Labor

  • November 13, 2025

    Senate Committee To Consider Stalled NLRB Nominee

    The U.S. Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions on Wednesday will consider the nomination of Boeing's internal labor counsel to a seat on the National Labor Relations Board.

  • November 13, 2025

    Union To Pay Attys $315K Who Dissented On Palestine Vote

    A union for legal aid lawyers and advocates agreed to pay $315,000 to three of its attorney members who said the labor group tried to kick them out for opposing a pro-Palestine resolution they saw as antisemitic, counsel for the attorney members said Thursday.

  • November 12, 2025

    Union Doesn't Qualify For Casino Picket TRO, Court Says

    A Teamsters local doesn't qualify for a temporary restraining order allowing it to resume picketing outside a Caesars-owned casino, an Indiana federal judge ruled, saying the union hasn't proved that its desired picketing site is either public property or "private property historically dedicated to public expression."

  • November 12, 2025

    Wage Rule Inapplicable To 'Plug And Play' Work, Panel Told

    A New Jersey utility systems installer told a state appellate panel Wednesday that its subcontracted cell tower work — limited to plugging in pre-terminated fiber optic cables — was wrongly categorized under the state's prevailing wage for electricians instead of the lower rate under the electrician teledata classification.

  • November 12, 2025

    Republicans Propose Overhauling Federal Labor Law

    A package of Republican labor bills proposes overhauling how workers interact with the National Labor Relations Board and how unions organize workplaces, drawing praise from pro-business groups and criticism from unions and their advocates.

  • November 12, 2025

    2nd Circ. Doubts NLRB Dress Code Test In Starbucks Appeal

    A Second Circuit panel appeared skeptical Wednesday of the revised test underlying the National Labor Relations Board's ruling that Starbucks illegally forbade roastery workers to wear union T-shirts but appeared to buy that the agency's reviews of employers' dress codes generally deserve deference.

  • November 12, 2025

    Providence Health Nears ERISA Deal Over 401(k) Admin Costs

    Providence Health & Services has reached a tentative deal to resolve a proposed class action accusing the nonprofit healthcare system of misspending millions of dollars in forfeited employer retirement contributions in violation of federal benefits law, the parties told a Seattle federal judge.

  • November 12, 2025

    DOT Immigrant Trucker Rule Frozen Pending DC Circ. Review

    The D.C. Circuit has stayed a new U.S. Department of Transportation rule that blocks certain immigrants from driving commercial trucks or buses while it considers whether the rule is arbitrary, as workers and unions have claimed.

  • November 12, 2025

    MVP: Cohen Milstein's Christine E. Webber

    Cohen Milstein Sellers & Toll PLLC partner Christine E. Webber helped secure more than $65 million in settlements with major institutions over allegations of gender discrimination, earning her a spot as one of the 2025 Law360 Employment MVPs.

  • November 10, 2025

    Law360 MVP Awards Go To Top Attorneys From 76 Firms

    The attorneys chosen as Law360's 2025 MVPs have distinguished themselves from their peers by securing significant achievements in high-stakes litigation, complex global matters and record-breaking deals.

  • November 10, 2025

    Justices Doubt GEO's Immunity Claim In Forced Labor Suit

    The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday appeared reluctant to adopt GEO Group's interpretation of an 85-year-old ruling as extending immunity to contractors facing lawsuits, as the private prison operator stands accused of forcing immigrant detainees to clean a detention facility. 

  • November 10, 2025

    Landfill Co. Asks Court To Nix Union's Arb. Award Challenge

    An Indiana federal judge should affirm an arbitrator's finding that an engineers union missed its deadline to challenge a landfill employee's firing, the landfill's operator said, asking the judge to toss the union's attempt to revive its firing grievance.

  • November 10, 2025

    High Court Won't Hear Ore. Workers' Union Dues Policy Case

    The U.S. Supreme Court won't resurrect a challenge to an Oregon prison worker union's dues policy that was tossed by the Ninth Circuit earlier this year, according to an order list the justices filed Monday.

  • November 10, 2025

    Justices Give Feds Time To Argue In Machinists Pension Fight

    The federal government can participate in oral arguments when it hears a bid by employers to overturn a D.C. Circuit finding that an International Association of Machinists pension plan could retroactively change how withdrawal payments are calculated, the U.S. Supreme Court said Monday.

  • November 10, 2025

    3rd Circ. Rules Post-Gazette Bargained In Bad Faith

    The Third Circuit on Monday affirmed that the publisher of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette had been bargaining with its unions in bad faith and should not have unilaterally imposed a new contract on newsroom employees more than five years ago.

  • November 10, 2025

    Justices Won't Weigh Contractor's ULP Case Against Union

    The U.S. Supreme Court won't take up a Maryland mechanical contractor's suit accusing a Sheet Metal Air Rail & Transportation Workers local of initiating a defamatory campaign against the company, the justices said Monday.

  • November 07, 2025

    Alcoa Can't Stay Benefits Injunction During 7th Circ. Appeal

    Alcoa must comply with an injunction compelling it to reinstate life insurance benefits for a group of union-represented retirees, an Indiana federal judge ruled Friday, rejecting the aluminum producer's motion to stay the injunction while the Seventh Circuit considers whether to preserve it.

  • November 07, 2025

    Starbucks Union At Crossroads As Open-Ended Strike Looms

    The campaign to organize Starbucks is coming to a head after workers across hundreds of unionized stores voted to authorize an open-ended strike in hopes of reaching an elusive first contract with the coffee giant.

  • November 07, 2025

    8th Circ. Upholds EpiPen Co. Worker's Reinstatement

    The Eighth Circuit affirmed an arbitration award ordering EpiPen maker Meridian Medical to reinstate an employee accused of falsifying job training records, ruling Friday the decision doesn't violate public policy since there are no federal regulations governing auto-injector training that forbids reinstatement for a procedural training violation. 

  • November 07, 2025

    Firefighters Union Wants To Arbitrate Promotion Dispute

    The union representing a Denver Fire Department captain has asked a Colorado state court judge to force the city into arbitration hearings over a grievance the captain filed to protest the hiring of a different candidate for a vacancy within the department.

  • November 07, 2025

    Pension Corp. Installs EEOC Ex-Chair Dhillon As Director

    The Pension Benefit Guaranty Corp. swore in former U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission chair and commissioner Janet Dhillon as the 17th director of the federal agency, which runs two insurance programs backstopping the nation's single and multiemployer defined-benefit pension plans.

  • November 07, 2025

    Indiana City Can't Bar Union Picketing, Teamsters Local Says

    The city of Shelbyville, Indiana, can't legally ban the Teamsters from picketing on the sidewalk outside a casino, a union local said in a complaint, asking a federal judge to forbid the city from sending in cops to scuttle the picket.

  • November 06, 2025

    Attys Spar Over Dismissal Motion In Nurse Strike Pay Suit

    A Colorado federal judge on Thursday questioned the parties on both sides of a complaint in determining if it has enough details to move forward in the lawsuit from nearly 40 nurses who claim they were not properly paid while temporarily working at Kaiser Permanente facilities in California during a 2023 strike.

  • November 06, 2025

    9th Circ. Backs NLRB Ruling On Nurses' Pandemic Pay Fight

    The Ninth Circuit has affirmed the National Labor Relations Board's order finding a trio of Southern California hospitals violated federal labor law by unilaterally implementing a COVID-19 pandemic pay program without first bargaining with a Service Employees International Union affiliate representing registered nurses and professional workers. 

  • November 06, 2025

    6th Circ. Becomes Latest To Reject NLRB's Thryv Remedy

    The Sixth Circuit is the latest court to weigh in on the National Labor Relations Board's 2022 decision that employers must cover any financial hits that workers take due to company misconduct, joining the Third and Fifth circuits and opposing the Ninth Circuit in ruling that the board overstepped.

Expert Analysis

  • Trends That Will Shape The Construction Industry In 2024

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    Though the outlook for the construction industry is mixed, it is clear that 2024 will bring evolving changes aimed at building projects more safely and efficiently under difficult circumstances, and stakeholders would be wise to prepare for the challenges and opportunities these trends will bring, say Josephine Bahn and Jeffery Mullen at Cozen O'Connor.

  • A Focused Statement Can Ease Employment Mediation

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    Given the widespread use of mediation in employment cases, attorneys should take steps to craft mediation statements that efficiently assist the mediator by focusing on key issues, strengths and weaknesses of a claim, which can flag key disputes and barriers to a settlement, says Darren Rumack at Klein & Cardali.

  • 3 Areas Of Focus In Congressional Crosshairs This Year

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    Companies must prepare for Congress to build on its 2023 oversight priorities this year, continuing its vigorous inquiries into Chinese company-related investments, workplace safety and labor relations issues, and generative artificial intelligence, say attorneys at Morgan Lewis.

  • Water Cooler Talk: Insights On Noncompetes From 'The Office'

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    Troutman Pepper’s Tracey Diamond, Evan Gibbs, Constance Brewster and Jim Earle compare scenarios from “The Office” to the complex world of noncompetes and associated tax issues, as employers are becoming increasingly hesitant to look to noncompete provisions amid a potential federal ban.

  • 5 NLRA Changes To Make Nonunion Employers Wary In 2024

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    As the National Labor Relations Board continues pushing an aggressive pro-union agenda and a slate of strict workplace rules, nonunion employers should study significant labor law changes from 2023 to understand why National Labor Relations Act compliance will be so crucial to protecting themselves in the new year, say attorneys at Hunton.

  • NLRA Expansion May Come With Risks For Workers

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    The last few years have seen a rapid expansion of the National Labor Relations Act to increase labor law coverage in as many ways and to as many areas as possible, but this could potentially weaken rather than strengthen support for unions and worker rights in the U.S., says Daniel Johns at Cozen O’Connor.

  • What The NLRB Wants Employers To Know Post-Cemex

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    Recent guidance from the National Labor Relations Board illuminates prosecutorial goals following Cemex Construction Materials, a decision that upended decades of precedent, and includes several notable points to which employers should pay close attention, say attorneys at Perkins Coie.

  • Top 10 Employer Resolutions For 2024

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    From technological leaps to sea changes in labor policy to literal sea changes, 2024 provides opportunities for employers to face big-picture questions that will shape their business for years to come, say Allegra Lawrence-Hardy and Lisa Haldar at Lawrence & Bundy.

  • Cos. Should Be On Guard After Boom In Unfair Labor Claims

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    The National Labor Relations Board's recent expansion of protected activity and imposition of case-by-case policies led to a historic boom in unfair labor practice charges in 2023, so companies should prepare for labor complaints to increase in 2024 by conducting risk assessments and implementing compliance plans, say Daniel Schudroff and Lorien Schoenstedt at Jackson Lewis.

  • 3 Developments That Will Affect Hospitality Companies In 2024

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    As the hospitality industry continues its post-pandemic recovery, it faces both challenges and opportunities to thrive in 2024, including navigating new labor rules, developing branded residential living spaces and cautiously embracing artificial intelligence, says Lauren Stewart at Sheppard Mullin.

  • Top 10 Whistleblowing And Retaliation Events Of 2023

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    The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission and federal and state courts made 2023 another groundbreaking year for whistleblower litigation and retaliation developments, including the SEC’s massive whistleblower awards, which are likely to continue into 2024 and further incentivize individuals to submit tips, say attorneys at Proskauer.

  • Starbucks Raise Ruling Highlights Labor Law Catch-22

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    A National Labor Relations Board judge recently ruled that Starbucks violated federal labor law when it gave raises to nonunion employees only, demonstrating that conflicts present in workforces with both union and nonunion employees can put employers in no-win situations if they don't consider how their actions will be interpreted, say attorneys at Duane Morris.

  • Del. Ruling Shows Tension Between 363 Sale And Labor Law

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    The Delaware federal court's ruling in the Braeburn Alloy Steel case highlights the often overlooked collision between an unstayed order authorizing an asset sale free and clear of successor liability under Section 363 of the Bankruptcy Code and federal labor law imposing successor liability on the buyer, say attorneys at Proskauer.

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