The U.S. Department of Labor wage chief has a busy final few weeks, with a new proposed rule and opinion letters, and as the agency transitions to an administration that is expected to have different policy priorities. Jessica Looman spoke with Law360 about end-of-term priorities and the administration’s wage and hour legacy, and offered advice for her successor.
The Seventh Circuit declined to reconsider its opinion in favor of tradespeople in a lawsuit accusing a staffing firm of failing to pay them for time spent traveling between job sites, turning down the company's argument that the decision created a split with other circuits.
Skidmore deference is getting more attention in the post-Chevron landscape, eight decades after the U.S. Supreme Court established the principle, leading some attorneys to believe courts will treat it like "Chevron 2.0." Here, Law360 explores Skidmore deference.
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The U.S. Department of Labor wage chief has a busy final few weeks, with a new proposed rule and opinion letters, and as the agency transitions to an administration that is expected to have different policy priorities. Jessica Looman spoke with Law360 about end-of-term priorities and the administration’s wage and hour legacy, and offered advice for her successor.
The Seventh Circuit declined to reconsider its opinion in favor of tradespeople in a lawsuit accusing a staffing firm of failing to pay them for time spent traveling between job sites, turning down the company's argument that the decision created a split with other circuits.
Skidmore deference is getting more attention in the post-Chevron landscape, eight decades after the U.S. Supreme Court established the principle, leading some attorneys to believe courts will treat it like "Chevron 2.0." Here, Law360 explores Skidmore deference.
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December 09, 2024
A Mexican supermarket in Michigan will pay $187,500 to end a U.S. Department of Labor suit alleging it stiffed workers on overtime, demanded they return back wages from a previous agency probe and instructed them to lie to investigators, according to court papers filed Monday.
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December 09, 2024
The U.S. Department of Labor urged the Fifth Circuit to let stand its opinion that the department has the authority to create a salary threshold as part of its role in defining overtime exemptions, saying the ruling doesn't conflict with holdings from the U.S. Supreme Court.
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December 09, 2024
A Buffalo Wild Wings franchise urged an Ohio federal court not to grant workers a win in their suit accusing the company of illegally claiming a tip credit, saying it properly alerted workers it was doing so and was under no obligation to spell out what that meant.
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December 09, 2024
The U.S. Supreme Court has declined to review a Fourth Circuit decision holding that a Baltimore utility's "honest belief" that a worker was misusing medical leave justified the employee's termination, according to high court orders released Monday.
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December 07, 2024
The U.S. Supreme Court will hear its final set of oral arguments for the 2024 calendar year starting Monday, including disputes over the proper scope of federal environmental reviews and whether corporate affiliates can be ordered to pay disgorgement awards in trademark infringement disputes.
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December 06, 2024
Private prison contractor The GEO Group Inc. told the Ninth Circuit on Friday that a recent ruling in the same court underscores its assertion that only the federal government can say whether a minimum wage must be paid to detained immigrants participating in a voluntary work program in Tacoma, Washington.
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December 06, 2024
A hospital urged a Connecticut federal court to throw out a nurses union's lawsuit that seeks to bar the hospital from forcing nurses to work overtime, saying the union's attempt to invoke a state law flies in the face of the terms set out in a collective bargaining agreement.
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December 06, 2024
A customer experience technology company urged a Colorado federal court Friday to throw out a lawsuit from a remote worker who said the company required her to purchase high-speed internet and a computer but didn't reimburse her for these costs, saying the former employee signed a valid arbitration agreement.
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December 06, 2024
New Jersey has urged a state court to throw out gender discrimination and retaliation claims from a former acting director at the New Jersey Department of Banking and Insurance, arguing she didn't show she was passed over for a promotion because of her gender.
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December 06, 2024
In the coming week, attorneys should watch for a potential ruling on a motion for judgment or a new trial in a COVID-19 vaccination mandate case by San Francisco Bay Area Rapid Transit District workers. Here's a look at that case and other labor and employment matters on deck in California.
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December 06, 2024
This week, the Second Circuit will consider an attempt from workers to revive their suit accusing a fire suppression company of violating state and federal wage and hour law by not paying them prevailing wages on public projects. Here, Law360 looks at this and other cases on the docket in New York.
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December 06, 2024
Ford Motor Co. violated state and federal laws by failing to pay certain employees overtime wages despite not employing them in an executive capacity and requiring them to work more than 40 hours per week, a proposed class action filed in Ohio federal court said.
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December 05, 2024
A Delaware federal judge on Thursday recommended pruning of a 14-count suit filed by six former Twitter employees accusing the company now known as X and Elon Musk of contract breaches and other claims in connection with Musk's takeover of the social media giant in 2022.
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December 05, 2024
A Colorado federal judge on Thursday kept alive a suit by tipped servers accusing a steakhouse chain of underpayment, rejecting the chain's invitation to rely on the Fifth Circuit's decision striking the U.S. Department of Labor's final rule on tipped wages.
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December 05, 2024
Employees of a yard management company who accused their former employer of failing to pay them overtime wages despite requiring them to work more than 50-hour weeks have ended their proposed class and collective action against the company, a filing in Illinois federal court said.
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December 05, 2024
A Black and Nigerian-born Ohio prison worker in his sixties accused the prison he once worked in of discriminating against him for his race, his national origin and his age Thursday, claiming in a new lawsuit that he was passed over for five separate promotions because of the purported bias.
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December 05, 2024
Current and former Philadelphia Police Department commissioners and human resources directors urged a Pennsylvania federal court to throw out a proposed class action by ranking officers alleging that the department failed to alert them of their overtime eligibility, saying the case was brought too late.
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December 05, 2024
A Pennsylvania federal judge ruled Thursday that a Georgia law professor can't intervene or unseal a settlement restaurant chain P.F. Chang's and more than 6,000 tipped servers struck, saying doing so would hurt the parties.
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December 05, 2024
The Eleventh Circuit refused to revive a security officer's lawsuit claiming she was paid less than male colleagues and removed from her post after she complained, saying many co-workers she identified had more responsibilities than she did.
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December 05, 2024
A former Four Seasons employee said the hotel chain cheated Los Angeles employees out of wages, telling a California state court that employees weren't paid for all hours worked.
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December 04, 2024
A California federal judge refused Wednesday to throw out an unpaid overtime lawsuit the U.S. Department of Labor launched against a household appliance company, rejecting the retailer's argument that Julie Su, the department's acting secretary, doesn't have the authority to sue.
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December 04, 2024
Two seafood companies will shell out $2.1 million to more than 2,300 workers who accused them of paying late and underpaying during mandatory COVID-19 quarantines, as a Washington federal court gave the deal its final OK.
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December 04, 2024
The University of Arkansas paid a Black female assistant softball coach less than her white colleagues and fired her after she flagged concerns about the discrepancies, according to a lawsuit filed Wednesday in federal court.
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December 04, 2024
A Maryland Department of Health psychiatric hospital will pay $270,000 to settle a U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission suit alleging it paid four female workers lower salaries than it paid a less experienced male employee, the agency announced Wednesday.
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December 04, 2024
A former Alabama State University associate athletic director's Equal Pay Act claims will head back to the district court, an Eleventh Circuit panel ruled, instructing the court to follow a two-step analytical framework the appeals court laid out in a recent sex discrimination decision.