-
January 08, 2025
The U.S. Department of Labor is trying to restore $132,000 to more than 600 temporary agricultural workers for a South Carolina company who had money illegally deducted from their wages for cleaning fees and political donations.
-
January 08, 2025
A Raytheon subsidiary allowed managers to make disparaging comments to an employee who sought to take parental leave to care for his newborn and then fired him six days before the leave was about to start, according to a suit filed in New York federal court.
-
January 07, 2025
Gig economy company Handy Technologies Inc. has agreed to return nearly $3 million to workers who used the platform, in a settlement with the Federal Trade Commission and the New York Attorney General's Office to resolve claims that the company misled workers about how much they could expect to earn through its services.
-
January 07, 2025
McDermott Will & Emery has brought on a Polsinelli shareholder as a partner in its Washington, D.C., office, where he will specialize in representing healthcare companies as part of the firm's employment practice group.
-
January 07, 2025
Kiss has settled a civil suit filed by its former hairstylist who accused the American glam metal band of misclassifying him as an independent contractor and later firing him for raising complaints over allegedly lax COVID-19 safety practices, according to a minute order entered Monday in California state court.
-
January 07, 2025
Two construction groups pressed a Texas federal court to grant them a win in their challenge to the U.S. Department of Labor's final rule updating how prevailing wage rates are calculated under the Davis-Bacon Act, rejecting the department's argument that they couldn't sue.
-
January 07, 2025
The Federal Acquisition Regulatory Council announced Tuesday that it will withdraw a pending rule barring federal contractors from considering a job applicant's salary history, to focus on other priorities in the waning days of the Biden administration.
-
January 07, 2025
The Computer Science Teachers Association's former financial director has sued the organization for gender discrimination in Illinois federal court, claiming it knowingly paid and treated her worse than male colleagues and blamed an unsupported "accounting error" on her mid-leave termination.
-
January 07, 2025
A metal manufacturing company will pay nearly $143,000 to resolve a veteran employee's lawsuit accusing it of failing to pay him and other production workers for all the hours they worked, a filing in Ohio federal court said.
-
January 07, 2025
US Foods has been hit with a proposed class action by a former employee in Seattle who claims the food service retailer systematically shorts workers on breaks, overtime pay, sick leave and expense reimbursements, according to a new lawsuit in Washington federal court.
-
January 07, 2025
Volvo does not pay hourly employees for their time spent putting on and taking off personal protective equipment and completing other necessary pre- and post-shift tasks, a proposed class and collective action filed in South Carolina federal court said.
-
January 07, 2025
An attorney specializing in employment litigation matters and advising companies on compliance strategies has moved her practice to McGuireWoods' Pittsburgh office after nearly six years with Buchanan Ingersoll & Rooney PC.
-
January 07, 2025
An Amazon employee hasn't prevailed in his claims that the e-commerce giant hurdled his promotions for his U.S. Marine Corps Reserve leave, the company said, urging a Washington federal court to deny his $1.63 million in attorney fees requested as part of his settlement.
-
January 07, 2025
International labor and employment law firm Fisher Phillips has brought on a Dallas-based labor and employment partner with expertise in a wide range of litigation — from class and collective actions to restrictive covenant claims — the firm announced Monday.
-
January 07, 2025
A former executive at a Massachusetts company that makes drones for the agricultural industry says he was never paid during his brief tenure, according to a lawsuit filed Tuesday in state court.
-
January 07, 2025
A Washington state appeals court declined to send to arbitration a former worker's suit accusing a Subway franchisee of failing to provide employees with meal breaks, despite a dissent finding that the worker's wage claims fall under an arbitration pact.
-
January 07, 2025
An arbitration pact that the operator of a restaurant chain in California gave to a worker pushes his Private Attorneys General Act individual claims into arbitration, a state appeals panel ruled, partly flipping a trial court's decision.
-
January 06, 2025
A Washington federal judge on Monday cut the state's employment agency loose from a union challenge to policies that have allegedly depressed farmworker wages, saying the U.S. Department of Labor is the only proper defendant in the litigation.
-
January 06, 2025
The former CEO of the American arm of a U.K.-based food manufacturer says the company deluded him with misleading promises about stock options during the recruitment process to get him to join and then refused to pony up the shares when he left.
-
January 06, 2025
A longtime hairstylist at Fox Sports is accusing the network of ignoring sexual harassment and a toxic workplace environment created by its executives and hosts, including an offer by TV host Skip Bayless of $1.5 million to have sex with her, according to a California state lawsuit.
-
January 06, 2025
A Houston-area restaurant should not be allowed to claim a tip credit that permits it to pay servers less than the minimum wage because it failed to inform workers that they have to foot the bill for their uniforms, according to a proposed collective action filed in Texas federal court.
-
January 06, 2025
A healthcare staffing agency agreed to pay $4.4 million to resolve a 2,300-member collective action accusing it of shorting travel nurses on overtime wages and forcing them to accept lower pay after they had already begun their contracts, a filing in Washington federal court said.
-
January 06, 2025
Ohio State University, the NCAA, The Big Ten Conference Inc. and a media rights licensing company urged an Ohio federal judge to toss a proposed class action brought by former Buckeye star quarterback Terrelle Pryor alleging they engaged in an anticompetitive conspiracy to monopolize profits on athletes' names, images and likenesses.
-
January 06, 2025
A former nonequity partner at Sunstein LLP says the firm waited months to pay him approximately $85,000 he was owed for work he performed for two clients he originated for the firm, according to a suit alleging violations of the Massachusetts Wage Act.
-
January 03, 2025
Panera cheated some employees out of overtime wages and reimbursement for the use of their cars and cellphones working with catering clients, and also manipulated records to inaccurately log break times in violation of California labor laws, according to a representative action lodged Thursday in California state court.