Labor

  • February 25, 2025

    How To Track Trump's Legal Battles

    President Donald Trump has issued a historic number of executive orders and other actions during his first five weeks back in the White House, eliciting more than 80 legal challenges and setting the stage for major courtroom battles over birthright citizenship, presidential power, the federal government's structure and more. Law360 has created a database to keep track of them all.

  • February 25, 2025

    PLA Amendment Moots Contractor Dispute, Gov't Says

    The federal government has asked the U.S. Court of Federal Claims to dismiss a case challenging the requirement that contractors submit a project labor agreement with their solicitations for government projects, saying the requirement has already been removed from the solicitations at issue.

  • February 25, 2025

    5th Circ. Asks NLRB To Back Up Coercion Claim Against Apple

    A Fifth Circuit panel asked the National Labor Relations Board to spell out how Apple Inc. was coercive to a worker during a unionization push in New York, pondering Tuesday whether affirming the board's finding would tamp down on the company's freedom of expression.

  • February 25, 2025

    Attys Seek $1.7M Fees For Union 401(k) Plan Case Settlement

    Lawyers for two elevator company employees who settled a proposed class action against their union's retirement plan for $5 million asked a Pennsylvania federal judge to approve about $1.7 million in attorney fees, saying it represents the standard one-third fee dispensed in these cases.

  • February 25, 2025

    NJ Appeals Panel Upends Custodians' COVID Pay Award

    A New Jersey appellate court reversed an arbitration award Tuesday granting extra money to school custodians who worked during the COVID-19 state of emergency, saying the award conflicts with a state statute that provided school employees with regular pay throughout the pandemic.

  • February 25, 2025

    Pa. Health System Strikes Deal To Exit Workers' OT Suit

    A Pennsylvania health system reached a deal Tuesday to resolve a proposed class action accusing it of stiffing unionized hospital workers on overtime wages, according to a report filed in federal court announcing a successful mediation.

  • February 25, 2025

    DOL Taps Former Agency Official As Exec Secretary

    The U.S. Department of Labor announced Tuesday that a former agency official who served under President Donald Trump's first administration was appointed as its executive secretary.

  • February 25, 2025

    20 Republican AGs Back Trump's Firing Of Wilcox From NLRB

    A coalition of 20 Republican attorneys general asked a Washington, D.C., federal judge to uphold President Donald Trump's removal of Gwynne Wilcox from the National Labor Relations Board, backing the administration's position that board members' job protections written into the National Labor Relations Act are unconstitutional.

  • February 25, 2025

    Special Counsel Calls Out Illegal Federal Worker Firings

    The firings of six probationary federal employees amid the Trump administration's mission to trim the federal workforce were unlawful, the head of the U.S. Office of Special Counsel said, urging the Merit Systems Protection Board to halt the dismissals while indicating more workers are in the same boat.

  • February 25, 2025

    Union Says Train Co.'s Lawsuit Frustrates Bargaining

    A Florida high-speed rail operator is not bargaining in good faith with a transport workers union by claiming it is not subject to federal railway labor law, the union alleged in a lawsuit filed in federal court Tuesday.

  • February 24, 2025

    Ex-Prison Guard Loses Religious Bias Suit Against Teamsters

    A Chicagoland Teamsters local defeated a former prison guard's claim that it committed religious discrimination by failing to fight for her to get time off to observe the Sabbath, with an Illinois federal judge ruling Monday that the suit lacked facts to back up the claim.

  • February 24, 2025

    DC Judge Wary Of Constitutionality Of Musk's DOGE

    A D.C. federal judge on Monday questioned the constitutionality of Elon Musk's Department of Government Efficiency while expressing skepticism that groups challenging the department's access to federal systems housing Americans' sensitive data had established the irreparable harm needed to block access.

  • February 24, 2025

    Unions, Groups Say Fed. Employees '5 Things' Email Illegal

    A group of unions challenging the federal layoff order said the U.S. Office of Personnel Management's controversial request for federal employees to include in a weekly email five things they accomplished flouts federal law, amending their lawsuit in California federal court.

  • February 24, 2025

    Md. Judge Blocks DOGE Access To Education, OPM Data

    A Maryland federal judge on Monday prohibited the U.S. Department of Education and the Office of Personnel Management from continuing to share with Elon Musk's Department of Government Efficiency the sensitive information of federal employees and student aid recipients, saying the agencies likely have violated federal privacy law.

  • February 24, 2025

    Ousted MSPB Chair Defends Humphrey's In Injunction Bid

    The Merit Systems Protection Board chair fired by President Donald Trump demanded an injunction to prevent her removal by administration officials, telling a D.C. federal judge that siding with the president's position on the U.S. Supreme Court's Humphrey's Executor ruling would "upend constitutional law."

  • February 24, 2025

    CVS Says Union Vote Certifications Require NLRB Quorum

    CVS has argued that National Labor Relations Board regional offices cannot certify the results of union representation elections while the agency lacks a quorum, advancing the latest argument employers have adopted seeking to block the board's actions.

  • February 24, 2025

    GAO Sinks Protest Over Army Corps Solicitation Amendment

    The U.S. Government Accountability Office has said the Army Corps of Engineers rightly changed a solicitation to remove the requirement that solicitors attach a project labor agreement, denying a construction contractor's protest of the change.

  • February 24, 2025

    NLRB Stops Defending Job Protections For Members, Judges

    National Labor Relations Board prosecutors will no longer defend board members and judges against claims that their job protections are unconstitutional, the prosecutors told a Missouri federal judge, switching positions after the acting solicitor general stated that administrative law judges' job protections violate the U.S. Constitution.

  • February 24, 2025

    Unions Seek To Block DOGE's 'Unprecedented' Access To Info

    Elon Musk's Department of Government Efficiency must be stopped from having "unprecedented" access to personal data from the Social Security Administration, two unions and a retiree advocacy group argued in Maryland federal court, becoming the latest lawsuit trying to stop DOGE from obtaining information at federal agencies.

  • February 24, 2025

    Retired Conn. Cops Can't Get Retro Pay Under New Contract

    More than 30 retired New Haven police officers couldn't snag retroactive back pay a collective bargaining agreement laid out because they were not active employees when the contract was ratified, the Connecticut Appellate Court ruled, affirming a trial court's decision to toss the cops' suit.

  • February 21, 2025

    Unions Lose Bid To Block Trump Admin Efforts To Gut USAID

    A Washington, D.C., federal judge Friday refused to grant a preliminary injunction barring the Trump administration from placing U.S. Agency for International Development employees on leave, halting funding and taking other steps that federal employee unions say are meant to illegally dismantle the foreign assistance agency.

  • February 21, 2025

    New EO Could Give Trump More 'Levers' To Influence NLRB

    A recent executive order issued by President Donald Trump that seeks to rein in independent federal agencies could increase political influence on the National Labor Relations Board, though experts said it is unclear just how much of the board's work the change will touch.

  • February 21, 2025

    Trump, NLRB Chairman Defend Wilcox's Removal As Lawful

    President Donald Trump told a D.C. federal judge Friday that former National Labor Relations Board member Gwynne Wilcox should not be reinstated, laying out his arguments for why a 90-year-old U.S. Supreme Court opinion does not apply to board members.

  • February 21, 2025

    Teamsters Unit Fights Amazon's New Bid To Block NLRB Case

    Amazon doesn't deserve an injunction blocking a National Labor Relations Board hearing any more now than it did two weeks ago, a Teamsters unit argued, asking a California judge to toss the company's renewed bid to escape a hearing on claims that it illegally snubbed a delivery drivers union.

  • February 21, 2025

    NY Forecast: 2nd Circ. Hears Harassment Retaliation Case

    This week, the Second Circuit will consider reviving a New York school district employee's lawsuit claiming she was retaliated against after she complained that an administrator at her school sexually harassed her. Here, Law360 looks at this and other notable cases on the docket in New York courts.

Expert Analysis

  • Religious Institution Unionization Risks Post-NLRB Decision

    Author Photo

    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

    Author Photo

    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

    Author Photo

    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'

    Author Photo

    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

    Author Photo

    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

    Author Photo

    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

    Author Photo

    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

    Author Photo

    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

    Author Photo

    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

    Author Photo

    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

    Author Photo

    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

    Author Photo

    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

    Author Photo

    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.

Can't find the article you're looking for? Click here to search the Employment Authority Labor archive.