Labor

  • October 30, 2024

    Parking Co. Says NLRB Office's Block Request Is Too Late

    The National Labor Relations Board's Brooklyn office waited too long before asking a New York federal judge to compel a hospital's valet parking contractor to hire about three dozen union employees from its predecessor, the contractor said, asking him to toss the request. 

  • October 30, 2024

    3rd Circ. Vacates, Remands Philly Union Rule Suit

    The Third Circuit revived a suit by a group of contractors against Philadelphia and its mayor's office over the city's former policy requiring that companies working on public projects be members of certain designated unions, ruling that those contractors still have standing for injuries that arose while the rule was enforced.

  • October 29, 2024

    NLRB Balks At Apple's Interrogation Rethink At 5th Circ.

    The National Labor Relations Board urged the Fifth Circuit to reject Apple's push to protect employers' speech rights by loosening the board's interrogation test and affirm a ruling that the company illegally cracked down on a unionization drive at a Manhattan store.

  • October 29, 2024

    1st Starbucks Cemex Ruling Shows Goals Of Bargaining Test

    A National Labor Relations Board judge's decision finding for the first time that Starbucks should be ordered to bargain with Workers United under the board's new Cemex standard shows the intent behind the landmark precedent shift, experts said, but the improving relationship between the coffee giant and union might blunt its impact.

  • October 29, 2024

    Legal Union Fights Title VII Claims After Palestine Resolution

    The Association of Legal Aid Attorneys did not violate anti-discrimination laws by moving to expel three attorneys who tried to stop the union from adopting a controversial pro-Palestine resolution, the union has argued, asking a New York federal judge to dismiss the attorneys' Title VII lawsuit.

  • October 29, 2024

    NLRB Defends Constitutionality In Lead 5th Circ. Case

    The National Labor Relations Board has filed its defense to a consolidated Fifth Circuit challenge to its constitutionality, arguing that courts overstepped by blocking NLRB suits against SpaceX and others and that it's more harmful to enjoin the agency's prosecutions than to let them proceed.

  • October 29, 2024

    9th Circ. Halts Cemex Review To Mull Bigger NLRB Challenge

    The Ninth Circuit will hold off on deciding the fate of the National Labor Relations Board's Cemex ruling, which set a new standard for issuing bargaining orders in administrative proceedings, while it mulls whether the structure of those proceedings is still viable under recent U.S. Supreme Court precedent.

  • October 29, 2024

    5th Circ. Revives Pilots Union's Dispute With Southwest

    The Fifth Circuit has revived a union's dispute with Southwest Airlines over alleged retaliation against a worker for his union activity and sent it back to Texas federal court, saying the legal fight qualifies for an exception to the Railway Labor Act's mandatory arbitration rule.

  • October 28, 2024

    NLRB Told To Study Starbucks Case In Newspaper Union Battle

    A Pennsylvania federal judge on Monday told National Labor Relations Board attorneys to bolster their bid to force the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette's publishers back to the bargaining table with striking unions, pointing out the higher bar the U.S. Supreme Court recently set for obtaining injunctions against employers over unfair labor practices. 

  • October 28, 2024

    Boeing Moves Ahead With $19B Share Sale Amid Cash Crunch

    Boeing launched plans Monday to sell common and preferred stock estimated to raise nearly $19 billion, potentially easing the aviation giant's cash crush amid a prolonged strike and production setbacks, represented by Kirkland & Ellis LLP and underwriters' counsel Davis Polk & Wardwell LLP.

  • October 28, 2024

    2nd Circ. Enforces NLRB Order Against Theater Co.

    The Second Circuit has enforced a National Labor Relations Board order compelling a theatrical production company to hand over certain documents to the Actors' Equity Association, saying Monday the company can't cite a concern that the union might publicize the information as a reason to withhold it.

  • October 28, 2024

    Yellow Corp. Says Failing Biz Excuses WARN Act Duty

    Bankrupt trucking firm Yellow Corp. told a Delaware judge Monday that it should get early wins in suits brought by laid off employees, saying that because the company had ceased most business operations, it was excused from notification obligations surrounding the firing of thousands of workers.

  • October 28, 2024

    NLRB Official OKs Nurse Supervisors' Vote In Jail Union

    Registered nurse supervisors will be able to vote with dentists to be represented by a healthcare union at a California jail, a National Labor Relations Board official ruled, saying that assigning clinical staff was routine in nature.

  • October 28, 2024

    Ariz. Judge Won't Halt NLRB Case On Constitutional Grounds

    An Arizona federal judge won't pause a National Labor Relations Board case against a grocer on constitutional grounds, saying the company hasn't shown it would suffer irreparable harm if the case continues.

  • October 28, 2024

    NLRB Judge Says Starbucks Punished Worker For Union Shirt

    Starbucks violated federal labor law by issuing discipline to a worker for wearing a union shirt on the job, a National Labor Relations Board judge ruled Friday, saying the company previously allowed workers to wear nonunion apparel without punishment.

  • October 28, 2024

    DOL Settles Officer Election Row With Fla. Port Union

    The U.S. secretary of labor will oversee the next officers' election at an International Longshoremen's Association local in Jacksonville, Florida, the union and the U.S. Department of Labor have agreed, resolving a lawsuit that challenged four candidates' disqualification from a 2022 election.

  • October 28, 2024

    Teamsters Didn't Taint UPS Election, NLRB Tells 9th Circ.

    The National Labor Relations Board urged the Ninth Circuit to uphold an order making UPS bargain with the Teamsters over conditions at a California warehouse, disputing the company's claim that union representatives tainted a union vote by campaigning in the parking lot.

  • October 25, 2024

    5th Circ. Punts Musk Tweet Lawfulness, But Axes NLRB Order

    An en banc Fifth Circuit majority on Friday overturned a National Labor Relations Board decision that a tweet Tesla CEO Elon Musk sent during a United Auto Workers unionization campaign violated federal labor law, while the court's dissenting members criticized the majority's decision as "logically incoherent."

  • October 25, 2024

    Alibaba Agrees To $433.5M Deal In Nearly 4-Year Investor Suit

    Alibaba Group has agreed to shell out $433.5 million to resolve a proposed class of investors' allegations it made misstatements about its exclusivity practices and the planned $34 billion initial public offering of a fintech affiliate, the Chinese e-commerce company said in a U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission filing on Friday.

  • October 25, 2024

    Boeing Row Shines Spotlight On Union Bargaining Breaches

    A recent charge by Boeing accusing the International Association of Machinists of bargaining in bad faith offers a relatively rare example of an employer accusing a union of skirting its negotiating duty, further heightening the stakes of the prolonged strike.

  • October 25, 2024

    OpenAI, Authors Battle Over Execs' Texts And Proof Of Harm

    California labor law doesn't shield OpenAI from producing CEO Sam Altman's and President Greg Brockman's texts and social media messages relevant to a copyright infringement lawsuit, authors alleging OpenAI and Microsoft illegally used their copyrighted works to train artificial intelligence program ChatGPT have told a New York federal judge.

  • October 25, 2024

    NLRB Wins Injunction, Defeats Constitutional Claims In Mich.

    A Michigan federal judge handed the National Labor Relations Board two victories Friday in the agency's dispute with a hospital, ordering the hospital to resume recognizing the Service Employees International Union affiliate it ousted last year and rejecting the hospital's argument that the agency's structure is unconstitutional.

  • October 25, 2024

    NLRB Demands Bargain Order Against Calif. Dialysis Operator

    NLRB prosecutors asked a California federal judge to order the operator of dialysis centers to bargain with a West Coast affiliate of the Service Employees International Union, arguing the injunction is imperative to help the union win back diminishing support because of the company's unfair labor practices.

  • October 25, 2024

    Maritime Unions Tell EPA To Reject Calif. Workboat Rule

    Three maritime labor unions and a tugboat trade association called on U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Michael Regan to deny California's request for a Clean Air Act waiver to enforce its rule mandating the installation of diesel particulate filter technology on workboats.

  • October 25, 2024

    Amazon Defends Harm Claim In Bid To Block NLRB Dispute

    Amazon pushed back on the National Labor Relations Board's claim at the Fifth Circuit that the company has not justified its suit seeking to block prosecutions against it on the grounds that the agency is unconstitutionally structured, arguing that facing unconstitutional proceedings is a harm courts can remedy.

Expert Analysis

  • Religious Institution Unionization Risks Post-NLRB Decision

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    A recent National Labor Relations Board decision granted Saint Leo University religious exemption from the National Labor Relations Act, potentially setting a new standard for other religious educational institutions, which must identify unionization risks and create plans to address them, say Terry Potter and Quinn Stigers at Husch Blackwell.

  • Prepare Now To Comply With NJ Temp Worker Law

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    New Jersey temporary staffing firms and their clients must prepare now for the time-consuming compliance requirements created by the controversial new Temporary Laborers' Bill of Rights, or face steep penalties when the law's strict wage, benefit and record-keeping rules go live in May and August, say attorneys at Duane Morris.

  • Protecting Workplace Privacy In The New Age Of Social Media

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    The rise of platforms like TikTok and BeReal, that incentivize users to share workplace content, merits reminding employers that their social media policies should protect both company and employee private information, while accounting for enforceability issues, say Christina Wabiszewski and Kimberly Henrickson at Foley & Lardner.

  • Water Cooler Talk: Quiet Quitting Insights From 'Seinfeld'

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    Tracey Diamond and Evan Gibbs at Troutman Pepper chat with Paradies Lagardere's Rebecca Silk about George Costanza's "quiet quitting" tendencies in "Seinfeld" and how such employees raise thorny productivity-monitoring issues for employers.

  • Garmon Defense Finds New Relevance As NLRB Stays Active

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    With a more muscular National Labor Relations Board at work, employers should recall that they have access to a powerful yet underutilized defense to state law employment and tort claims established under the U.S. Supreme Court decision in San Diego Building Trades Council v. Garmon, say Alex Meier and Cary Reid Burke at Seyfarth.

  • Eye On Compliance: Cross-State Noncompete Agreements

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    The Federal Trade Commission's recent proposal to limit the application of worker noncompete agreements is a timely reminder for prudent employers to reexamine their current policies and practices around such covenants — especially businesses with operational footprints spanning more than one state, says Jeremy Stephenson at Wilson Elser.

  • Conducting Employee Investigations That Hold Up In Court

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    A recent Maryland federal court decision, which held that Elite Protective Services failed to provide a worker under internal investigation with protections required by his collective bargaining agreement, highlights important steps employers should take to ensure the conclusions of internal reviews will withstand judicial scrutiny, say attorneys at Venable.

  • Memo Shows NLRB Intends To Protect Race Talk At Work

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    A newly released memo from the National Labor Relations Board advising that discussions of racism at work count as protected concerted activity should alert employers that worker retaliation claims may now face serious scrutiny not only from the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, but also the NLRB, says Mark Fijman at Phelps Dunbar.

  • Cannabis Co. Considerations For Handling A Union Campaign

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    As employees in Connecticut and across the country increasingly unionize, cannabis employers must understand the meaning of neutrality and the provisions of labor peace agreements to steer clear of possible unfair labor charges, say attorneys at Shipman & Goodwin.

  • Handling Severance Pact Language After NLRB Decision

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    Following the National Labor Relations Board’s recent ruling that severance agreements with broad confidentiality or nondisparagement provisions violate federal labor law, employers may want to consider whether such terms must be stripped from agreements altogether, or if there may be a middle-ground approach, says Daniel Pasternak at Squire Patton.

  • Eye On Compliance: Service Animal Accommodations

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    A Michigan federal court's recent ruling in Bennett v. Hurley Medical Center provides guidance on when employee service animals must be permitted in the workplace — a question otherwise lacking clarity under the Americans with Disabilities Act that has emerged as people return to the office post-pandemic, says Lauren Stadler at Wilson Elser.

  • Joint Employment Mediation Sessions Are Worth The Work

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    Despite the recent trend away from joint mediation in employment disputes, and the prevailing belief that putting both parties in the same room is only a recipe for lost ground, face-to-face sessions can be valuable tools for moving toward win-win resolutions when planned with certain considerations in mind, says Jonathan Andrews at Signature Resolution.

  • A Look At NLRB GC's Memos On Misleading Employees

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    The National Labor Relations Board's general counsel recently confirmed her plan to limit what she considers coercive and misleading statements by employers during union organizing drives, and provided some guidance for employers that, if recognized and followed, may keep a company out of legal trouble with the NLRB, says Rebecca Leaf at Miles & Stockbridge.

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