Amazon security screenings count as "hours worked" under Connecticut state employment law, and no legal exception permits the retailer to withhold pay for time spent on minimal matters at the end of a worker's shift, the state supreme court ruled unanimously on Thursday.
The California Supreme Court's holding that courts should scrutinize difficult-to-read arbitration agreements but that "illegibility" does not render their substance so unfair as to make them unjust should remind employers to be careful with such pacts in wage and hour disputes, attorneys said.
Instacart won't be able to block New York City's laws for app-based delivery workers instituting a new minimum wage, tipping options and disclosure requirements while it challenges a federal court's order, a New York federal judge ruled.
Previous
Next
Amazon security screenings count as "hours worked" under Connecticut state employment law, and no legal exception permits the retailer to withhold pay for time spent on minimal matters at the end of a worker's shift, the state supreme court ruled unanimously on Thursday.
The California Supreme Court's holding that courts should scrutinize difficult-to-read arbitration agreements but that "illegibility" does not render their substance so unfair as to make them unjust should remind employers to be careful with such pacts in wage and hour disputes, attorneys said.
Instacart won't be able to block New York City's laws for app-based delivery workers instituting a new minimum wage, tipping options and disclosure requirements while it challenges a federal court's order, a New York federal judge ruled.
-
February 06, 2026
Two North Carolina restaurants urged a federal court Friday to narrow a U.S. Department of Labor lawsuit alleging they unlawfully kept and pooled tips from front-of-house workers and allocated the funds to tip-ineligible back-of-house employees, arguing they did not "keep" the tips by distributing them to nontipped workers.
-
February 06, 2026
This week, a New York federal magistrate judge will consider granting preliminary approval to a $6 million class action settlement resolving allegations from home health aides who claimed a provider did not pay them for all hours they worked during live-in shifts.
-
February 06, 2026
The Fair Labor Standards Act does not categorically bar a contract's release of an employee's claims, a Washington federal judge ruled, finding that a former pharmaceutical manufacturing company worker's severance agreement that included a general release of claims precludes his wage suit.
-
February 06, 2026
In the coming week, attorneys should watch for Ninth Circuit oral arguments in a discrimination case against a utility district. Here's a look at that case and other labor and employment matters on deck in California.
-
February 06, 2026
The new minimum hourly wage for federal contractors will be set at $13.65, the U.S. Department of Labor Wage and Hour Division said Friday, a move coming after the Trump administration nixed a Biden-era rule setting the wage to $15.
-
February 05, 2026
A California federal judge appeared open Thursday to tossing a proposed class action alleging Tesla discriminates against American workers by favoring allegedly underpaid H-1B visa holders, telling counsel repeatedly during a hearing the allegations seem to be "speculation."
-
February 05, 2026
Health insurer Elevance told a North Carolina federal court that it should deny a former nurse's attempt to expand a class definition in her overtime-exempt misclassification lawsuit, arguing that the reworked definition would entirely upend the litigation and prejudice the insurer.
-
February 05, 2026
The U.S. Department of Labor should pay attorney fees and expenses that a human resources manager at a Tennessee pork farm incurred to defend the agency's retaliation suit, the manager told a federal court Thursday, saying the department failed to investigate the claims against her before suing.
-
February 05, 2026
A Red Lobster worker must pursue her Illinois wage claims in arbitration rather than federal court because she agreed to arbitrate employment disputes when she was rehired, the restaurant chain said Thursday.
-
February 05, 2026
The public has until March 2 to comment on recently proposed amendments to New York City's sick leave law, changes that will expand employees' rights to take paid time off for reasons that go beyond illnesses.
-
February 05, 2026
An aircraft services company stiffed workers on overtime and pay for all hours worked, a former employee alleged in a proposed collective action complaint filed in Texas federal court.
-
February 05, 2026
A neuroscience company and a related entity paid their former chief operations officer late or not at all and cheated her out of overtime, the former executive said in a proposed class and collective action in New York federal court.
-
February 05, 2026
A California-based harvesting company and related entities will pay over $6.1 million for failing to tell farmworkers about their paid sick leave options and stiffing them on their full wages, the California Labor Commissioner's Office has said.
-
February 05, 2026
An energy infrastructure company and a construction company underpaid workers by treating part of their compensation as per diem payments excluded from overtime calculations, a worker said in a proposed collective action filed in Virginia federal court.
-
February 04, 2026
A Kentucky coal miner accused a Colorado energy company in a proposed collective action Wednesday of violating the Fair Labor Standards Act by forcing employees to work more than an hour of overtime every workday without pay.
-
February 04, 2026
A Louisiana federal judge authorized notice to be sent to H-2A sugar cane workers who may be owed unpaid overtime on Tuesday, allowing them to opt in to a proposed Fair Labor Standards Act collective action against two companies.
-
February 04, 2026
An Illinois federal judge preliminarily approved a $975,000 settlement to resolve a proposed class and collective action alleging a pet product manufacturer failed to pay its employees for the time they spent putting on and removing personal protective equipment, according to a court filing.
-
February 04, 2026
The California Civil Rights Department has opened its portal for employers with 100 or more employees to report pay data from 2025, the agency announced.
-
February 04, 2026
Uber misclassifies drivers in New York as independent contractors, leading to unpaid wages and a lack of reimbursement for car-related expenses, two workers claim in a proposed class action filed in federal court.
-
February 04, 2026
A steakhouse chain violated tip credit rules by including morning-shift employees in its tip pool even though they worked primarily while the restaurant was closed to guests, a Colorado federal judge has ruled, finding those workers were not "customarily and regularly tipped" because their customer interaction was minimal.
-
February 04, 2026
A California appeals court will not publish its decision that last-mile deliveries Amazon workers performed represented interstate commerce exempt from federal arbitration, turning down requests to publish the opinion.
-
February 03, 2026
A company that transports radioactive medical materials misclassified drivers as independent contractors, leading to minimum wage and overtime violations, according to a proposed class and collective action filed in Florida federal court.
-
February 03, 2026
Saratoga County was aware that its rounding policies led to unpaid wages, a New York federal judge has ruled, granting summary judgment on the issue of liability to a group of more than 100 current and former employees at the county sheriff's office.
-
February 03, 2026
A Jim Henson Co. former employee filed a $7.5 million suit in California state court alleging the entertainment giant wrongfully diminished his executive producer credit and deprived him of an Oscar at the Academy Awards in connection with Guillermo Del Toro's "Pinocchio," despite his significant contributions to the film's "undeniable success."
-
February 03, 2026
A live music venue in Denver failed to pay workers for all hours worked, misclassified them as independent contractors and retaliated against a worker for complaining about unpaid wages, according to a potential class and collective action complaint filed in Colorado federal court.