Employment

  • December 08, 2025

    Paralegal Seeks Contempt Order Over Firm's Emails For OT

    A Texas law firm should face sanctions after it flouted a court's order to turn over emails that could determine how much overtime a former paralegal worked, the former employee told a federal court, saying the firm provided "unusable garbage."

  • December 08, 2025

    Catching Up With Delaware's Chancery Court

    The Delaware Chancery Court delivered a busy first week of December, featuring commercial disputes, post-closing merger and acquisition battles and renewed scrutiny of fiduciary conduct ranging from oil and gas investments to healthcare acquisitions. 

  • December 08, 2025

    Justices Block Union From Appealing 5th Circ. SpaceX Ruling

    The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday denied a union's bid to seek review of a Fifth Circuit ruling that entitles employers targeted by the National Labor Relations Board to court orders blocking the agency's cases.

  • December 08, 2025

    Arbitrator Erred In Tossing Firing Grievance, Union Tells Court

    An Indiana federal judge should vacate an arbitration award that allowed a landfill employee's firing to stand, the ex-worker's union argued, saying the arbitrator based his award not on the language of the union contract but on a rule that he "invented."

  • December 08, 2025

    Fired Worker Can't Get Justices To Mull Burden-Shifting Test

    The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday turned away a former restaurant worker who said she was unlawfully fired after a diabetic episode, declining her invitation to review a legal test used to determine the viability of employment bias claims.

  • December 08, 2025

    US Lawyer Numbers Surge With Hefty 2024 Graduating Class

    The number of U.S. lawyers showed marked growth for the first time since 2020, due to a 2024 graduating class that was nearly 12% larger than any other class since 2012, a study from the American Bar Association released Monday showed.

  • December 09, 2025

    CORRECTED: Duane Reade, NYC To Pay $7.2M To NYPD Cops In Wage Suit

    Duane Reade and New York City will pay $7.2 million to more than 2,000 New York Police Department officers who claimed in New York federal court that the drug store chain didn't properly compensate them for work performed during off-duty hours. 

  • December 08, 2025

    Justices Seek SG Input On Bias Protections For Coaches

    The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday requested input from the solicitor general on the case of two former Georgia college employees who have claimed that federal Title IX laws protecting students from sex discrimination should also apply to professors and coaches.

  • December 08, 2025

    High Court Won't Review Former Denver Firefighter's ADA Suit

    The U.S. Supreme Court said Monday that it will not rethink the dismissal of an ex-firefighter's disability bias suit alleging he was forced to retire because the city of Denver gave him work that aggravated a hand injury, leaving intact a Tenth Circuit ruling that shut down his case.

  • December 08, 2025

    High Court Skips Christian Baker's Wedding Cake Battle

    The U.S. Supreme Court refused Monday to hear a Christian bakery owner's challenge to a California appeals court's decision that the business's policy against selling baked goods for same-sex ceremonies amounted to unlawful discrimination.

  • December 08, 2025

    High Court Wants Feds' Input On Health Workers' Vax Fight

    The U.S. Supreme Court asked Monday for the federal government's input on a group of religious workers' challenge to a pandemic-era New York state policy requiring healthcare providers to make their employees be vaccinated against COVID-19.

  • December 05, 2025

    Wash. AG, Lawmakers Pitch Bill To Protect Immigrant Workers

    Two Washington lawmakers and the state's attorney general Friday announced plans to introduce legislation that would attempt to protect immigrant workers from federal crackdowns, saying the state's "prosperity would not be possible without the contributions of immigrants."

  • December 05, 2025

    Teamsters Challenge NLRB's Bid To Block California Law

    The Teamsters have asked a California federal judge to preserve a state law that expanded the state labor board's power, telling the judge that the law can exist side by side with the National Labor Relations Act and that he should reject the National Labor Relations Board's bid to block it.

  • December 05, 2025

    Colo. Jury Awards $11.5M In HR Society Discrimination Suit

    A Colorado federal jury Friday found a global human resources association racially discriminated against a Black Egyptian former employee and retaliated against her for criticizing her manager's favoritism toward white workers, awarding her a total of $11.5 million in damages.

  • December 05, 2025

    NLRB Could Get Quorum Back After Nominee Added To Bloc

    The National Labor Relations Board may soon have a quorum again after Senate Republicans added a nominee who recently won the labor committee's approval to a bloc of nearly 100 nominees for positions across federal agencies that the Senate will consider together. 

  • December 05, 2025

    Employment Authority: The Push To Unionize Museums

    Law360 Employment Authority covers the biggest employment cases and trends. Catch up this week with coverage on how workers at The Met are adding to a unionization wave in America's museums and why employers should heed warnings set by a $39 million settlement Starbucks reached with New York City to resolve alleged predictive scheduling violations. 

  • December 05, 2025

    NC Restaurants Hit With DOL Suit Over Pooled Tips

    Two North Carolina restaurants have, for four years, kept and pooled tips from front-of-house employees, while unlawfully distributing them to tip-ineligible, back-of-house employees in order to offset labor costs, the U.S. Department of Labor told a North Carolina federal court.

  • December 05, 2025

    1 Home Care Co. Axed From OT Rule Challenge

    A home care company facing a U.S. Department of Labor suit over unpaid wages that is currently in the Sixth Circuit cannot stay in a case challenging an Obama-era rule expanding protections for home care workers, a Pennsylvania federal judge ruled.

  • December 05, 2025

    10th Circ. Won't Stay Order In Union Early Retirement Case

    A union pension plan must comply with an order compelling it to restore benefits to certain early retirees while it appeals the ruling that required it to do so, the Tenth Circuit held, denying the plan's request for a stay of the order.

  • December 05, 2025

    WaPo Accused Of Failing To Protect Employee Info From Hack

    A former Washington Post employee has accused the newspaper of failing to prevent a targeted cyberattack over the summer, saying in a putative class action filed in D.C. federal court that lax cybersecurity procedures have put thousands of employees' and contractors' sensitive information in the hands of data thieves.

  • December 05, 2025

    High Court To Weigh Courts' Power Over Arbitration Awards

    The U.S. Supreme Court agreed Dec. 5 to consider whether federal courts have the authority to confirm or overturn arbitration awards arising out of cases they previously exercised authority over, taking up a tricky legal question stemming from a laid-off security guard's discrimination case.

  • December 05, 2025

    NFL Owner's Ex-Aide Agrees To Arbitrate Harassment Suit

    A former assistant to Arizona Cardinals owner Michael Bidwill agreed to proceed with arbitration in her lawsuit accusing Bidwill of harassment, after having previously opposed the move, according to a joint court filing from the parties.

  • December 05, 2025

    ERISA Recap: 4 Rulings Worth Paying Attention To From Nov.

    The Ninth Circuit striking down a class action win for transgender employee health plan participants who said their gender-affirming care denials were discriminatory is just one noteworthy Employee Retirement Income Security Act ruling from November. Here's a recap of that ruling and three others.

  • December 05, 2025

    Pharma Co. Says Ex-Staff Used Secrets To Compete

    Pharmaceutical supplier New Life Medicals (USA) Inc. told a North Carolina state court that a former warehouse manager, a freelance contractor and a business partner conspired to steal confidential information to form a competing venture only 10 miles away.

  • December 05, 2025

    Court Staff Attys Settle Claims Of Undermining Colleague

    Six months after Massachusetts' highest court revived some of a former Appeals Court staff attorney's claims in a suit alleging two supervisors intentionally undermined him, the parties have reported reaching a settlement in the case.

Expert Analysis

  • H-1B Fee Guidance Is Helpful But Notable Uncertainty Persists

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    Recent guidance narrowing the scope of the $100,000 entry fee for H-1B visas will allow employers to plan for the hiring season, but a lack of detail about the mechanics of cross-agency payment verification, fee exemptions and other practical matters still need to be addressed, say attorneys at Klasko Immigration Law Partners.

  • Indiana Law Sets New Standard For Wage Access Providers

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    The recent enactment of a law establishing a comprehensive regulatory framework for earned wage access positions Indiana as one of the leading states to allow EWA services, and establishes a standard that employers must familiarize themselves with before the Jan. 1 effective date, say attorneys at Faegre Drinker.

  • Series

    Practicing Stoicism Makes Me A Better Lawyer

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    Practicing Stoicism, by applying reason to ignore my emotions and govern my decisions, has enabled me to approach challenging situations in a structured way, ultimately providing advice singularly devoted to a client's interest, says John Baranello at Moses & Singer.

  • How Courts Treat Nonservice Clauses For Financial Advisers

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    Financial advisers considering a job change should carefully consider recent cases that examine controlling state law for nonservice and nonacceptance provisions to prepare for potential legal challenges from former firms, says Andrew Shedlock at Kutak Rock.

  • Series

    The Biz Court Digest: Texas, One Year In

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    A year after the Texas Business Court's first decision, it's clear that Texas didn't just copy Delaware and instead built something uniquely its own, combining specialization with constitutional accountability and creating a model that looks forward without losing touch with the state's democratic and statutory roots, says Chris Bankler at Jackson Walker.

  • AG Watch: Illinois A Key Player In State-Level Enforcement

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    Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul has systematically strengthened his office to fill federal enforcement gaps, oppose Trump administration mandates and advance state policy objectives, particularly by aggressively pursuing labor-related issues, say attorneys at Troutman.

  • What's At Stake In High Court Pension Liability Case

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    The U.S. Supreme Court’s upcoming decision in M&K Employee Solutions v. Trustees of the IAM National Pension Fund will determine how an employer’s liability for withdrawing from a multiemployer retirement plan is calculated — a narrow but key issue for employer financial planning and collective bargaining, say attorneys at Thompson Hine.

  • Series

    Law School's Missed Lessons: Educating Your Community

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    Nearly two decades prosecuting scammers and elder fraud taught me that proactively educating the public about the risks they face and the rights they possess is essential to building trust within our communities, empowering otherwise vulnerable citizens and preventing wrongdoers from gaining a foothold, says Roger Handberg at GrayRobinson.

  • Federal Grantees May Soon Face More Limitations On Speech

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    If courts accept the administration’s new interpretation of preexisting case law, which attempts to graft onto grant recipients the existing limitations on government contractors' free speech, a more deferential standard may soon apply in determining whether an agency’s refusal or termination of a grant was in violation of the First Amendment, say attorneys at Venable.

  • 7 Areas To Watch As FTC Ends Push For A Noncompete Ban

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    ​​​​​​As the government ends its push for a nationwide noncompete ban, ​employers who do not want to be caught without protections for legitimate business interests should explore supplementing their noncompetes by deploying elements of seven practical, enforceable tools, including nondisclosure agreements and garden leave strategies, say attorneys at Seyfarth.

  • 5 Crisis Lawyering Skills For An Age Of Uncertainty

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    As attorneys increasingly face unprecedented and pervasive situations — from prosecutions of law enforcement officials to executive orders targeting law firms — they must develop several essential competencies of effective crisis lawyering, says Ray Brescia at Albany Law School.

  • Opinion

    It's Time For The Judiciary To Fix Its Cybersecurity Problem

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    After recent reports that hackers have once again infiltrated federal courts’ electronic case management systems, the judiciary should strengthen its cybersecurity practices in line with executive branch standards, outlining clear roles and responsibilities for execution, says Ilona Cohen at HackerOne.

  • Workday Case Shows Auditing AI Hiring Tools Is Crucial

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    Following a California federal court's recent decisions in Mobley v. Workday signaling that both employers and vendors could be held liable for discriminatory outcomes from artificial intelligence hiring tools, companies should consider two rigorous auditing methods to detect and mitigate bias, says Hossein Borhani at Charles River Associates.

  • Identifying The Sources And Impacts Of Juror Contamination

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    Jury contamination can be pervasive, so it is important that trial teams be able to spot its sources and take specific mitigation steps, says consultant Clint Townson.

  • Pa. Court Reaffirms Deference To Workers' Comp Judges

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    In Prospect Medical Holdings v. Son, the Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania reaffirmed that it will defer to workers' compensation judges on witness credibility, reminding employers that a successful challenge of a judge's determination must show that the determination was not supported by any evidence, says Keld Wenge at Pond Lehocky.

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