Pay transparency laws are making an impact on pay disparities but policymakers should be careful to not make compliance too burdensome, says employment attorney Kelly Cardin. Here, °µÍø½ûÇø speaks with Cardin about how pay transparency will continue to evolve.
The U.S. labor secretary told a U.S. House committee Thursday that the Department of Labor will continue to combat wage theft even with fewer resources after President Donald Trump's administration proposed cutting the number of wage and hour investigators.
Nationwide injunctions could be on the chopping block at the U.S. Supreme Court over President Donald Trump's birthright citizenship order, sparking debate over the role they play in wage and hour law by curtailing regulatory overreach and helping employers operate with predictable compliance obligations, attorneys say.
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Pay transparency laws are making an impact on pay disparities but policymakers should be careful to not make compliance too burdensome, says employment attorney Kelly Cardin. Here, °µÍø½ûÇø speaks with Cardin about how pay transparency will continue to evolve.
The U.S. labor secretary told a U.S. House committee Thursday that the Department of Labor will continue to combat wage theft even with fewer resources after President Donald Trump's administration proposed cutting the number of wage and hour investigators.
Nationwide injunctions could be on the chopping block at the U.S. Supreme Court over President Donald Trump's birthright citizenship order, sparking debate over the role they play in wage and hour law by curtailing regulatory overreach and helping employers operate with predictable compliance obligations, attorneys say.
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June 06, 2025
A Michigan federal jury on Friday ruled that a migrant farmworker contractor engaged in forced labor, finding in favor of five farmworkers who said they were coerced into working long hours without pay.
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June 06, 2025
The Ninth Circuit declined to upend an order applying the federal rate instead of a higher Washington state rate when calculating prejudgment interest that a federal jury awarded to a worker in his lawsuit accusing a manufacturer of firing him for taking leave, saying his federal claim guided his litigation strategy.
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June 06, 2025
Counsel representing two female teachers should receive nearly $218,000 in costs following a jury trial in which the workers were awarded $165,000 over claims that a Pennsylvania school district paid them less than men, the teachers told a federal court.
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June 06, 2025
A Michigan federal judge on Friday granted initial approval of a $205,000 settlement to end a collective action alleging the owner of a chain of Michigan dispensaries withheld portions of tips meant to go to retail workers.
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June 06, 2025
Truck drivers said a California federal court focused on the wrong shipper when it ruled that they were overtime-exempt under the Fair Labor Standards Act, urging the Ninth Circuit to flip the decision granting a win to a food distributor.
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June 06, 2025
In the coming week, attorneys should keep an eye out for oral arguments at the Ninth Circuit regarding the extent to which federal labor law preempts employment law claims, in a case involving UPS. Here's a look at that case and other labor and employment matters coming up in California.
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June 06, 2025
This week, the Second Circuit will consider an attempt from a former dean at the State University of New York Upstate Medical University to revive his suit claiming he was demoted in retaliation for advocating against widespread discrimination against students and faculty. Here, °µÍø½ûÇø looks at this and other cases on the docket in New York.
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June 06, 2025
Baggage and cargo handlers claiming Southwest Airlines paid them late told a New York federal court that they advanced enough evidence to show that the airline paid them all on the same schedule, urging the court to certify a collective.
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June 06, 2025
Digital media company BuzzFeed will pay more than $45,000 to put an end to an investigation into its failure to timely pay freelance workers, the New York City Department of Consumer and Worker Protection said.
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June 06, 2025
The owners of more than 60 Dunkin' franchises agreed to pay $135,000 to resolve a collective action accusing them of failing to pay store managers overtime wages, a filing in Massachusetts federal court said.
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June 05, 2025
A Maryland federal judge granted final approval Thursday to settlements worth nearly $400 million for poultry processing workers who claimed that the nation's biggest chicken producers conspired to suppress their wages.
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June 05, 2025
A Michigan federal judge on Wednesday said a religious television network and its owner must face a lawsuit alleging they interfered with a Black pastor's on-air and earning opportunities, saying the pastor shared enough evidence to support his claim that he was discriminated against because of his race.
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June 05, 2025
An American Federation of Teachers affiliate settled a federal court case aiming to stop a Connecticut hospital from requiring nurses to work overtime, with the parties telling the judge on Thursday that they agree to dismiss the union's allegations.
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June 05, 2025
A former Virginia city assistant attorney's Family and Medical Leave Act suit against the chief city prosecutor will head to trial, a federal judge said Thursday, ruling that there is an open question over whether firing the attorney was a pretext to not grant a leave request.
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June 05, 2025
Six recent decisions back up workers' class and collective claims accusing an automobile parts company of shorting them on wages, the former employees told a North Carolina federal court Thursday, saying the cases show they didn't miss their window to bring the allegations.
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June 05, 2025
A Tesla worker booted amid mass layoffs last year told a California federal judge that under a deal struck with the automaker, he'll drop his putative class action wage and notice claims to pursue most of the same causes of action in state court under the Private Attorneys General Act.
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June 05, 2025
A Colorado federal judge has certified a collective class action against a cannabis manufacturer accused by one of its ex-employees of skirting state and federal law to avoid paying employees overtime premiums.
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June 05, 2025
A law firm's counterclaim accusing a paralegal of launching an unpaid overtime wages lawsuit against it in order to try to extort it for money cannot proceed, a Texas federal judge ruled Thursday, saying the claim isn't sufficiently linked to the underlying dispute.
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June 05, 2025
A D.C. federal judge allowed a city attorney's discrimination and retaliation lawsuit to proceed to discovery Thursday, rejecting the D.C. government's motion to toss the claims that a city administrative law judge discriminated against Black women and paid the plaintiff attorney less than her male peers.
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June 05, 2025
A production company and an entertainment company failed to pay background extras for all the hours they worked after forcing them to work off-the-clock and through breaks, according to a proposed class action filed in California state court.
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June 05, 2025
Truckers can continue pursuing as a class their claims that a transportation company failed to pay them for the time they spent sleeping in their cabs, a New York federal court ruled, adopting a magistrate judge's recommendations to grant class certification.
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June 05, 2025
Greenberg Traurig LLP has strengthened its labor and employment practice with the addition of a Bracewell LLP attorney in Houston, boosting the firm's ability to serve clients in the growing Texas market and beyond.
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June 05, 2025
A lawsuit accusing a General Electric subsidiary of failing to pay safety employees overtime wages should go to trial, the workers told a Texas federal court, pushing against the company's argument that the workers were highly compensated and their "yearslong quest for a windfall" should end.
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June 05, 2025
The U.S. Supreme Court declined Thursday to weigh in on whether federal courts can certify classes that include uninjured members, holding it improperly agreed to hear a disability discrimination case against diagnostics company Labcorp that raised the important question.
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June 04, 2025
Several migrant workers for a farm labor contracting company testified they weren't forced to turn over their passports or work 20-hour days as the company sought to defend itself against human trafficking claims before a Michigan federal jury on Wednesday.