The Seventh Circuit declined to reconsider its opinion in favor of tradespeople in a lawsuit accusing a staffing firm of failing to pay them for time spent traveling between job sites, turning down the company's argument that the decision created a split with other circuits.
Skidmore deference is getting more attention in the post-Chevron landscape, eight decades after the U.S. Supreme Court established the principle, leading some attorneys to believe courts will treat it like "Chevron 2.0." Here, Law360 explores Skidmore deference.
The U.S. Department of Labor's proposal Tuesday to eliminate subminimum wages for workers with disabilities has wage and hour observers wondering whether such a rule would survive the next presidential administration and whether the agency has authority to take such action.
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The Seventh Circuit declined to reconsider its opinion in favor of tradespeople in a lawsuit accusing a staffing firm of failing to pay them for time spent traveling between job sites, turning down the company's argument that the decision created a split with other circuits.
Skidmore deference is getting more attention in the post-Chevron landscape, eight decades after the U.S. Supreme Court established the principle, leading some attorneys to believe courts will treat it like "Chevron 2.0." Here, Law360 explores Skidmore deference.
The U.S. Department of Labor's proposal Tuesday to eliminate subminimum wages for workers with disabilities has wage and hour observers wondering whether such a rule would survive the next presidential administration and whether the agency has authority to take such action.
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December 05, 2024
A Delaware federal judge on Thursday recommended pruning of a 14-count suit filed by six former Twitter employees accusing the company now known as X and Elon Musk of contract breaches and other claims in connection with Musk's takeover of the social media giant in 2022.
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December 05, 2024
A Colorado federal judge on Thursday kept alive a suit by tipped servers accusing a steakhouse chain of underpayment, rejecting the chain's invitation to rely on the Fifth Circuit's decision striking the U.S. Department of Labor's final rule on tipped wages.
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December 05, 2024
Employees of a yard management company who accused their former employer of failing to pay them overtime wages despite requiring them to work more than 50-hour weeks have ended their proposed class and collective action against the company, a filing in Illinois federal court said.
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December 05, 2024
A Black and Nigerian-born Ohio prison worker in his sixties accused the prison he once worked in of discriminating against him for his race, his national origin and his age Thursday, claiming in a new lawsuit that he was passed over for five separate promotions because of the purported bias.
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December 05, 2024
Current and former Philadelphia Police Department commissioners and human resources directors urged a Pennsylvania federal court to throw out a proposed class action by ranking officers alleging that the department failed to alert them of their overtime eligibility, saying the case was brought too late.
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December 05, 2024
A Pennsylvania federal judge ruled Thursday that a Georgia law professor can't intervene or unseal a settlement restaurant chain P.F. Chang's and more than 6,000 tipped servers struck, saying doing so would hurt the parties.
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December 05, 2024
The Eleventh Circuit refused to revive a security officer's lawsuit claiming she was paid less than male colleagues and removed from her post after she complained, saying many co-workers she identified had more responsibilities than she did.
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December 05, 2024
A former Four Seasons employee said the hotel chain cheated Los Angeles employees out of wages, telling a California state court that employees weren't paid for all hours worked.
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December 04, 2024
A California federal judge refused Wednesday to throw out an unpaid overtime lawsuit the U.S. Department of Labor launched against a household appliance company, rejecting the retailer's argument that Julie Su, the department's acting secretary, doesn't have the authority to sue.
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December 04, 2024
Two seafood companies will shell out $2.1 million to more than 2,300 workers who accused them of paying late and underpaying during mandatory COVID-19 quarantines, as a Washington federal court gave the deal its final OK.
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December 04, 2024
The University of Arkansas paid a Black female assistant softball coach less than her white colleagues and fired her after she flagged concerns about the discrepancies, according to a lawsuit filed Wednesday in federal court.
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December 04, 2024
A Maryland Department of Health psychiatric hospital will pay $270,000 to settle a U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission suit alleging it paid four female workers lower salaries than it paid a less experienced male employee, the agency announced Wednesday.
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December 04, 2024
A former Alabama State University associate athletic director's Equal Pay Act claims will head back to the district court, an Eleventh Circuit panel ruled, instructing the court to follow a two-step analytical framework the appeals court laid out in a recent sex discrimination decision.
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December 04, 2024
Apple gave the former head of an audio division an "awful" choice — work under a performance improvement plan or quit — after she raised concerns that she received less pay than her male counterparts and participated in an investigation into her supervisor, she told a California state court.
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December 04, 2024
A former operations coordinator sued a California robotics company making food delivery in partnership with Uber Eats, claiming in his proposed class action in state court that the company cheated workers out of wages and failed to provide meal and rest breaks.
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December 03, 2024
A New Jersey appeals court scrapped an arbitration award favoring a firefighters union reached with the city of Newark over concerns that it cut vacation time from its firefighters terminal leave benefit calculations, after finding Tuesday the arbitrator didn't address the core issue of the dispute.
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December 03, 2024
An Illinois federal judge signed off Tuesday on a $460,000 agreement to settle a nationwide collective action of Walgreens call center workers who claimed they were unlawfully required to perform unpaid work before and after their shifts.
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December 03, 2024
A California federal court threw out several claims in a lawsuit launched against Lizzo and her touring company by a fashion designer who created custom pieces for the singer on tour, finding the Fair Labor Standards Act doesn't apply to work performed in Europe.
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December 03, 2024
A Zoup restaurant franchisee in Ohio paid employees their regular rate for all hours worked, denying them overtime premiums, the U.S. Department of Labor alleged Tuesday in federal court.
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December 03, 2024
Los Angeles County asked a California federal court to sign off on a $185,000 settlement that resolves 17 jail workers' collective action alleging they were forced to work nearly 60-hour weeks without any overtime compensation.
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December 03, 2024
The U.S. Department of Labor pushed a Texas federal court to throw out the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and other groups' challenge to the agency's independent contractor final rule, pointing to a Tennessee federal magistrate's recommendation to toss a similar case.
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December 03, 2024
President Joe Biden's decision to increase federal contractors' hourly minimum wage falls under authority that presidents have exercised for 75 years, the U.S. government said, urging the U.S. Supreme Court to stay out of the Tenth Circuit's decision keeping the wage hike in place.
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December 03, 2024
An Illinois federal court declined to throw out a proposed class action accusing a yard management company of failing to pay its workers overtime wages, though the court found that the company did not have to face claims from a Missouri-based former employee.
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December 03, 2024
The U.S. Department of Labor said Tuesday it will proceed with a rule to end employers' ability to pay workers with disabilities below the federal minimum wage, taking long-awaited action on the issue in the final weeks of President Joe Biden's administration.
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December 02, 2024
A Washington federal judge granted conditional collective certification Monday to Amazon Flex drivers in their lawsuit accusing the e-commerce giant of misclassifying them as independent contractors, saying the workers sufficiently showed they're all subjected to the same policy.