Wage & Hour

  • March 26, 2025

    Wings Restaurant Illegally Retains Tips, Server Says

    Wild Wing Cafe claimed a tip credit allowing it to avoid paying servers a full minimum wage, but then required workers to pool their tips and used the cash to pay for restaurant expenses, a proposed class and collective action filed in North Carolina federal court said.

  • March 26, 2025

    Worker Says Koch Foods Fails To Pay For Off-Clock Tasks

    Koch Foods refused to pay workers for the time they spent putting on and taking off protective gear, and it deducted money from their paychecks if they needed items replaced during a workweek, a proposed class action filed in Illinois federal court said.

  • March 26, 2025

    NLRB Defends Finding Illegal Wage Snub To 9th Circ.

    The National Labor Relations Board properly found that a gas supplier violated federal labor law by withholding a raise from a group of unionizing Southern California employees in 2018, board prosecutors told the Ninth Circuit, asking the appellate court to enforce the ruling.

  • March 26, 2025

    Colo. Rehab Center Must Face Nurse's Civil Theft Claim

    A Colorado rehabilitation center can't escape a nurse's civil theft claim in her suit alleging the center required her to work through meal breaks without proper pay, a federal judge ruled, saying a longer statute of limitation applies.

  • March 26, 2025

    Kaiser Left Holiday Pay, Incentives Out Of OT, Worker Claims

    Healthcare company Kaiser Permanente miscalculated workers' overtime by leaving out rates for extra days of work and holidays, according to a proposed class action filed in Colorado state court.

  • March 26, 2025

    Crunch Fitness Fails To Pay All Wages, Worker Says

    Crunch Fitness failed to pay California-based employees for all their hours worked, improperly calculated their overtime pay and lacked a procedure in place by which workers could accrue paid sick time, a Private Attorneys General Act lawsuit said.

  • March 26, 2025

    House Panel Urges Labor Head To Keep Subminimum Wage

    Republican members of a U.S. House committee urged the head of the U.S. Department of Labor on Wednesday to drop a Biden administration proposal to phase out the ability of employers to pay workers with disabilities below the federal minimum wage.

  • March 25, 2025

    Ohio Snack-Maker To Pay $1.15M In Worker Wage Settlement

    An Ohio federal judge on Tuesday approved a $1.15 million settlement ending a collective action that accused snack manufacturer Shearer's Foods of having employees work overtime without pay, including doing necessary preshift sanitation and preparation work.

  • March 25, 2025

    NCAA Baseball Coaches Ask Court To OK $49M Wage-Fix Deal

    A group of Division I volunteer baseball coaches has asked a California federal court to sign off on a proposed settlement under which the NCAA would pay $49.25 million to roughly 1,000 coaches to resolve their proposed antitrust class action challenging a since-repealed "uniform wage fix" bylaw.

  • March 25, 2025

    Federal Contract Issues May Lead To W&H Suits, Lawyer Says

    Eric Leonard, a government contracts and employment lawyer, said he foresees an uptick in unpaid wages litigation and that federal contractors need to assert their rights amid the current uncertainty. Here, Law360 speaks with Leonard about what this turmoil means for contractors and their wage obligations.

  • March 25, 2025

    Recruiter To Pay $6M To End Nurses' Suit Alleging Strict Pacts

    An Ohio federal judge greenlighted a deal in which a healthcare staffing company that recruits nurses from the Philippines will shell out $6 million to settle a suit with about 5,600 workers accusing it of imposing strict employment contracts, not paying overtime and mandating a gossip ban.

  • March 25, 2025

    Hershey Escapes Ex-Production Worker's Leave Bias Suit

    Hershey defeated a former production operator's lawsuit claiming he was fired for taking time off to assist his wife with fertility treatments, a Pennsylvania federal judge ruled, saying there was nothing wrong with an internal investigation that found he was misusing the leave he'd been given.

  • March 25, 2025

    House Panel Split On Independent Contractor, OT Updates

    Republicans on a U.S. House subcommittee called on Tuesday for updating the Fair Labor Standards Act to more easily classify workers as independent contractors and enable overtime and paid time off swapping, while Democrats urged greater protections for employees, not a watering down of the law.

  • March 25, 2025

    Media Cos. Want Docs Unsealed In X Workers' Layoff Suit

    More than two dozen filings in a proposed class action alleging X unlawfully shorted laid-off workers on severance should be unveiled, several media companies told a Delaware federal court Tuesday in a bid to intervene in the case, arguing the public has a right to view those filings.

  • March 25, 2025

    NCAA Makes New Bid To Sink Athletes' Wage Suit

    A group of student-athletes still failed to show that their colleges, universities and the NCAA had the joint control typical of employers even after their cases took a trip to the Third Circuit, the association told a Pennsylvania federal court, launching a renewed bid to toss the students' suit.

  • March 25, 2025

    Staffing Co. Workers Can't Get Class Status In NC Wage Suit

    Staffing firm employees can't proceed as a class in their lawsuit accusing their employer of failing to pay them a minimum wage, a North Carolina federal judge ruled, because they can't show that all the workers were subject to the same common policies.

  • March 25, 2025

    DOJ Says 5th Circ. Fed. Contractor Wage Hike Dispute Moot

    The Fifth Circuit's ruling in favor of the Biden administration's mandate increasing the minimum wage for federal contractors to $15 per hour must be nixed because President Donald Trump overturned the rule in an executive order, the U.S. Department of Justice said.

  • March 24, 2025

    Steak 'n Shake To Pay $372K To Settle Wage Dispute

    Restaurant chain Steak 'n Shake will shell out $372,000 to nearly 150 servers who claimed that they were not paid full minimum wages when they spent more than 20% of their time performing nontipped work, as an Ohio federal judge approved the deal Monday.

  • March 24, 2025

    Trump Taps Morgan Lewis Atty To Lead OFCCP

    The Trump administration has selected a former Morgan Lewis & Bockius LLP attorney to lead the Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs, with the lawyer promising Monday to uphold the president's mandate of stripping the agency's legal authority to investigate bias complaints against federal contractors.

  • March 24, 2025

    Ex-Rikers Island Officer Files Wage Action Against NYC

    A corrections officer at New York's Rikers Island told a federal court that he worked up to 88 hours per workweek and was forced to remain on premises — without getting properly paid for overtime — while missing inmates were located.

  • March 24, 2025

    Older Worker Says Logistics Co. Underpaid Him

    A 76-year-old worker said he was forced to retire because a global logistics provider discriminated against him because of his age and disabilities and misclassified him as a manager to avoid paying him overtime, a lawsuit filed in North Carolina federal court said.

  • March 24, 2025

    DOL Abandons Biden's Wage Hike For Federal Contractors

    The U.S. Department of Labor said it is no longer enforcing the Biden-era minimum wage for federal contractors after President Donald Trump axed the raise, asking the Ninth Circuit to vacate a panel's decision against the wage bump.

  • March 24, 2025

    Xerox Workers Prevail On Washington Wage Law Claim

    Xerox failed to pay call center workers in compliance with Washington state's minimum wage law, a federal judge ruled while saying it's unclear just how much the company owes a class of about 4,800 current and former employees.

  • March 24, 2025

    Justices Won't Review San Francisco Nurses' Salary Dispute

    The U.S. Supreme Court declined on Monday to review a case about whether San Francisco nurses were misclassified and are entitled to overtime pay because they were not paid a true salary under the Fair Labor Standards Act — an issue that recalls the high court's ruling in Helix Energy Solutions Group Inc. v. Hewitt.

  • March 21, 2025

    Ex-Worker, Oilfield Services Co. Settle Misclassification Suit

    A Texas-based oilfield support services company and a former employee have reached a settlement in the ex-employee's wage lawsuit accusing the company of misclassifying workers as independent contractors to avoid paying overtime, the parties told a Texas federal court.

Expert Analysis

  • FMLA Confusion Persists Despite New DOL Advisory

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    A recent U.S. Department of Labor advisory opinion provides some clarity regarding the Family and Medical Leave Act's handling of holiday weeks, but the FMLA remains a legal minefield that demands fact-specific analysis of each employee's unique situation, says Nicholas Schneider at Eckert Seamans.

  • East Penn Verdict Is An FLSA Cautionary Tale For Employers

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    A Pennsylvania federal jury's recent $22 million verdict against East Penn set a record for the Fair Labor Standards Act and should serve as a reminder to employers that failure to keep complete wage and hour records can exponentially increase liability exposure under the FLSA, say Benjamin Hinks and Danielle Lederman at Bowditch & Dewey.

  • Pay Transparency Laws Complicate Foreign Labor Cert.

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    State and local laws adopted to help close the gender pay gap pose challenges for U.S. companies recruiting foreign nationals, as they try to navigate a thicket of pay transparency laws without running afoul of federally regulated recruitment practices, say Stephanie Pimentel and Asha George at Berry Appleman.

  • 2 Ways Calif. Justices' PAGA Ruling May Play Out

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    In Adolph v. Uber, the California Supreme Court will soon decide whether an employee’s representative Private Attorneys General Act claims can stay in court when their individual claims go to arbitration — either exposing employers to battles in multiple forums, or affirming arbitration agreements’ ability to extinguish nonindividual claims, says Justin Peters at Carlton Fields.

  • How To Navigate Class Incentive Awards After Justices' Denial

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    Despite a growing circuit split on the permissibility of incentive awards, the U.S. Supreme Court recently declined to hear cases on the issue, meaning class action defendants must consider whether to agree to incentive awards as part of a classwide settlement and how to best structure the agreement, say attorneys at K&L Gates.

  • Check Onboarding Docs To Protect Arbitration Agreements

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    The California Court of Appeal's recent Alberto v. Cambrian Homecare decision opens a new and unexpected avenue of attack on employment arbitration agreements in California — using other employment-related agreements to render otherwise enforceable arbitration agreements unenforceable, say Morgan Forsey and Ian Michalak at Sheppard Mullin.

  • Remote Work Considerations In A Post-Pandemic World

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    Now that the public health emergency has ended, employers may reevaluate their obligations to allow remote work, as well as the extent to which they must compensate remote working expenses, though it's important to examine any requests under the Americans With Disabilities Act, say Dan Kaplan and Jacqueline Hayduk at Foley & Lardner.

  • Handbook Hot Topics: Remote Work Policies

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    Implementing a remote work policy that clearly articulates eligibility, conduct and performance expectations for remote employees can ease employers’ concerns about workers they may not see on a daily basis, says Melissa Spence at Butler Snow.

  • An Overview Of Calif. Berman Hearings For Wage Disputes

    Excerpt from Practical Guidance
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    While California's Berman hearings are pro-employee procedures that are accessible, informal and affordable mechanisms for parties filing a claim to recover unpaid wages, there are some disadvantages to the process such as delays, says David Cheng at FordHarrison.

  • No Blank Space In Case Law On Handling FMLA Abuse

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    Daniel Schwartz at Shipman & Goodwin discusses real-world case law that guides employers on how to handle suspected Family and Medical Leave Act abuse, specifically in instances where employees attended or performed in a concert while on leave — with Taylor Swift’s ongoing Eras Tour as a hypothetical backdrop.

  • Water Cooler Talk: Bias Lessons From 'Partner Track'

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    Tracey Diamond and Evan Gibbs at Troutman Pepper chat with CyberRisk Alliance's Ying Wong, about how Netflix's show "Partner Track" tackles conscious and unconscious bias at law firms, and offer some key observations for employers and their human resources departments on avoiding these biases.

  • History Supports 2nd Circ. View Of FAA Transport Exemption

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    In the circuit split over when transport workers are exempt from the Federal Arbitration Act, sparked by the 2022 U.S. Supreme Court decision in Southwest Airlines v. Saxon, the Second Circuit reached a more faithful interpretation — one supported by historical litigation and legislative context, though perhaps arrived at via the wrong route, say Joshua Wesneski and Crystal Weeks at Weil.

  • Employers Need Clarity On FLSA Joint Employer Liability

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    A judicial patchwork of multifactor tests to determine joint employment liability has led to unpredictable results, and only congressional action or enactment of a uniform standard to which courts will consistently defer can give employers the clarity needed to structure their relationships with workers, say attorneys at Seyfarth.