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September 24, 2025
An Atlanta attorney suing her former law firm over allegations it fired her and threatened her when she demanded her last paycheck said the firm can't force her suit into arbitration, arguing it is hiding behind a sealed agreement and hasn't disclosed its full terms.
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September 24, 2025
A group of Division I athletes looking to be classified as employees filed a succinct reply chiding the NCAA and several prestigious universities for their "hundreds of pages" of "repetitive, overlapping" arguments that rehash points already made in Pennsylvania federal court.
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September 24, 2025
Employers who want their employees to dress the part need to keep in mind that dress codes and uniforms each present their own distinct wage and hour considerations. Here attorneys offer three tips for employers seeking to implement a uniform or dress code policy.
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September 24, 2025
A police department in a Georgia city failed to pay a veteran officer for the time he spent conducting field training, then transferred him to a front desk security guard role after he complained about the missing wages, according to a suit in federal court.
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September 24, 2025
An ex-waiter for a now-dissolved restaurant operator in New York City cannot snag class certification in his federal court wage suit because he already settled individual tip credit claims in state court, a federal judge ruled, adding that his counsel failed to represent the interests of potential class members.
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September 24, 2025
A North Carolina federal judge said the owners of Lee and Sons Farms must face a collective action brought by migrant farmworkers and certified several classes of workers alleging breach of contract and wage law violations.
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September 23, 2025
The federal government told the U.S. Supreme Court that immigrant detention contractor The GEO Group Inc. is wrong when it asserts that a federal judge's rejection of its immunity defense to a detainee class action could be appealed immediately.
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September 23, 2025
A California federal judge certified a class of Amazon workers who allege the retail giant failed to pay them for time spent at mandatory new hire events, but she granted the company partial summary judgment on some of the wage allegations against it.
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September 23, 2025
The Trump administration proposed a rule on Tuesday to change the H-1B lottery process to one that gives priority to higher-skilled workers at companies offering better pay, according to a Federal Register notice.
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September 23, 2025
Meta failed to accommodate an employee who had disabilities and didn't allow him time off to take care of his terminally ill father in Tel Aviv, a suit filed in California state court claims.
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September 23, 2025
A pregnant food service worker and the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs reached a settlement of her suit accusing the department of denying her accommodation requests, according to an order in Pennsylvania federal court.
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September 22, 2025
Public Citizen urged the U.S. Supreme Court on Monday to rein in lower courts' interpretation of the 85-year-old Yearsley ruling, arguing it doesn't provide government contractors sovereign immunity derived from the government.
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September 22, 2025
Starbucks violated New Jersey's antidiscrimination laws by failing to reasonably accommodate the needs of a postpartum nursing barista with an adequate, private space for her to express breast milk during her shift, New Jersey Attorney General Matthew J. Platkin alleged Monday.
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September 22, 2025
Three farm operators didn't jointly employ two Mexican migrant farmers who accused them of failing to reimburse workers for travel and visa expenses and requiring illegal kickbacks for meal charges, even though the farms filed H-2A visa applications together, a North Carolina federal judge ruled.
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September 22, 2025
A former Anadarko Petroleum project manager settled his lawsuit claiming he was unlawfully denied severance benefits when he resigned following the oil and gas company's 2019 acquisition by Occidental Petroleum, according to a Monday filing in Colorado federal court.
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September 22, 2025
A Georgia federal judge awarded $226,000 in attorney fees to the lawyers behind a $161,000 verdict earlier this year against an Atlanta restaurant that was accused by servers of illegally pocketing their tips and docking their wages.
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September 22, 2025
An over-the-counter pharmaceutical company will shell out $1.5 million to end a suit accusing it of not paying its facility workers overtime and paying them late, after a New York federal judge gave the deal its final approval.
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September 22, 2025
A community college in Kansas struck a deal to resolve the federal government's allegations that it unlawfully fired an Army National Guard officer after his return from active duty, the U.S. Department of Justice said Monday.
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September 22, 2025
An Eleventh Circuit panel has asked for more arguments on jurisdiction and standing as it weighs two builder groups' legal challenge of an executive order requiring union-favoring project labor agreements for federal contracts valued over $35 million.
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September 22, 2025
Stradley Ronon Stevens & Young LLP announced Monday that it has hired a Freeman Mathis & Gary LLP employment attorney based out of New York and Newark, New Jersey, as a partner.
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September 22, 2025
A class of servers supported their claims that Hard Rock Cafe International required them to perform excessive untipped work without paying them full minimum wage, a Georgia federal court ruled, rejecting the chain's argument that they didn't lose their tipped-employee status.
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September 22, 2025
The U.S. Department of Labor's Wage and Hour Division quietly replaced the official who had been temporarily serving in its top role while President Donald Trump's nominee for the position awaits Senate confirmation.
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September 19, 2025
A North Carolina federal judge who plans to unseal a settlement to a wage and hour suit against an automotive technology manufacturer on Monday unsealed a portion of the deal on Friday, revealing the company paid $175,000 to settle one plaintiff's non-wage claims.
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September 19, 2025
The owner of several Seattle-area "bikini barista" espresso stands has been hit with a sweeping employment discrimination suit claiming he made women strip naked in front of him during job interviews, provide sexual favors to keep their hours and get paid, and perform similar nude "shows" for customers.
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September 19, 2025
Disney's recent $233 million settlement resolving claims that it violated a minimum wage ordinance for Anaheim, California, hospitality workers demonstrates how local, industry-specific wage floors have become quite the powerful tool, attorneys said.