Coalition for Workforce Innovation et al v. Walsh et al
Case Number:
1:21-cv-00130
Court:
Nature of Suit:
Other Statutes: Administrative Procedures Act/Review or Appeal of Agency Decision
Judge:
Firms
Companies
- American Hotel & Lodging Association
- American Trucking Associations Inc.
- Associated General Contractors of America
- Financial Services Institute Inc.
- National Association of Convenience Stores
- National Association of Realtors
- National Employment Law Project
- National Federation of Independent Business
- National Retail Federation Inc.
- Public Citizen Inc.
- Public Justice Center
- Service Employees International Union
- Small Business and Entrepreneurship Council
- United Brotherhood of Carpenters & Joiners of America
Government Agencies
Sectors & Industries:
-
March 06, 2024
Chamber, Trade Groups Revamp Contractor Rule Challenge
The U.S. Chamber of Commerce and a slew of trade groups revamped their lawsuit in Texas federal court accusing the U.S. Department of Labor of violating federal law when it issued its latest independent contractor rule, alleging it tried to circumvent a court's earlier ruling.
-
January 25, 2024
DOL Contractor Rule Critics Aim For Familiar Judge's Review
As the effective date for the U.S. Department of Labor's independent contractor rule approaches, the Fifth Circuit is mulling critics' request to put it up for review by the Texas federal judge who threw out the agency's last rulemaking.
-
July 01, 2022
4 Major Wage-Hour Rulings So Far In 2022
Wage and hour cases returned to the U.S. Supreme Court after the justices skipped them last term. Meanwhile, lower courts have thwarted President Joe Biden's actions on independent contractor classification and minimum wage. Here, Law360 recaps four major rulings in the first half of 2022.
-
May 13, 2022
DOL To Appeal Trump-Era Contractor Rule Decision
The U.S. Department of Labor will ask the Fifth Circuit to undo a Texas district court's decision ruling it flouted certain requirements when it delayed and withdrew a Trump-era independent contractor rule, the agency said in a notice filed Friday.
-
April 13, 2022
Labor Department Rules Are Reshaping Wage Enforcement
Since President Joe Biden took office, the U.S. Department of Labor has been busy undoing the previous administration’s actions and establishing its regulations. From tipped minimum wage to joint employer liability and independent contractor classification, here are six rules that have kept the Biden administration busy.
-
April 13, 2022
GOP Urges DOL To Reinstate Trump-Era Contractor Letters
Two key Republicans on the House Education and Labor Committee asked the U.S. Department of Labor to reinstate two Trump-era opinion letters defining independent contractor parameters, arguing the Biden administration inappropriately withdrew them in an act of "open hostility to workers."
-
March 15, 2022
Biden Must Live With Trump Contractor Rule, For Now
A Texas federal judge's ruling this week that reinstated the Trump administration's independent contractor rule is unlikely to be the last word on the standards used for classifying workers, attorneys told Law360.
-
March 15, 2022
Texas Federal Judge Reinstates Trump DOL Contractor Rule
The U.S. Department of Labor didn't properly follow administrative procedure requirements when it delayed and withdrew a Trump-era rule determining workers' independent contractor status, a Texas federal judge ruled, saying the rule has been in effect since last year.
-
August 31, 2021
DOL Tells Court Rollback Of Trump Contractor Rule Was Lawful
The U.S. Department of Labor followed administrative procedure requirements for delaying and then withdrawing a Trump-era rule that established an independent contractor status test, the government said in a bid for an early win in Texas federal court against a challenge by trade associations.
-
August 03, 2021
Trade Groups Seek Win To Save Trump Contractor Rule
The U.S. Department of Labor unlawfully delayed and withdrew a Trump-era rule establishing a test for determining independent contractor status, trade associations argued in a bid for an early win in Texas federal court, saying the government hadn't sufficiently justified nixing the rule.
- ← Previous
- 1
- 2
- 3
- Next →