Labor

  • June 12, 2024

    2nd Circ. Partially Nixes Injunction Over Amazon Firing

    The Second Circuit vacated on Wednesday a New York federal judge's order barring Amazon from firing workers for engaging in union activity, saying the judge did not explain why she imposed the broad prohibition while at the same time finding the company did not have to rehire a fired union activist.

  • June 11, 2024

    DOL's H-2A Protections Rule Flouts Labor Law, GOP AGs Say

    The U.S. Department of Labor's final rule including protections for foreign farmworkers within the H-2A visa program doesn't comport with federal labor law, a group of Republican attorneys general claimed in Georgia federal court, saying the rule doesn't give the same rights to U.S. citizen workers.

  • June 11, 2024

    NCAA Settlement Could Aid Athletes' Employee Status Push

    A landmark settlement the NCAA announced in May in an antitrust class action brought by former college athletes reportedly sets a path for schools to share revenue with players, and experts said it could bolster active efforts to deem college athletes employees under federal labor law.

  • June 11, 2024

    Teamsters Unit Was 'Colluding With UPS,' Worker Says

    A UPS worker accused a Teamsters affiliate in Illinois federal court of violating its fair representation duty by "colluding" with the shipping giant to slash his hours and pay him incorrectly while also alleging that the company retaliated against him for an unfair labor practice charge.

  • June 11, 2024

    NLRB Election Notice Tainted Union Vote, Dispensary Argues

    A Phoenix cannabis dispensary asked the D.C. Circuit to reverse a National Labor Relations Board order compelling the company to recognize a United Food and Commercial Workers local, saying the board shouldn't have certified the union because of an issue with the election notice.

  • June 11, 2024

    Ex-Union Leader Seeks Sentencing Delay Ahead Of Retrial

    Former International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers Local 98 business manager John Dougherty has asked a Pennsylvania federal judge to postpone his sentencing for his bribery and embezzlement convictions, pointing to the possibility of the government retrying him on extortion charges following an April mistrial in that case.

  • June 11, 2024

    UAW Prez Faces Probe Over Retaliation Claims, Monitor Says

    United Auto Workers President Shawn Fain and other union leaders are under investigation over allegations of retaliation and financial misconduct, an independent monitor has detailed in a report, saying the union has "slow-rolled" access to documents for the probe.

  • June 11, 2024

    GRSM50 Adds Labor And Employment Pro In San Diego

    Gordon Rees Scully Mansukhani LLP has hired as a partner for its employment law practice an attorney with prior private practice experience who has also worked for multiple companies and a labor union during her more than 20-year career.

  • June 11, 2024

    Union Defends Arb. Win In Seniority Fight With Concrete Co.

    An arbitrator reasonably found that a Missouri ready-mix concrete supplier violated its contract with a Teamsters local when it began releasing drivers from duty for the day without respect for their level of seniority, the union argued, encouraging a Missouri federal judge to preserve the arbitration award.

  • June 10, 2024

    UPS Unit Opposes Teamsters Local's Certification At 9th Circ.

    A UPS subsidiary is fighting a National Labor Relations Board decision over a Teamsters local's certification at the Ninth Circuit, alleging that the union's misconduct amid a representation election unfairly influenced the vote.

  • June 10, 2024

    Pension Fund Repays PBGC $8M In Excess Financial Aid

    The U.S. Department of Justice announced Monday that a pension provider for workers in graphic communications has paid back more than $8 million in excess funds it received through a financial assistance program administered by the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corp.

  • June 10, 2024

    2nd Circ. Order Won't Quell NLRB Injunction Discovery Debate

    A recent Second Circuit order reviving the National Labor Relations Board's bid to block Starbucks from committing alleged labor law violations in New York boosted employers' power to seek discovery in labor injunction cases, even as it knocked a district judge for letting Starbucks pry into a union campaign.

  • June 10, 2024

    SoCal Workers Want Class Cert. In Union Healthcare Fee Suit

    A group of union-represented Southern California hospitality workers who say they're getting charged much higher health insurance rates than their counterparts in Las Vegas are seeking class certification in their lawsuit challenging the rates, according to a filing in Illinois federal court.

  • June 10, 2024

    NLRB Monitor Says Agency Needs Specific Mail-Ballot Rules

    Regional offices of the National Labor Relations Board "were not consistently complying" with procedures for mail-ballot elections, an agency watchdog report found, highlighting lapses in documenting details of elections conducted by mail and a lack of internal controls tailored to mail ballots.

  • June 10, 2024

    NLRB Judge Orders Starbucks Exec Video As ULP Remedy

    Starbucks violated federal labor law multiple times at cafes near Phoenix where union organizing efforts with Workers United were brewing, a National Labor Relations Board judge ruled, recommending an order to make the coffee chain post a video recording of a reading notice about employees' rights.

  • June 10, 2024

    Chemical Manufacturer Beats Rehire Order In Fight With Union

    A Texas federal judge has vacated an arbitration award ordering a chemical and ammunition manufacturer to rehire an employee who it accused of lying about receiving confidential information from a union steward, finding the award didn't draw its essence from the union contract.

  • June 10, 2024

    Cozen Sustains NY Growth With Ogletree Labor Expert

    An experienced labor and employment attorney has jumped from Ogletree Deakins Nash Smoak & Stewart PC to Cozen O'Connor, continuing recent growth in the firm's New York office.

  • June 10, 2024

    UPS Can't Escape Unpaid Security Screening Claims

    A New Jersey federal judge rejected UPS' request to toss claims that the delivery company should pay warehouse workers for the time they spent undergoing security screenings before their shifts started, court records show.

  • June 07, 2024

    Ohio Panel Says School Union Dues Dispute Tied To Contract

    An Ohio state appeals court said five public school employees cannot hash out their claims over unauthorized union dues deductions in court because they draw from a collective bargaining agreement and therefore must be handled administratively.

  • June 07, 2024

    Ill. Judge Unmoved By 2nd Circ. In Starbucks Subpoena Row

    An Illinois federal judge declined to narrow a prior order letting Starbucks subpoena workers to boost its defense against a National Labor Relations Board injunction bid, saying a recent Second Circuit decision faulting the scope of a discovery grant in another Starbucks case doesn't apply.

  • June 07, 2024

    Union Says NYC Hotel Must Pay Severance Arbitration Award

    A hotel workers union urged a New York federal court to force a former operator of a shuttered Marriott hotel in Manhattan to pay $6 million in severance pay stemming from the COVID-19 pandemic, saying an arbitrator's award in the union's favor must be enforced.

  • June 07, 2024

    SpaceX Pans NLRB Offer In Injunction Battle

    The National Labor Relations Board's offer to pause an in-house suit against SpaceX is "merely a ploy" to stave off a Fifth Circuit decision backing the company's challenge to the agency's constitutionality, the rocket maker told a Texas federal judge.

  • June 07, 2024

    Southwest Attys Get Pause On 'Punitive' Religious Training

    In finding Friday that an order for several in-house Southwest Airlines attorneys to undergo "religious liberty training" should be permanently placed on hold while an appeal of a flight attendant's Title VII trial win is pending, the Fifth Circuit said the district court had likely exceeded "the scope of the court's civil-contempt authority."

  • June 07, 2024

    NLRB Asks Judge To Make Auto Co. Rehire Union Organizers

    An Arizona electric car manufacturer quashed a nascent union organizing campaign by monitoring two leaders of the drive and then firing them when they persisted, National Labor Relations Board prosecutors claimed in a lawsuit that asks a federal judge to order the company to rehire the workers.

  • June 07, 2024

    Cozen Adds Eckert Seamans Employment Pro In Boston

    Cozen O'Connor brought on a veteran employment lawyer from Eckert Seamans Cherin & Mellott LLC in Boston, who comes with experience working in the public sector that he said allows him to help companies navigate any type of employment suit that comes their way. 

Expert Analysis

  • What Starbucks Union Efforts May Mean For Service Industry

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    Collective bargaining agreements that result from growing unionization drives at Starbucks cafes across the country could change how and what customers can order — and foreshadow broader shifts in the service and restaurant industries as COVID-19 and attendant labor shortages put pressure on employers, say David Pryzbylski and Colleen Naumovich at Barnes & Thornburg.

  • Employer's Agenda: Toyota Counsel Talks Worker Retention

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    Michael Martinez, managing counsel for labor and employment at Toyota Motor North America, discusses how companies and in-house counsel can address the pandemic-related labor shortage, and avoid common pitfalls when implementing wage increases, remote work setups and other well-meaning efforts to attract new workers.

  • Justices Correctly Used Shadow Docket In OSHA Vax Ruling

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    The U.S. Supreme Court’s use of the shadow docket to sink the Biden administration’s vaccine mandate for large employers in National Federation of Independent Business v. U.S. Department of Labor was the right procedure given the rule’s time-limited duration — even if the court reached the wrong substantive result, says Peter Fox at Scoolidge Peters.

  • What High Court Rulings Mean For Employer Vax Mandates

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    While the U.S. Supreme Court’s recent opinions on COVID-19 vaccination mandates for private and health care employers offer important guidance on workplace applicability, lower courts’ resolution of the underlying lawsuits could still pose further changes, says Jordann Wilhelm at Radey Law Firm.

  • 5 Advertising Law Trends To Watch

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    For the world of advertising, 2022 will bring new compliance challenges and considerations shaped by legal developments in everything from nonfungible-token commerce in the metaverse to the ever-growing impact of social media on young users, say Jason Gordon and Deborah Bessner at Reed Smith.

  • Contractor Classification Battle Unlikely To Cool Off In 2022

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    Despite a flurry of activity in the independent contractor classification space, 2021 did not provide the clarity many practitioners hoped for — and this year there appears to be no sign of a cease-fire between those who favor and oppose making it easier to classify workers as contractors, say attorneys at McDermott.

  • Top 10 Employer Resolutions For 2022: Part 2

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    Allegra Lawrence-Hardy and Lisa Haldar at Lawrence & Bundy continue their discussion of employer priorities for the new year, including plans to mitigate discrimination claims from remote workers, ensure LGBTQ inclusion, adapt vacation policies and more.

  • Top 10 Employer Resolutions For 2022: Part 1

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    Allegra Lawrence-Hardy and Lisa Haldar at Lawrence & Bundy discuss how a constantly changing employment law landscape — especially concerning COVID-19 issues — requires employer flexibility when addressing priorities for the new year.

  • Understanding Labor Law Issues In Starbucks Union Win

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    Anne Lofaso at the West Virginia University College of Law lays out how labor law applies to Starbucks workers’ recent vote to unionize at a single store in Buffalo, New York, particularly with regard to determinations of appropriate bargaining units and communities of interest, and she predicts what this could mean for National Labor Relations Board standards and the future of organizing.

  • Employer Lessons On NLRB Elections After Amazon Vote

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    The ongoing labor saga at an Alabama Amazon distribution center — involving a failed vote to unionize this spring, subsequent claims of company misconduct and the National Labor Relations Board’s recent order of a second election — contains important employer takeaways on mail-in ballots, employee turnout and other key aspects of workplace elections, says Thomas Lenz at Atkinson Andelson.

  • Employer Takeaways From NLRB Top Cop Immigration Memo

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    After the National Labor Relations Board general counsel’s recent memo reiterating that the organizing rights of immigrant workers are protected under federal law, employers can expect vigorous enforcement of this policy in all aspects of the agency's investigation, litigation, enforcement and remedial activities, say Steven Swirsky and Erin Schaefer at Epstein Becker.

  • DC Circ. Ruling Shows Slow-Rolled NLRB Compliance Is Risky

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    The D.C. Circuit recently held MasTec Advanced Technologies in contempt of court for failing to comply with an order from the National Labor Relations Board, serving as a reminder to employers that a slow response to or ignorance of board and court orders may come with stiff sanctions, say attorneys at Hunton.

  • 10 Developments That Shaped Employment Law In 2021

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    Attorneys at Proskauer count down 10 of the most influential employment law developments of the year, each of which is profoundly affecting employers' risk calculations and workplace practices with their employees, with California becoming an even more challenging jurisdiction.

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