Labor

  • January 22, 2026

    Kaiser Says Unions' Actions Should Free It From Bargaining

    A coalition of unions representing Kaiser Permanente employees breached their obligations under a labor agreement by publishing a "haphazard and sensational" report accusing the healthcare nonprofit of fraudulent practices and patient endangerment, the nonprofit told a California federal court.

  • January 22, 2026

    Teamsters Wants Award Restored In Assignment Dispute

    The International Brotherhood of Teamsters has urged a D.C. federal court to enforce an arbitration award assigning construction work to a group of Pennsylvania members, arguing that another union's appeal to overturn the award was invalid.

  • January 22, 2026

    Littler Names New Board Of Directors Chair, Adds 3 Members

    Littler Mendelson PC has elected New York shareholder William J. Anthony to serve as chair of its 19-member 2026 Board of Directors and named three new board members.

  • January 22, 2026

    Salvation Army Pulls NLRB Challenge After Case Dropped

    The Salvation Army dropped a suit seeking a court's declaration that its rehab centers are outside the National Labor Relations Board's jurisdiction after agency prosecutors, who had defended their power over the group, dropped their underlying administrative complaint.

  • January 22, 2026

    Calif. Universities, Faculty Settle EEOC Info-Sharing Fight

    The California State University system has struck a deal with faculty labor unions to resolve a suit claiming the CSU improperly shared employee contact information with the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission to aid an investigation into antisemitism on its campuses.

  • January 21, 2026

    Yellow Corp. Defends Pension Fund Deals Amid Objection

    Insolvent trucking company Yellow Corp. defended its settlements with 15 multiemployer pension funds to resolve about $7.4 billion worth of withdrawal liability claims after major shareholders objected that the debtor should have settled for less.

  • January 21, 2026

    NLRB Urges DC Circ. To Back Picket Dispute Ruling

    The National Labor Relations Board has urged the D.C. Circuit to enforce a final board order finding that a California cleaning contractor violated federal labor law by threatening and firing janitorial employees for picketing in front of a building where they worked, arguing that the picketers' actions were aboveboard.

  • January 21, 2026

    9th Circ. Reverses Ruling In $4.1M Union Health Plan Suit

    A California district court erred in concluding a medical center where union dockworkers received treatments was not a hospital, a split Ninth Circuit panel ruled Wednesday, sending the workers' $4.1 million claims dispute against a multiemployer health plan back to the lower court.

  • January 21, 2026

    Union, Shipping Co. Challenge NLRB Ruling In Union Dispute

    The International Longshoremen's Association and a shipping company urged the Ninth Circuit to vacate a National Labor Relations Board that had purportedly resolved a jurisdictional dispute between two other unions at the Port of Seattle.

  • January 21, 2026

    Honeywell Defends Deals Against NLRB Challenge

    Honeywell has urged a National Labor Relations Board judge not to find that its employment and severance agreements stifle worker organizing, saying its provisions are narrower than those the board has declared illegal and that the severance agreement has clear exceptions to accommodate labor rights.

  • January 21, 2026

    AFL-CIO Backs Flowers Foods Driver In High Court Arb. Case

    A Flowers Foods distributor is exempt from federal arbitration because even though he delivered goods locally, his work was part of an uninterrupted stream of interstate commerce, AFL-CIO told the U.S. Supreme Court on Wednesday, backing the worker's bid to keep his misclassification suit in court.

  • January 20, 2026

    John Roberts Welcomes John Roberts To Supreme Court

    U.S. Supreme Court advocates have tips galore for staying calm at a debut argument, including diligent preparation, mindful breathing and treating the event as a conversation. But a Proskauer Rose LLP attorney benefited Tuesday from a distinctive development: the chief justice's introductory jest about the two of them not being related.

  • January 20, 2026

    Law360 Names Firms Of The Year

    Eight law firms have earned spots as Law360's Firms of the Year, with 48 Practice Group of the Year awards among them, achieving milestones such as high-profile litigation wins at the U.S. Supreme Court and 11-figure merger deals.

  • January 20, 2026

    Viral Trump Clip At Ford Has Lessons For Employers, Unions

    A viral interaction between a United Auto Workers member and President Donald Trump at a Michigan Ford plant last week carries lessons for how employers and unions handle political speech in the workplace, though experts said it is unlikely the dispute raises any issues under federal labor law.

  • January 20, 2026

    Justices Icy To Time Limits For Multiemployer Plan Actuaries

    The U.S. Supreme Court appeared skeptical Tuesday of a push by employers to prohibit pension plan actuaries from retroactively changing assumptions used to calculate how much employers must pay when they withdraw from multiemployer funds, with multiple justices questioning whether a timing rule aligned with federal benefits law.

  • January 20, 2026

    NLRB Pushes Contempt For Pittsburgh Paper's Defiance

    The ailing Pittsburgh Post-Gazette is still defying the Third Circuit's order to restore newsroom workers it railroaded in collective bargaining to their old healthcare plan, the National Labor Relations Board said Tuesday in a renewed motion to hold the newspaper in contempt of the March 2025 ruling.

  • January 20, 2026

    Judge Tosses Ex-NJ Port Worker's Suit Against Maersk, Union

    A New Jersey federal judge tossed a former shipping and logistics company employee's suit alleging that he was unlawfully fired and misled by an International Longshoremen's Association local during the grievance process on Tuesday, ruling that his state law claims are preempted by federal law.

  • January 20, 2026

    JFK Jet Fueler Overseers Get OK For NLRB Union Vote

    Workers at a JFK International Airport airplane fueling contractor will vote on whether to join the Teamsters after a National Labor Relations Board official held that they fall under the National Labor Relations Act under National Mediation Board policy.

  • January 20, 2026

    NLRB Official OKs Union Vote For Wis. Music Librarians

    Two music librarians working for the Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra can vote on whether to join a bargaining unit represented by an American Federation of Musicians local, a National Labor Relations Board official ruled.

  • January 16, 2026

    Law360 Names Practice Groups Of The Year

    Law360 would like to congratulate the winners of its Practice Groups of the Year awards for 2025, which honor the attorney teams behind litigation wins and significant transaction work that resonated throughout the legal industry this past year.

  • January 17, 2026

    Up Next At High Court: Fed Firing & Gun 'Vampire Rules'

    The Supreme Court will begin a short argument week Tuesday, during which the justices will consider President Donald Trump's authority to fire a Democratic Federal Reserve governor over allegations of mortgage fraud, as well as the ability for states to presumptively bar gun owners from carrying firearms onto private property open to the public unless the property owner explicitly allows it. 

  • January 16, 2026

    Labor Board Shed Nearly 200 Jobs Since Inauguration

    The National Labor Relations Board has lost nearly 200 jobs since President Donald Trump's inauguration last year, a dramatic decline at an agency that has hemorrhaged employees over the last several years.

  • January 16, 2026

    Littler Adds Epstein Becker Employment Litigator In Calif.

    Littler Mendelson PC announced that an attorney from Epstein Becker Green is joining its Century City, California, office as a shareholder, bringing a wealth of experience in employment law. 

  • January 16, 2026

    Ohio Judge Tosses Traffic Co.'s Challenge To Union's Award

    An Ohio federal judge on Friday confirmed an arbitration award finding that a traffic control company failed to follow the terms of a collective-bargaining agreement with a chapter of the International Association of Machinists, ruling that the award "draws its essence" from the agreement.

  • January 16, 2026

    Flight Attendant Fights Southwest's Bid To Toss OT Suit

    An Illinois federal judge should preserve a proposed class action accusing Southwest Airlines of systematically depriving flight attendants at Chicago Midway International Airport of overtime pay, a former flight attendant said, fighting Southwest's argument that the Railway Labor Act preempts the claims because the flight attendants are unionized.

Expert Analysis

  • 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.

  • Trader Joe's Ruling Highlights Trademark Infringement Trends

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    The Ninth Circuit's recent decision in Trader Joe's Co. v. Trader Joe's United explores the legal boundaries between a union's right to advocate for workers and the protection of a brand's intellectual property, and illustrates a growing trend of courts disfavoring early dismissal of trademark infringement claims in the context of expressive speech, say attorneys at Mitchell Silberberg.

  • H-2A Rule Rollback Sheds Light On 2 Policy Litigation Issues

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    The Trump administration’s recent refusal to defend an immigration regulation implemented by the Biden administration highlights a questionable process that both parties have used to bypass the Administrative Procedure Act’s rulemaking process, and points toward the next step in the fight over universal injunctions, says Mark Stevens at Clark Hill.

  • $100K H-1B Fee May Disrupt Rural Healthcare Needs

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    The Trump administration's newly imposed $100,000 supplemental fee on new H-1B petitions may disproportionately affect healthcare employers' ability to recruit international medical graduates, and the fee's national interest exceptions will not adequately solve ensuing problems for healthcare employers or medically underserved areas, say attorneys at Holland & Knight.

  • How 5th Circ.'s NLRB Ruling May Reshape Federal Labor Law

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    The Fifth Circuit's recent SpaceX National Labor Relations Board decision undermines the agency's authority, but it does not immediately shut down NLRB enforcement, so employers and labor organizations should expect more litigation, more uncertainty and a possible U.S. Supreme Court showdown, say attorneys at Goldberg Segalla.

  • Ruling On Labor Peace Law Marks Shift For Cannabis Cos.

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    Currently on appeal to the Ninth Circuit, an Oregon federal court’s novel decision in Casala v. Kotek, invalidating a state law that requires labor peace agreements as a condition of cannabis business licensure, marks the potential for compliance uncertainty for all cannabis employers in states with labor peace mandates, say attorneys at Sheppard Mullin.

  • Trump NLRB Picks May Usher In Employer-Friendly Precedent

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    If President Donald Trump's National Labor Relations Board nominees are confirmed, the board would regain a quorum with a Republican majority and would likely reverse several union-friendly decisions, but each nominee will bring a unique perspective as to how the board should operate, say attorneys at BakerHostetler.

  • Handbook Hot Topics: State Laws Shape Drug-Testing Policies

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    With the growing popularity of state laws regulating drug testing, employers must consider the benefits and costs associated with maintaining such policies, particularly where they are subject to conflicting state laws, say attorneys at Kutak Rock.

  • Union Interference Lessons From 5th Circ. Apple Ruling

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    The Fifth Circuit's recent holding that Apple did not violate the National Labor Relations Act during a store's union organizing drive provides guidance on what constitutes coercive interrogation and clarifies how consistently enforced workplace policies may be applied to union literature, say attorneys at Proskauer.

  • NY Bill Would Complicate Labor Law Amid NLRB Uncertainty

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    The New York Legislature passed a bill that, if enacted, would grant state agencies the power to enforce federal labor law, potentially causing significant challenges for employers as they could be subject to both state and federal regulators depending on the National Labor Relations Board's operational status, say attorneys at Sheppard Mullin.

  • Corp. Human Rights Regulatory Landscape Is Fragmented

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    Given the complexity of compliance with nations' overlapping human rights laws, multinational companies need to be cognizant of the evolving approaches to modern slavery transparency, and proposals that could reduce mandatory due diligence and reporting requirements, say attorneys at Simpson Thacher.

  • Forced Labor Bans Hold Steady Amid Shifts In Global Trade

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    As businesses try to navigate shifting regulatory trends affecting human rights and sustainability, forced labor import bans present a zone of relative stability, notwithstanding outstanding questions about the future of enforcement, say attorneys at Simpson Thacher.

  • 7 Ways Employers Can Avoid Labor Friction Over AI

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    As artificial intelligence use in the workplace emerges as a key labor relations topic in the U.S. and Europe, employers looking to reduce reputational risk and prevent costly disputes should consider proactive strategies to engage with unions, say attorneys at Baker McKenzie.

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