued in New York federal court.
The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission recently issued guidance cautioning employers about legal risks that come with requiring workers to wear or carry devices that collect sensitive data, a road map that experts say can be useful for businesses as workplaces expand their reliance on technology. Here, management-side experts discuss four tips about deploying wearable technology now that the EEOC has weighed in.
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The Ninth Circuit seemed inclined Wednesday to strike down a trial court win for patients who challenged Blue Cross Blue Shield of Illinois' administration of their employer-provided health plans containing gender-affirming care exclusions, with two judges questioning why those employers weren't part of the case.
Mastercard Inc. has agreed to shell out $26 million and change its hiring practices to put to rest a proposed class and collective action alleging sex, gender, race and ethnicity-based employment discrimination, according to a motion filed Tuesday, the same day the workers sued in New York federal court.
The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission recently issued guidance cautioning employers about legal risks that come with requiring workers to wear or carry devices that collect sensitive data, a road map that experts say can be useful for businesses as workplaces expand their reliance on technology. Here, management-side experts discuss four tips about deploying wearable technology now that the EEOC has weighed in.
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January 15, 2025
Florida urged an Eleventh Circuit panel on Wednesday to overturn an order declaring the state's ban on certain types of medical treatment for gender dysphoria unconstitutional, arguing the lower court wrongly used the condition as a proxy for transgender individuals in ruling that the prohibition was proof of discriminatory animus.
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January 15, 2025
An attorney employed by Davis Wright has launched a pro se employment discrimination lawsuit in Washington state court, accusing the firm of trying to "strong-arm" him into leaving after he reported what he described as misconduct by a partner and banishing him from its Seattle office when he threatened legal action.
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January 15, 2025
A federal judge tossed a former paralegal's suit claiming a Colorado city attempted to sabotage her unemployment benefits after a dustup over a disability accommodation caused her to lose her job, ruling that her allegations weren't properly pled under the laws she invoked.
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January 15, 2025
A federal judge declined to cut a supervisor from a former software company worker's suit claiming he was fired after his boss found out he is gay, stating the Arizona-based supervisor can still be sued in Michigan even though he managed the ex-employee remotely.
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January 15, 2025
The Maine State Chamber of Commerce and U.S. shipyard Bath Iron Works told a state court that certain provisions of the rule for the state medical leave program are illegal, arguing that employers will shell out conspicuous amounts into a fund they won't use.
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January 15, 2025
The Tenth Circuit refused Wednesday to revive a former mail carrier's lawsuit alleging the U.S. Postal Service changed his route and ultimately fired him because he's Hispanic, ruling he hadn't demonstrated that the Postal Service overreacted by terminating him after an altercation with his boss.
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January 15, 2025
A major poultry processor agreed to settle a Black former employee's suit claiming he was targeted for punishment after complaining that a nonwhite worker received a harsher penalty than a white worker for the same safety violation, according to a docket entry in North Carolina federal court.
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January 15, 2025
A former executive at roofing manufacturer GAF Materials is accusing her former lawyers of mishandling a potential age and gender discrimination case by failing to meet a key procedural deadline, according to a lawsuit filed in Massachusetts state court.
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January 15, 2025
President-elect Donald Trump said late Tuesday he plans to nominate former EEOC Commissioner and Department of Labor official Keith Sonderling for deputy labor secretary, the second-in-command at the DOL.
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January 14, 2025
As the U.S. Supreme Court on Tuesday analyzed judicial powers to reopen dismissed cases, a Halliburton attorney sought to steer oral arguments toward questions the high court hadn't agreed to address, testing some justices' patience and eventually prompting the attorney to insist he wasn't "afraid of the question presented."
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January 14, 2025
The Tenth Circuit backed the city of Tulsa, Oklahoma's win over a former information technology worker's lawsuit claiming she was fired because she's a Black woman, ruling Tuesday that she couldn't overcome the city's explanation that she was let go because of repeated dishonesty and disrespect.
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January 14, 2025
An Alabama law banning diversity, equity and inclusion from state schools and college campuses is unconstitutional, according to a Tuesday suit brought by a group of professors, students and the Alabama NAACP against the state's governor and its university system.
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January 14, 2025
A former maintenance manager with CSX Transportation hit the company with a lawsuit in Georgia federal court alleging his complaints about lapses in railway safety were met with "screaming, cussing, and hollering" before his eventual firing last year while he was out on medical leave.
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January 14, 2025
A Michigan federal judge paused a suit from two former Detroit Tigers scouts who said they were fired as part of a systemic push to get rid of older employees, saying she did so due to a similar case that is pending in New York.
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January 14, 2025
A Wyoming trucking company will pay $124,000 to resolve a U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission lawsuit claiming its owner subjected female drivers to inappropriate and offensive sexual comments almost daily, according to federal court filings.
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January 14, 2025
The Tenth Circuit revived a race and sex bias suit Tuesday from a Native American worker who said a university fired her after she faced discrimination and complained about it, stating she did enough to cast doubt on the institution's rationale that poor performance caused her termination.
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January 14, 2025
A former assistant finance manager for Essex County Superior Court in New Jersey has sued the vicinage and its trial court administrator, alleging that in retaliation for reporting a colleague's racist remark she was subjected to a discriminatory investigation and ultimately terminated.
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January 14, 2025
The former CEO of Curaleaf Holdings Inc. is urging a Massachusetts federal court to toss a former senior vice president's claims against him in a suit alleging the company discriminated against her for her gender and race, saying the state's courts don't have jurisdiction over him.
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January 14, 2025
The Massachusetts Appeals Court on Tuesday ruled that the state's anti-SLAPP statute could not stop a suit brought by the former head of an MIT-affiliated biomedical research lab who stepped down amid a finding that he harassed a subordinate, though several of his claims were axed nonetheless.
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January 14, 2025
An official who has held a leadership role in the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission's San Francisco district office since 2022 has been elevated to serve as the district's director, the agency said Tuesday.
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January 14, 2025
An assisted living facility and a former employee have agreed to close her suit claiming she was paid less than colleagues and belittled by her supervisor because she is Indian American, according to a New York federal court filing.
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January 13, 2025
A former Duke University Health System Inc. radiology technologist who accused the healthcare network of firing her for being pregnant with her second child told a North Carolina federal judge Monday she is all right with her former employer's request to take the matter to arbitration.
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January 13, 2025
The Fourth Circuit reopened a lawsuit Monday claiming a German auto parts manufacturer fired a Black quality engineer because of her race and sex, ruling a reasonable jury could determine the company's shifting explanations were cover for discrimination.
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January 13, 2025
The same organization that successfully sued Harvard University over its affirmative action policies targeted McDonald's with a lawsuit in Tennessee federal court Sunday over its Latino scholarship program, arguing it violates a federal statute governing equal rights under the law.
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January 13, 2025
The American Civil Liberties Union settled a Black former employee's suit claiming the nonprofit demoted and fired him after he shared concerns in a conference speech that Black workers were treated inequitably in the organization's ranks, according to a New York federal court filing.