Labor

  • July 10, 2024

    ​GOP Bombards Agencies With Demands After Chevron's End

    Republican leaders of major congressional committees Wednesday demanded details from dozens of agencies on policies suddenly shrouded in uncertainty after U.S. Supreme Court conservatives overturned the so-called Chevron doctrine, which for 40 years gave regulators flexibility in rulemaking and advantages in related litigation.

  • July 10, 2024

    SpaceX Anti-NLRB Crusade Advances As Judge Grants Block

    A Texas federal judge on Wednesday blocked a National Labor Relations Board suit accusing SpaceX of suppressing workers' rights while he weighs the rocket maker's claims that the prosecution is unconstitutional, according to a docket notice.

  • July 10, 2024

    Carmaker's Discovery Request Narrowed In NLRB Dispute

    An Arizona federal judge cleared an electric car manufacturer to move forward with the discovery process in an injunction dispute with the National Labor Relations Board, holding that the company can request some but not all of its workers' communications with union representatives.

  • July 10, 2024

    Starbucks Questions NLRB Constitutionality After ALJ Ruling

    Starbucks fought an agency judge's ruling over the termination of a union supporter in Michigan with claims that the National Labor Relations Board's structure violates the U.S. Constitution, challenging removal protections for board members and administrative law judges.

  • July 10, 2024

    Teamsters Lose 3rd Circ. Fight Over Belated Wage Grievance

    The Third Circuit on Wednesday issued a rare opinion declining to enforce a union's arbitration win, saying a Teamsters unit waited too long to challenge a cemetery operator's read of their new contract's raise language.

  • July 10, 2024

    Pittsburgh Paper Bargained In Bad Faith, NLRB Judge Says

    The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette violated federal labor law by pursuing proposals in contract negotiations that would tread on its advertising department workers' rights, a National Labor Relations Board judge ruled, issuing a bargaining order against the newspaper.

  • July 10, 2024

    NLRB Outburst Order Violated Due Process, 5th Circ. Says

    The National Labor Relations Board must reconsider its decision changing the analysis of whether worker outbursts are protected under federal labor law, the Fifth Circuit ruled, finding the board violated a company's due process rights by not hearing its arguments prior to the precedent shift.

  • July 10, 2024

    Bankruptcy Filing Halts Dueling Unions' Defamation Dispute

    One of two security and law enforcement unions embroiled in defamation suits in Michigan federal court has informed the court that it has filed for bankruptcy in Pennsylvania, pausing the claims against it a week before trial.

  • July 10, 2024

    Keurig Dr. Pepper Sent Mass Anti-Union Texts, Workers Say

    Keurig Dr. Pepper has been accused in Illinois state court of sending mass anti-union text messages to the personal cellphone numbers of its factory workers, in violation of their privacy.

  • July 10, 2024

    $6B Yellow Corp. Pension Fund Fight Set For August Hearing

    A Delaware bankruptcy judge said Wednesday he would schedule a hearing in August to resolve competing motions for summary judgment on Yellow Corp.'s objection to several pension plans' claims for more than $6 billion in retirement-fund withdrawal liability.

  • July 09, 2024

    6th Circ. Won't Revive Pilots' COVID Vax Preemption Fight

    The Sixth Circuit on Tuesday refused to revive a putative class action by Kalitta Air pilots who were fired over their refusal to get the COVID-19 vaccine, finding that the Railway Labor Act precludes the court from hearing their failure-to-accommodate and disability discrimination claims, which must be resolved through arbitration instead.

  • July 09, 2024

    Trader Joe's Fired Worker For Raising Complaints, NLRB Says

    The National Labor Relations Board ordered Trader Joe's on Tuesday to rehire a worker who was fired after raising concerns about COVID-19 safety, benefits and other issues, affirming a judge's ruling that the company acted to rid itself of a "squeaky wheel" and not because co-workers complained about her.

  • July 09, 2024

    DC Circ. Dings NLRB's Analysis In Pot Co.'s Certification Fight

    The National Labor Relations Board must explain why it applied one legal test over another when analyzing whether a union representation election at a Chicago cannabis dispensary was fair, the D.C. Circuit said Tuesday, sending the dispensary's challenge to union certification back to the board.

  • July 09, 2024

    Calif. Tribe Wants Nix Of Casino Card Check Arbitration Award

    An arbitration award that required a California tribe to comply with a union authorization card check process at a casino should be nixed, the tribe has told a federal judge, arguing a tribal ordinance mapping out a procedure for a secret ballot election must be followed instead.

  • July 09, 2024

    NLRB Official Says Carmaker's Union Info Request Is Invasive

    An electric car manufacturer is overreaching by soliciting communications between a union and its workers in an injunction dispute with a National Labor Relations Board official, the agency told an Arizona federal judge, asking her to deny the company's request for third-party document production.

  • July 09, 2024

    No Conflict For Ballard Spahr In Ex-Union Leader's Bribe Case

    A Pennsylvania federal judge on Tuesday rejected a claim by former Philadelphia union leader and convicted felon John "Johnny Doc" Dougherty that his Ballard Spahr LLP defense team marred its representation of him in a bribery prosecution because of a conflict of interest with Comcast.

  • July 09, 2024

    NLRB Asks High Court Not To Touch Union Animus Standard

    The Ninth Circuit correctly enforced a National Labor Relations Board decision ordering a hotel to rehire more than 100 union-represented workers, the agency told the U.S. Supreme Court, asking it to uphold the ruling and reject the hotel's challenge to the evidence standard for proving anti-union animus.

  • July 09, 2024

    DOL Defends H-2A Farmworkers' Rule

    The U.S. Department of Labor has argued that it has had the authority to regulate labor protections for foreign H-2A farmworkers for about 40 years, telling a Georgia federal court that 17 Republican attorneys general and two entities cannot halt a rule that just went into effect.

  • July 09, 2024

    Ex-NLRB Atty Rejoins Ogletree After In-House Stint

    After a busy month of expansion, management-side labor and employment firm Ogletree Deakins Nash Smoak & Stewart PC announced Monday that it is welcoming a shareholder back to the firm following his in-house stint with wholesale grocery distributor UNFI.

  • July 08, 2024

    UAW Monitor Says Union Must Turn Over Docs

    The court-appointed monitor overseeing the United Auto Workers' compliance with a 2021 consent decree that resolved a corruption probe told a Michigan federal judge Monday that the union cannot withhold certain documents from him, saying the consent decree doesn't entitle the union to confidentiality.

  • July 08, 2024

    NEA Locks Out Staff Union After Strike During Annual Meeting

    The National Education Association locked out employees represented by a staff union Monday after workers were on the picket line for three days during an annual meeting of the national organization.

  • July 08, 2024

    Mass. Court Tosses School Nurses' Breaks Suit

    A Massachusetts appeals panel kept a trial court's decision tossing two school nurses' suit claiming unpaid meal breaks, saying the duo was paid for the breaks they spent while remaining on school grounds.

  • July 08, 2024

    Judge Rightly Axed Guard's Bias Claim, Union Tells 6th Circ.

    An Ohio federal judge properly dismissed a fired white female prison guard's claim that her union failed to fight as hard for her reinstatement as it did for the Black male guard fired alongside her, the union told the Sixth Circuit, saying her claims lack merit.

  • July 08, 2024

    K&L Gates Labor Atty Moves To Cozen O'Connor In Pittsburgh

    Cozen O'Connor expanded its Pittsburgh office this week with the addition of an attorney with nearly two decades of experience in labor and employment law, who moved his practice after more than five years with K&L Gates LLP.

  • July 08, 2024

    DC Circ. Supports NLRB Order Against Puerto Rico Hospital

    The National Labor Relations Board rightly found that a hospital in Puerto Rico violated federal labor law by unilaterally slashing workers' hours, the D.C. Circuit ruled, saying the hospital can't excuse its actions with claims about financial effects from the pandemic.

Expert Analysis

  • ERISA Ruling Reveals Big-Picture Health Benefit Issues

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    While a California federal court’s recent ruling in Asner v. SAG-AFTRA Health Fund concerned fiduciary duty claims under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act, a closer look at the details raises broad questions about retirees’ rights to lifetime health benefits and the staying power of employer-sponsored health care, says Mark DeBofsky at DeBofsky Sherman.

  • 2nd Circ. Ruling Signals Decisive Shift To NLRB Contract Test

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    In its recent International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers v. National Labor Relations Board decision, the Second Circuit explicitly approved an NLRB test that gives employers flexibility to address unforeseen circumstances not addressed in union contracts, and signified the end of a decades-old test requiring a clear and unmistakable waiver of bargaining rights, says Frederick Braid at Holland & Knight.

  • What Employers Should Know About NLRB Top Cop Priorities

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    A recent memo released by the National Labor Relations Board's new general counsel signals changes in enforcement priorities, and both unionized and nonunionized employers should note potential shifts in precedent for contract work, handbooks, electronic media and more, say Robert Lian and James Crowley at Akin Gump.

  • Employer Lessons From 7th Circ. Ruling On Labor Violations

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    The Seventh Circuit’s recent affirmation of the National Labor Relations Board’s finding against Mondelez Global contains lessons for employers on unlawful discharges, unilateral changes and information requests — which also apply to mandatory vaccination and other pandemic-related policies, say Andrew Goldberg and Christina Wernick at Laner Muchin.

  • How High Court Takings Ruling Compares With Prior Analysis

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    In setting new precedent on regulatory takings with its recent decision in Cedar Point v. Hassid, the U.S. Supreme Court did not overrule the test established in its 1978 Penn Central v. New York City opinion, but it is possible that Penn Central would be decided differently today, says John Walk at Hirschler.

  • Under Biden, Nonunion Employers Can't Ignore Labor Law

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    The National Labor Relations Board under President Joe Biden will likely expand employee protections in the nonunion workplace, so employers must consider potential liabilities, especially regarding investigations, handbooks and discipline for worker misconduct, says Daniel Johns at Cozen O'Connor.

  • NLRB Saves Scabby But Must Go Further On Free Speech

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    The National Labor Relations Board recently reaffirmed that unions have the right to display banners and the rat-shaped balloon Scabby on public property near a work site shared by multiple employers, but the absence of full First Amendment protection for peaceful labor picketing has become increasingly untenable in view of U.S. Supreme Court decisions, says Catherine Fisk at the University of California.

  • How Purchasers, Debtors Can Navigate CBAs In Bankruptcy

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    As commercial bankruptcy filings rise, debtor and purchasing employers have several available tools to modify or eliminate preexisting collective bargaining agreements, with nuanced considerations established by the Bankruptcy Code and case law, says Stephania Sanon at McDermott.

  • Lessons On Protected Conduct From Starbucks NLRB Ruling

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    A recent National Labor Relations Board ruling against Starbucks, finding that the company violated the National Labor Relations Act, helps to illustrate examples of protected conduct and highlights some best practices for employers considering adverse action against employees who have engaged in union activities, says Geoff Gilbert at Constangy Brooks.

  • DC Circ. Labor Ruling Is A Win For Employer Free Speech

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    The D.C. Circuit’s recent decision overturning the National Labor Relations Board's finding that a Trinity Services manager's misstatements blaming the union for paid leave issues amounted to an unfair labor practice preserves workplace free speech, but reminds employers to uphold certain best practices when communicating with workers, say Scott Nelson and Lukas Moffett at Hunton.

  • NLRB Can Bypass Senate Gridlock To Impose Labor Reforms

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    The Protect the Right to Organize Act, which would dramatically expand federal labor law and is endorsed by the Biden administration, is likely to fail in the Senate, but there are many elements of the pro-union bill that may be implemented by the National Labor Relations Board without legislation, say attorneys at Jackson Lewis.

  • Justices' Cedar Point Ruling May Inspire More Takings Claims

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    The U.S. Supreme Court's decision in Cedar Point Nursery v. Hassid, finding that a California law granting union organizers access to private property was a government taking, provides landowners with a new weapon to fight a broad range of government regulations, says Ryan Sugden at Stinson.

  • What High Court Union Access Ruling Means For Employers

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    In Cedar Point Nursery v. Hassid, the U.S. Supreme Court recently overturned a California law that required growers to grant union organizers access to their property, offering a new avenue of attack against such union invasions of an employer’s property, including those protected by other California statutes, say Keahn Morris and Mark Ross at Sheppard Mullin.

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