Thousands of nurses at three New York City hospital systems walked off the job Monday, heralding what their union called the largest nurses' strike in the city's history after the systems refused to meet workers' demands on staffing, benefits and work safety protocol during contract negotiations.
The D.C. Circuit's decision to permit the president's removal of Merit Systems Protection Board member Cathy Harris despite her statutory job protections will stand after the full court declined to rehear her firing challenge Friday.
The newly functional National Labor Relations Board has wasted little time chipping away at a backlog of cases that piled up over the nearly yearlong period that it lacked enough members to rule, issuing five decisions on Thursday adopting preliminary rulings that went unchallenged.
Previous
Next
Thousands of nurses at three New York City hospital systems walked off the job Monday, heralding what their union called the largest nurses' strike in the city's history after the systems refused to meet workers' demands on staffing, benefits and work safety protocol during contract negotiations.
The D.C. Circuit's decision to permit the president's removal of Merit Systems Protection Board member Cathy Harris despite her statutory job protections will stand after the full court declined to rehear her firing challenge Friday.
The newly functional National Labor Relations Board has wasted little time chipping away at a backlog of cases that piled up over the nearly yearlong period that it lacked enough members to rule, issuing five decisions on Thursday adopting preliminary rulings that went unchallenged.
-
January 13, 2026
An independent union based in Southern California has urged a D.C. federal court to toss a Los Angeles grocery store's suit challenging the removal restrictions of National Labor Relations Board administrative law judges, arguing that the store fails to show that the protections are unconstitutional.
-
January 13, 2026
The National Labor Relations Board cannot bring a case against the Salvation Army, the organization told a Michigan federal judge, saying the board does not have jurisdiction over it because it is a religious nonprofit.
-
January 12, 2026
The Trump administration urged a Ninth Circuit panel Monday to scrap a preliminary injunction blocking President Donald Trump's executive order that eliminates labor contracts for purported "national security agencies," arguing that federal courts lack jurisdiction over the dispute and the president is afforded broad deference in such national security determinations.
-
January 12, 2026
General counsel Crystal Carey’s arrival at the National Labor Relations Board has set in motion an anticipated shift to employer-friendly policy at the labor board. Here, Law360 looks at what to expect from the board’s new top cop in the weeks and months ahead.
-
January 12, 2026
A Florida federal judge ruled in favor of UPS after the company was sued for alleged racial discrimination over firing one of its delivery drivers, who is Black, saying the former employee was terminated for misconduct.
-
January 12, 2026
A group of five unions asked the White House on Monday to convene a second board of experts to resolve a nearly 3-year-old contract fight at the Long Island Rail Road, saying the New York City-area commuter rail network won't listen to the first board's suggestions.
-
January 12, 2026
The U.S. Supreme Court refused Monday to take up an anti-union think tank’s challenge to a California law that limits the disclosure of information about new public employees.
-
January 12, 2026
The Supreme Court on Monday declined a food distributor's bid for review of a decision tossing a challenge to a National Labor Relations Board ruling that backed the withdrawal of a complaint of unfair labor practices against two Teamsters locals.
-
January 12, 2026
UPS did not violate an arbitration award when it subtracted a temporarily fired worker's unemployment benefits from her back pay, since the arbitration panel later clarified that was what its award intended, a Pennsylvania federal judge ruled Monday.
-
January 09, 2026
PepsiCo Inc., the Teamsters and a truck driver have agreed to end the driver's lawsuit claiming the union failed to properly represent him after the company breached the terms of its collective bargaining agreement by firing him, according to a filing in Pennsylvania federal court.
-
January 09, 2026
The U.S. Supreme Court will zero in on the methodology for assessing liability for pulling out of a multi-employer pension fund, and the circuit courts will hear bids to revive suits over alleged 401(k) mismanagement and deferred compensation. Here, Law360 looks at a quartet of oral arguments coming up in January.
-
January 09, 2026
One of the youngest equity partners in Seyfarth Shaw LLP's 80-year history has been named chair of the firm's labor and employment practice for the Seattle office, the firm has announced.
-
January 09, 2026
A South Carolina video game store didn't violate federal labor law when it fired an employee who made insulting comments about the store's general manager to customers, the store told a National Labor Relations Board judge, claiming the worker's comments weren't protected by the National Labor Relations Act.
-
January 09, 2026
The National Labor Relations Board can't exit a field attorney's suit over her advocacy work with an environmental nonprofit, a Washington federal judge has ruled, finding that she has adequately alleged that her work doesn't violate a federal conflict of interest statute.
-
January 09, 2026
In the coming week, attorneys should keep an eye out for Ninth Circuit oral arguments in a challenge to President Donald Trump's executive order that eliminates labor contracts for what the order refers to as national security agencies. Here's a look at that case and other labor and employment matters coming up in California.
-
January 08, 2026
A gas supplier added allegations in its suit against the International Brotherhood of Teamsters on Thursday, accusing the union in Pennsylvania federal court of working with a Teamsters local to encourage workers to defy an active no-strike clause in the local's collective bargaining agreement.
-
January 08, 2026
The Pennsylvania Labor Relations Board lacks jurisdiction to review an Adams County probation officer's firing over passing out stress balls with the irreverent acronym "FAFO" on them, since it did not fit a narrow union-related exemption to the courts' broad authority over their employees, a state appellate court said Thursday.
-
January 08, 2026
A union involved in the Fifth Circuit case that opened the door for employers to get National Labor Relations Board prosecutions blocked has struck out again in its bid to formally join the case, this time at the district court.
-
January 08, 2026
A construction industry union asked an Illinois federal court to enforce the terms of its settlement agreement with a construction company, claiming that the company and its president have failed to make more than $87,000 in required payments to workers and benefit funds.
-
January 08, 2026
Quality assurance workers for a chemical manufacturing company can vote on representation by the United Steelworkers, a National Labor Relations Board official has ruled, rejecting the company's argument that the workers weren't allowed to take part in a second election in a bargaining unit within the same year.
-
January 07, 2026
The U.S. Department of Homeland Security should be allowed to proceed with plans to terminate a labor contract covering Transportation Security Administration workers, the Trump administration told a Seattle federal judge, claiming that a preliminary injunction issued by the court in June no longer applies.
-
January 07, 2026
The Texas American Federation of Teachers sued the state's education agency in federal court Tuesday over its investigations into hundreds of school officials accused of making "vile" or "inappropriate" comments about the assassination of Charlie Kirk on social media, arguing the actions are a violation of free speech rights.
-
January 07, 2026
The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette announced plans to close after nearly 240 years, hours after the U.S. Supreme Court on Wednesday lifted Justice Samuel Alito's stay of a Third Circuit order making the company comply with a National Labor Relations Board order to restore its newsroom workers' healthcare plan.
-
January 07, 2026
A United Auto Workers local is fighting to escape a battery plant worker's hybrid discrimination lawsuit, telling a Tennessee federal court that the employee failed to show the union mishandled his work grievance.
-
January 07, 2026
The National Labor Relations Board is set to resume deciding cases after two new members arrived at the agency Wednesday along with President Donald Trump's pick to lead the Office of the General Counsel.