A bill that would block judges from decreasing awards in employment discrimination cases cleared New York's state Senate along party lines, marking a step forward in legislators' effort to curb second-guessing of state juries.
The Trump administration's willingness to target alleged discrimination stemming from efforts to diversify workplaces doesn't rewrite the rules for internal audits looking to ferret out bias, experts say, but employers would still be wise to give their practices a fresh look.
The Eighth Circuit closely scrutinized a former public school principal's free speech case over her advocacy for LGBTQ+ students Wednesday, with the judges hunting for the line at which her campaign may have crossed into protected activity.
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A bill that would block judges from decreasing awards in employment discrimination cases cleared New York's state Senate along party lines, marking a step forward in legislators' effort to curb second-guessing of state juries.
The Trump administration's willingness to target alleged discrimination stemming from efforts to diversify workplaces doesn't rewrite the rules for internal audits looking to ferret out bias, experts say, but employers would still be wise to give their practices a fresh look.
The Eighth Circuit closely scrutinized a former public school principal's free speech case over her advocacy for LGBTQ+ students Wednesday, with the judges hunting for the line at which her campaign may have crossed into protected activity.
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June 12, 2025
Florida's education agencies urged a federal judge Thursday to toss a transgender ex-teacher's suit claiming he was forced to quit after a new law required him to use incorrect pronouns at work, stating his claims fail because he resigned before the new rules took effect.
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June 12, 2025
A New Jersey state judge appeared skeptical Thursday of a fired Blume Forte Fried Zerres & Molinari staffer's argument that an arbitration agreement she signed as part of the firm's onboarding process is invalid because it was never explained to her and she has no recollection of signing it.
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June 12, 2025
Ogletree Deakins Nash Smoak & Stewart PC has launched a new practice group that will focus on using data-driven tools to advise employers on various workforce compliance and risk assessment matters.
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June 12, 2025
Harvey Weinstein's sexual abuse retrial ended Thursday with a Manhattan jury failing to reach a verdict on a count alleging the movie mogul raped an actress, one day after he was convicted of forcing sex on a production assistant and cleared on a third charge.
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June 12, 2025
The U.S. Supreme Court on Thursday ruled students claiming disability discrimination in public schools should not face a higher standard of proof than plaintiffs in other Americans with Disabilities Act and Rehabilitation Act lawsuits.
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June 11, 2025
The Federal Circuit has upheld an arbitration decision requiring a U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs employee, allegedly caught using marijuana on the job, to release her medical records and submit to random drug testing as part of a slate of conditions for her to return to work, finding the arbitrator's award acceptable.
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June 11, 2025
The University of North Carolina's hospital system must face a discrimination lawsuit filed by a fired surgical resident, a North Carolina federal judge ruled Wednesday, tossing the system's motion to dismiss claims that the discharge decision was motivated by bias against the resident's mental health conditions.
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June 11, 2025
A New York federal judge narrowed but declined to completely toss a bias suit from a Latinx Credit Agricole trader who said his boss repeatedly disrespected him, handed his responsibilities to a white trader and then tanked his performance review after he complained.
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June 11, 2025
An Eighth Circuit panel questioned Wednesday the process behind the National Labor Relations Board's ruling that Home Depot illegally forced out a worker for displaying the letters "BLM" on their apron but didn't tip its hand on whether this move was within the company's rights.
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June 11, 2025
A former pharmacy manager at a Massachusetts Walmart said he suffered age and disability discrimination following a stroke, then was wrongfully fired after more than 20 years with the retailer.
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June 11, 2025
California's civil rights enforcement agency said Wednesday that a railway technology company had settled an investigation into a worker's claims that he was wrongly suspended and escorted off the job after complaining about co-workers using racial slurs.
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June 11, 2025
The Oklahoma Medical Marijuana Authority is urging a federal court to throw out Title VII and Age Discrimination in Employment Act claims in a suit by a former contract monitor who alleges she was fired for whistleblowing.
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June 11, 2025
President Donald Trump's nominees for key roles in the U.S. Department of Labor and U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission will stand before a Senate committee next week, the panel said Wednesday.
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June 11, 2025
The Walt Disney Co. illegally fired a human resources specialist because she raised concerns about what she saw as the company's practices of primarily hiring immigrant workers while disproportionately firing African American employees, she told a California state court.
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June 11, 2025
A Manhattan state court jury on Wednesday convicted movie mogul Harvey Weinstein of sexually assaulting a production assistant, acquitted him of assaulting a former model and indicated it had so far failed to reach a verdict on a charge alleging he raped an actress.
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June 10, 2025
A San Francisco Bay Area-based technology recruiting company agreed Tuesday to pay civil penalties and change its recruiting practices to resolve allegations it illegally preferred H-1B visa holders over U.S. workers, marking the government's renewed push under the Trump administration to enforce the Immigration and Nationality Act against companies favoring foreign workers.
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June 10, 2025
A federal judge won't let a Georgia school district out of claims that it forced out a Black former principal over his vocal support for the Black Lives Matter movement, ruling that like the school board's individual members and ex-superintendent before it, the district failed to raise its defenses when it had the opportunity to do so.
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June 10, 2025
A North Carolina employment attorney accused the city of Charlotte in federal court Tuesday of being "game-y" by trying to change a Black fire chief's racial bias settlement after both sides agreed to certain terms, saying she wouldn't make him sign something that didn't reflect those promises.
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June 10, 2025
A construction worker can't sue his employer for wrongful termination on claims that his supervisor wrongly accused him of smoking marijuana while on the job, a Virginia federal judge has ruled, saying state law allows companies to fire workers even on untrue allegations of drug use.
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June 10, 2025
The University of Scranton wants a Pennsylvania federal judge to dismiss retaliation and disability bias allegations from a police sergeant who alleged he was fired because he had cancer, telling the district court that the worker hadn't put up enough facts to support some of his claims.
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June 10, 2025
Honda's manufacturing arm can send to Alabama a proposed class action alleging its opaque promotional practices unlawfully prevent Black workers from moving up, an Ohio federal judge ruled, saying the worker leading the suit likely would have stayed in the South had he received positions he sought.
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June 10, 2025
A cloud-based real estate brokerage firm's former chief financial officer was unfairly accused of racking up $17,000 in personal expenses on a company card to justify her termination after her maternity leave ended, she told a New York federal court Tuesday.
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June 10, 2025
The U.S. government hopes to escape a New Hampshire lawsuit challenging both state and federal policies prohibiting transgender athletes from competing in women's sports, saying the complaint shows only "speculative future injury."
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June 10, 2025
The mayor of Montgomery, Alabama, escaped a lawsuit claiming he harassed a police chief and forced him to resign because he refused to give preferential treatment to Black employees, as a federal judge said there was no evidence of a campaign to oust the law enforcement official.
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June 10, 2025
A musicians union has asked a New York federal judge to toss two suspended New York Philharmonic players' allegations that the union illegally dropped its fight for their reinstatement, saying it had good reason to abandon the mission after the full extent of their alleged sexual violence was revealed.