The U.S. Department of Labor urged the Second Circuit to rule that contract language requiring workers to pay for employers' attorney fees in the event of an arbitral defeat runs afoul of the Fair Labor Standards Act and cannot be enforced.
The U.S. Department of Labor will challenge a Texas federal judge's decision ruling that President Joe Biden couldn't increase the minimum wage for federal contractors to $15 per hour, making it the third such case to land at an appeals court.
State attorneys general bringing actions against gig companies alleging wage and hour violations have recovered hundreds of millions of dollars and evaded the arbitration hurdle that often stymies workers' cases, though they have left open the larger question of worker classification. Here, Law360 explores these actions.
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The U.S. Department of Labor urged the Second Circuit to rule that contract language requiring workers to pay for employers' attorney fees in the event of an arbitral defeat runs afoul of the Fair Labor Standards Act and cannot be enforced.
The U.S. Department of Labor will challenge a Texas federal judge's decision ruling that President Joe Biden couldn't increase the minimum wage for federal contractors to $15 per hour, making it the third such case to land at an appeals court.
State attorneys general bringing actions against gig companies alleging wage and hour violations have recovered hundreds of millions of dollars and evaded the arbitration hurdle that often stymies workers' cases, though they have left open the larger question of worker classification. Here, Law360 explores these actions.
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November 28, 2023
Walmart misclassifies its app-based delivery workers as independent contractors and fails to provide them the guaranteed wages, breaks and benefits owed to employees, a worker alleged in a proposed class action removed to Washington federal court.
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November 28, 2023
A real estate brokerage operator will pay $3 million to end a suit in California federal court alleging it misclassified agents as independent contractors and cheated them out of overtime after a federal judge approved the deal Tuesday.
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November 28, 2023
Farmworkers and a farm labor contractor told a California federal judge they agreed to settle the workers' class action accusing the contractor of failing to pay them during rest breaks.
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November 28, 2023
Warehouse operator Penske Logistics' production quotas compelled workers to start working early without pay and push through mandatory meal breaks, an ex-employee alleged in a proposed class action filed in California federal court.
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November 28, 2023
The owner of a Detroit senior home care company will spend time behind bars after repeatedly flouting court orders to turn over time and pay records requested by the U.S. Department of Labor during a wage investigation, a Michigan federal judge ruled Tuesday.
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November 28, 2023
A North Carolina federal judge barred Citrix from communicating with employees about a $5.9 million overtime settlement after the workers' counsel asked for a protective order, agreeing that Citrix's human resources "plainly violated" the terms of the deal when they held meetings to discuss its terms.
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November 28, 2023
Workers who delivered baked goods for Flowers Foods and two subsidiaries told the U.S. Supreme Court that the companies' petition to the high court to review a First Circuit decision denying them arbitration should wait for a similar case.
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November 28, 2023
Major U.S. law firms are steadfast in their commitment to the pursuit of further growth despite ongoing economic uncertainty. Here’s what the leaders of four Leaderboard firms have to say about how the legal industry is preparing for next year.
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November 28, 2023
Check out the Law360 Pulse Leaderboard to see which first-in-class firms made the list this year.
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November 28, 2023
A North Carolina-based lease management company and a former employee told a Texas federal court they had reached an agreement to end the worker's suit alleging the company failed to pay her overtime wages, asking the court to close the case.
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November 27, 2023
McDonald's asked the U.S. Supreme Court on Monday to review the Seventh Circuit's revival of a proposed class action alleging the company's since-discontinued no-poach provisions in franchisee agreements violated antitrust laws.
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November 27, 2023
The Ninth Circuit has upheld a lower court's decision denying a harbor towing company's bid to arbitrate a deck engineer's wage-and-hour suit, finding there to be no valid arbitration agreement covering the engineer's statutory wage claims without a "clear and unmistakable waiver of a judicial forum" for those claims.
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November 27, 2023
Sparacino PLLC has agreed to stop contacting UFC contenders who are potential members of a proposed class in a Nevada federal lawsuit that accuses the organization of repressing wages and is already represented by a group of lawyers from several firms.
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November 27, 2023
A former Papa John's manager wants to assuage a Kentucky federal judge's concerns over a $5 million settlement resolving claims over "no poach" provisions in the pizza chain's franchise agreements, arguing it doesn't matter that the deal covers both managerial and non-managerial workers or that some of them signed arbitration agreements because all plaintiffs were harmed by a "uniform" wage policy and all are making the same claim with the same theory of damages.
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November 27, 2023
Pennsylvania may block a construction firm accused of underpaying its workers from bidding on new construction contracts, as the state's Supreme Court ruled that the company must first contest any debarment with the state Department of Transportation before filing suit.
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November 27, 2023
A Florida construction company and a group of workers asked a federal judge Monday to place a stamp of approval on a $550,000 settlement ending a collective action alleging that the company ducked its overtime pay obligations for workers in its electrical and fire divisions.
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November 27, 2023
A former Kirkland & Ellis LLP associate accusing the firm of sex discrimination has urged a California federal court to disregard its motion to dismiss, arguing that Kirkland has been rehashing already-rejected arguments and improperly tacking on new ones.
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November 27, 2023
The U.S. Department of Labor announced Monday that 13 construction subcontractors working on a federally assisted project in Wisconsin paid more than $1.2 million in wages and fines to 142 workers denied their full pay.
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November 27, 2023
Workers for Duke Energy Corp. asked a Pennsylvania federal judge Monday to sign off on a deal ending a seven-year class action accusing the company of shorting them on overtime pay, saying the agreement is in their best interest.
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November 27, 2023
Two law firms embroiled in a dispute over how to divide some $1.8 million in attorney fees from a successful class action against DuPont have agreed to settle their claims for a six-figure sum before trial.
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November 27, 2023
Lansing's first Democratic majority in 40 years passed measures to bar discrimination, repealed a product-liability shield for pharmaceuticals and rolled back the previous decade of Republican labor policy. Law360 takes a look at some of the most impactful laws passed in Michigan this year.
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November 27, 2023
Safety representatives at a compliance and consulting company for the oil and gas industry worked 90- to 100-hour weeks without overtime compensation and were instead paid a flat day rate, three former workers said in a proposed collective and class action filed in New Mexico federal court.
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November 22, 2023
An appellate opinion may breathe new life into a case that a lower court dismissed, or throw out a decision with instructions to conduct a fresh analysis that adopts a new legal test. Here, Law360 reviews what happened in five minimum wage and overtime cases where an appellate ruling changed the course of the litigation.
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November 22, 2023
New York state will guarantee freelance workers the right to written contracts specifying contracted services and promised compensation, full and timely payment and a private right to sue for damages, under legislation signed into law Wednesday by Gov. Kathy Hochul.
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November 22, 2023
A Maryland federal judge handed a win to a Teamsters local in a back pay dispute with a transportation company Wednesday, ordering the company to pay $76,000 to a wrongfully fired mechanic in the Washington, D.C., area.