Wage & Hour

  • July 22, 2024

    9th Circ. Backs TSA's Win In Ex-Worker's Retaliation Suit

    The Ninth Circuit declined to reinstate a lawsuit alleging the Transportation Security Administration fired an officer for complaining that he faced a hostile work environment, saying he failed to overcome the agency's assertion that he was terminated for refusing to comply with an investigation into alleged criminal activity.

  • July 22, 2024

    Pizza Franchisees Owe $277K After DOL Child Labor Probe

    The operators of 10 pizza restaurant franchises in Nevada owe more than $277,000 for allowing minors to work at times the law does not permit and operate dangerous machinery, the U.S. Department of Labor announced Monday.

  • July 22, 2024

    Drivers Urge Court To Keep Amazon Wage Suit Alive

    Delivery drivers accusing Amazon of misclassifying them as independent contractors urged a Washington federal judge not to grant the e-commerce giant's bid to toss the eight-year-old suit, saying their claims are solid enough for this stage of the litigation to continue.

  • July 22, 2024

    Mexican Restaurants To Pay $137K For Wage Violations

    Three Mexican restaurant locations in Massachusetts, New Hampshire and Vermont will pay $137,000 in back wages, damages and fines for denying 126 workers their full tips and wages, the U.S. Department of Labor announced Monday.

  • July 22, 2024

    Canada Dry Agrees To Settle OT Dispute For $1M

    Canada Dry has agreed to shell out $1 million to put to rest a Fair Labor Standards Act suit in Pennsylvania federal court claiming it miscalculated workers' overtime pay.

  • July 22, 2024

    Rising Star: Filippatos' Tanvir H. Rahman

    Tanvir Rahman of Filippatos PLLC secured a $12 million settlement for a former Fox News producer who said she was used as a scapegoat during the network's legal battle with Dominion Voting Systems, earning him a spot among the employment law practitioners under age 40 honored by Law360 as Rising Stars.

  • July 22, 2024

    Ga. Child Therapists Say Employer Cheated Them Out Of Pay

    A Georgia children's therapy provider has not been paying its registered behavior technicians for the time spent working before appointments, traveling, performing administrative work and attending required training sessions, four ex-workers claimed in a proposed collective action in federal court.

  • July 22, 2024

    OT Rule Case Is Key Test In Post-Chevron World

    A suit challenging the U.S. Department of Labor's authority to regulate salary thresholds for overtime exemptions serves as an important test case for how courts will assess the contours of agency rulemaking power because of the salary requirements' particular history, attorneys say. 

  • July 19, 2024

    Business Groups Want DOL OT Rule Tossed

    A slew of business groups urged a Texas federal court to halt on a nationwide basis the U.S. Department of Labor's rule raising salary thresholds for a federal overtime exemption, arguing they raise identical arguments the court already sided with.

  • July 19, 2024

    FTC Wants To Block Kroger & Albertsons' 'Principal Defense'

    Federal Trade Commission staffers want to block Kroger and Albertsons from using their main defense to an in-house merger challenge — the plan to sell off 579 stores — or otherwise force the companies to produce documents so far protected as privileged, according to a recently public filing.

  • July 19, 2024

    9th Circ. Says Fueling Planes Is Arbitration-Exempt Work

    The Ninth Circuit on Friday affirmed that an airplane fuel pumper can proceed with his unpaid wage claims in federal court rather than in arbitration, ruling his work is involved in the flow of interstate commerce and he is thus a transportation worker exempt from the Federal Arbitration Act.

  • July 19, 2024

    Temple U.'s Ken Jacobsen On NCAA-House Deal, What's Next

    Even with a deal of such size and consequence — approximately $2.8 billion, more than 184,000 athletes in the class, all the Power Five conferences named and with decades of court rulings leading up to it — the settlement over name, image and likeness compensation in the Grant House-led class action against the NCAA is best seen as a beginning, rather than an end.

  • July 19, 2024

    NJ Says 3rd Circ. Ruling Backs State Temp Worker Law

    The State of New Jersey called a federal court's attention to a recent Third Circuit decision holding that the bar for issuing preliminary injunctions should be higher, saying the ruling supports its argument opposing a business community request to block a state law regulating protections for temporary workers.

  • July 19, 2024

    $15M Kraft Heinz Wage Deal Nabs Initial OK

    A Wisconsin federal court granted preliminary approval to a $15 million deal resolving claims that Kraft Heinz Foods Co. failed to pay employees for all hours worked and include certain compensation when calculating overtime, finding the deal fair and reasonable.

  • July 19, 2024

    Calif. Forecast: $5M Nurses Wage Deal Up For Approval

    In the coming week, attorneys should keep an eye out for the potential final approval of a $5 million deal to end a class action against a nurse staffing agency. Here's a look at that case and other labor and employment matters coming up in California.

  • July 19, 2024

    Rising Star: Jackson Lewis' Douglas J. Klein

    Douglas J. Klein of Jackson Lewis PC has defended employers against class and collective actions, including federal court cases involving a "naked" class waiver at Insomnia Cookies and wage-and-hour claims against New York's Metropolitan Transportation Authority, earning him a spot among employment law practitioners under age 40 honored by Law360 as Rising Stars.

  • July 19, 2024

    Property Management Group Pays $304K For OT Violations

    A Florida property management group paid nearly $304,000 in back wages, damages and fines for denying 92 workers overtime pay, the U.S. Department of Labor announced.

  • July 19, 2024

    Coffee Chain Owes OT, Brewer Says

    Production workers for a coffee chain haven't been getting paid for the time it takes them to put on and take off protective equipment, cheating them out of overtime wages, a brewer claimed in a proposed collective and class action filed in Pennsylvania federal court.

  • July 19, 2024

    NY Forecast: NLRB Injunction Bid Against Starbucks Resumes

    A status conference is scheduled this week in the National Labor Relations Board's recently revived suit seeking an injunction barring Starbucks from violating federal labor law at stores across the country.

  • July 19, 2024

    W&H Litigation Refined Arbitration Law In First Half Of 2024

    The first half of 2024 brought rapid-fire developments in arbitration law thanks to wage and hour cases on misclassification and unpaid wages, underscoring how the contours of the Federal Arbitration Act's Section 1 exemption will continue to be sliced and diced through employment litigation.

  • July 18, 2024

    Miner Seeks Atty Fees After 4th Circ. DOL Judges Ruling

    A former miner urged the Fourth Circuit to approve approximately $21,000 in attorney fees in his case seeking benefits for his black lung disease, saying he has been unable to reach a settlement with an engineering company that challenged the appointment of two U.S. Department of Labor administrative law judges.

  • July 18, 2024

    BAE Gets Wage Claims Cut From Engineer's Retaliation Suit

    A former engineer for BAE Systems adequately alleged that it understood he was raising concerns about his overtime pay when it chose to fire him, a Maryland federal magistrate judge ruled, keeping alive the ex-worker's retaliation claim while cutting his wage claims against the U.S. Navy contractor.

  • July 18, 2024

    Mass. ABC Test Turns 20 As Contractor Debate Evolves

    A three-prong test for determining independent contractor status in Massachusetts continues to be central to litigation two decades after its current form took effect, and attorneys expect it will remain so as the gig economy expands.

  • July 18, 2024

    Famous Dave's Attys Can't Score Extra Fees In $1M Tip Deal

    Attorneys representing workers for Famous Dave's can't get additional fees from funds left over from a settlement resolving claims that the restaurant chain violated tip regulations, a Maryland federal judge ruled Thursday, saying the workers' counsel have already received enough money.

  • July 18, 2024

    FordHarrison Taps Wage-Hour Leader To Helm LA Shop

    FordHarrison LLP named the leader of its wage and hour practice to take over as managing partner in the firm's Los Angeles office, turning to an attorney who started at the firm over a decade ago as an associate.

Expert Analysis

  • Why FLSA Settlement Reviews May Be Increasingly Unneeded

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    While most federal courts have followed the Eleventh Circuit's 1982 holding in Lynn's Food v. U.S. that Fair Labor Standards Act claims may be settled only with approval by a court or the U.S. Department of Labor, more courts are beginning to question — or outright challenge — that obligation, say attorneys at Jackson Lewis.

  • Key Takeaways From Calif.'s Sweeping Fast-Food Wage Law

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    California Gov. Gavin Newsom recently signed a controversial wage bill that will have a major impact on fast-food employers and employees, will likely shape how the state regulates other industries in the future, and represents a radical step toward sectoral bargaining, says Pooja Nair at Ervin Cohen.

  • Forecasting A Rise In 11th Circ. State Court Class Actions

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    Two recent opinions from the Eleventh Circuit have created an unusual landscape that may result in a substantial increase of class action litigation in state courts, particularly in Florida, that will be unable to utilize removal tools such as the Class Action Fairness Act, says Alec Schultz at Hilgers Graben.

  • Key Employer Takeaways From DOJ's Poultry Antitrust Case

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    The U.S. Department of Justice’s settlement with three major U.S. poultry processors for allegedly conspiring to fix employee wages and benefits may signal an uptick in antitrust violation investigations and serves as a reminder to companies of the risks they face when managing employee personal data, say attorneys at Akin Gump.

  • Recent Employer Lessons On Facing Calif. Labor Hearings

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    A California state appeals court in Elsie Seviour-Iloff v. LaPaille recently set forth multiple important holdings expanding the potential relief available to employees pursuing administrative relief for wage claims with the Division of Labor Standards Enforcement, and they offer crucial takeaways for employers, says Tyler Bernstein at Sheppard Mullin.

  • Poultry Sector Wage-Fixing Case Shows Info Exchange Risks

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    The nearly $85 million settlement of a U.S. Department of Justice case accusing Cargill and other poultry processors of conspiring to suppress worker pay should prod employers and trade groups to scrutinize all exchanges of potentially competitive sensitive information for compliance with labor market antitrust rules, say attorneys at Mintz.

  • Beware Employee Tracking As A Response To 'Quiet Quitting'

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    "Quiet quitting" — a recent trend that encourages a bare-minimum work ethic — may prompt employers to electronically monitor worker productivity, but this response raises concerns about discrimination, employee classification, labor law compliance, overtime pay and workplace morale, says Chris Deubert at Constangy Brooks.

  • 9th Circ. Class Cert. Move Illustrates Individual Claim Issues

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    The Ninth Circuit's recent class certification decision in Bowerman v. Field Asset Services illustrates the challenges presented when a defendant argues that not all putative class members have been injured or that damages must be determined on a claimant-by-claimant basis, says Robert Fuller at Robinson Bradshaw.

  • What Proposed Contractor Rule May Mean For Wage Litigation

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    The Biden administration's proposed independent contractor rule could have major implications for wage and hour litigation, but comparing it to the Trump administration's rule could help employers prepare for the next phase of employee classification disputes, say Jessica Scott and Frederick Yarger at Wheeler Trigg.

  • A Calif. Employer's Guide To Telework Expense Obligations

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    As the COVID-19 pandemic recedes and California employers face an increase in workplace reimbursement lawsuits from remote employees, it’s imperative to know what expenses must be covered — and how repayment should be administered — under state law, says Eric Fox at Gordon & Rees.

  • High Court FLSA Case Threatens OT Pay Landscape

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    The U.S. Supreme Court will soon decide in Helix Energy Solutions v. Hewitt whether a high-paid oil rig worker is entitled to overtime compensation under the Fair Labor Standards Act, and its eventual opinion could bring a new class of employees within the purview of the law’s requirements, say Melissa Legault and Wade Erwin at Squire Patton.

  • Calif. Pay Stub Ruling Spotlights Overtime, Bonus Compliance

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    Though a California appellate court's recent ruling provides a simple answer to how employers must list true-up overtime wages on pay stubs, it also underscores the importance of reviewing compliance requirements for wage statements where bonuses or other factors affect regular rates, says Paul Lynd at ArentFox Schiff.

  • 11th Circ. Clarifies FLSA Administrative Exemption

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    The Eleventh Circuit's recent decision in Fowler v. OSP Prevention Group about administrative employee determination under the Fair Labor Standards Act highlights the importance for employers to critically consider all required factors for an FLSA exemption, say Sarah Guo and Larry Perlman at Foley & Lardner.