High-ranking district chiefs cannot claim they are shielded from overtime pay exemptions because they are first responders, a Florida federal judge ruled, but the Orlando Fire Department has not shown that it was in the clear to deny them the premium wages.
Washington employers will get some reprieve from steep penalties for pay transparency violations, and workers in Los Angeles County will have the benefit of predictive scheduling. Here, Law360 explores a sampling of new developments employers should keep in mind in the coming weeks.
Wage and hour claims may not be the first issues that spring to a worker's mind following a layoff, but since they can be filed on a group basis and give the worker the benefit of the doubt, they are low-hanging litigation fruit for worker advocates.
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High-ranking district chiefs cannot claim they are shielded from overtime pay exemptions because they are first responders, a Florida federal judge ruled, but the Orlando Fire Department has not shown that it was in the clear to deny them the premium wages.
Washington employers will get some reprieve from steep penalties for pay transparency violations, and workers in Los Angeles County will have the benefit of predictive scheduling. Here, Law360 explores a sampling of new developments employers should keep in mind in the coming weeks.
Wage and hour claims may not be the first issues that spring to a worker's mind following a layoff, but since they can be filed on a group basis and give the worker the benefit of the doubt, they are low-hanging litigation fruit for worker advocates.
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May 28, 2025
An Oregon-based flooring manufacturer has been sued in Georgia federal court by a group of Chinese nationals who allege they were brought to the U.S. to work at a flooring manufacturing facility in Cartersville, Georgia, then exploited, underpaid and subjected to forced labor.
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May 28, 2025
The U.S. Department of Justice is pointing to a recent U.S. Supreme Court ruling to bolster its fight against a new trial being sought by a convicted Nevada nursing home executive, saying that the new high court decision establishes that economic loss isn't needed to prove wire fraud.
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May 28, 2025
A New Jersey law requiring employers to include a pay range in both internal and external job postings goes into effect June 1, and businesses in the state should be sure they have their ducks in a row. Here, management-side lawyers offer four tips to help employers prepare.
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May 28, 2025
An ambulance service will have to shell out the remaining $42,500 it owes to a group of emergency medical technicians and paramedics to settle their overtime after having missed payment deadlines several times, a Florida federal court ordered Wednesday.
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May 28, 2025
Snow sport instructors cannot revisit previous court orders denying class treatment in their wage and hour lawsuit against Vail Resorts, a Colorado federal judge ruled Wednesday, saying the case will proceed in its current form as a collective action.
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May 28, 2025
A new lawsuit from a onetime executive assistant at Stone Hilton PLLC alleges various forms of misconduct at the firm and claims that one of its founders resigned from Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton's office amid sexual harassment allegations.
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May 28, 2025
A New Jersey personal injury law firm will not be able to escape a former employee's lawsuit alleging she was paid less than men and harassed while pregnant, a state court judge ruled, saying that she fulfilled discovery demands.
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May 28, 2025
The University of Utah is an arm of the state and is therefore shielded against a proposed class and collective action accusing it of failing to pay customer service workers for the time they spent booting up their computers, the school told a federal court.
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May 28, 2025
A Florida construction company will pay more than $594,000 to put an end to the U.S. Department of Labor's investigation into allegations that it failed to pay workers overtime wages, the department said.
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May 27, 2025
The Second Circuit on Tuesday declined to revive claims from former officers for a New York Girl Scouts chapter who said they suffered retaliation after complaining that the group misused pandemic relief loans, but held that one plaintiff can pursue racial bias allegations.
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May 27, 2025
A coal miner claiming unpaid wages failed to show how a mining company directly employed him, but supported his allegations that the entity could have jointly employed him with a subsidiary, a West Virginia federal judge ruled Tuesday.
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May 27, 2025
A bus attendant cannot show that a school bus services provider willfully ran afoul of the Fair Labor Standards Act by improperly calculating workers' overtime pay, the company told an Ohio federal court Tuesday, saying her allegations aren't based on any facts.
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May 27, 2025
A federal magistrate judge in Alabama said it's not totally clear that Hyundai, a manufacturing company and a staffing firm stopped employing minors after the U.S. Department of Labor sued them for hiring a 13-year-old, recommending that the companies face the agency's claims.
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May 27, 2025
A coalition of construction groups didn't show how a Minnesota state law imposing hefty fines on companies that misclassify workers as independent contractors hurts them, the state's Department of Labor said, urging the Eighth Circuit to uphold a federal court's decision keeping the law standing.
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May 27, 2025
A seasoned BigLaw attorney who left Ogletree Deakins Nash Smoak & Stewart PC five years ago to move into an in-house legal position at Vice Media has rejoined the labor and employment law firm Tuesday as a shareholder.
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May 27, 2025
A trio of former Domino's delivery drivers asked an Ohio federal judge to certify their proposed classes of current and former drivers in and outside the Buckeye State as they pursue claims that Domino's franchisee Team Pizza Inc. took them below minimum wage by shuffling vehicle costs onto workers.
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May 27, 2025
A health insurance company failed to show that utilization reviewer nurses fell under certain Fair Labor Standards Act overtime exemptions, the nurses said, arguing to a Maryland federal court that their jobs required "routine mental work."
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May 27, 2025
An inn in the Blue Ridge Mountains failed to pay innkeepers minimum and overtime wages despite requiring them to work more than 12 hours a day, according to a suit filed in North Carolina federal court.
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May 23, 2025
This past year, a handful of attorneys secured billions of dollars in settlements and judgments for both classes and individual plaintiffs against massive companies and organizations like Facebook, Dell, the National Association of Realtors, Johnson & Johnson, UFC and Credit Suisse, earning them recognition as Law360's Titans of the Plaintiffs Bar for 2025.
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May 23, 2025
A contractor that provides guards for a U.S. Department of Homeland Security facility in Washington, D.C., forces them to take meal break pay deductions despite such breaks rarely occurring, employees said in a proposed class and collective action.
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May 23, 2025
An insurance company reneged on its promise to provide its benefits adviser with paid maternity leave and then fired her not long after she raised several concerns about unpaid commissions, according to a lawsuit removed to North Carolina federal court.
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May 23, 2025
This week, the Second Circuit will consider a New York speech therapist's attempt to revive her lawsuit claiming she was discriminated against on the basis of her race when her school district fired her in 2022. Here, Law360 looks at this and other cases on the docket in New York.
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May 23, 2025
The state of Missouri urged a federal judge to reject Starbucks' bid to dismiss its suit claiming its diversity policies discriminate based on race and gender, arguing it has put forward enough evidence showing how the company's practices have harmed its citizens to keep the case in court.
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May 23, 2025
Elevance cannot add up all potential class members' claims to put the total cost of future damages over the required amount to keep a case in federal court, a worker said in asking that her wage and hour case be sent back to Connecticut state court.
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May 23, 2025
The U.S. Department of Labor announced Friday a new acting administrator as well as four policy advisers to serve in the agency's division tasked with ensuring employers pay their employees in line with federal minimum wage and overtime laws.