The U.S. Department of Labor is planning to undo an independent contractor rule and potentially put in place guidance on joint employer liability, among other updates, according to a regulatory agenda unveiled Thursday. Here’s a look at the wage and hour actions in the agenda.
The U.S. Department of Labor received over 5,000 comments on its plan to rescind an Obama-era rule that expanded wage protections for home care workers, with advocacy organizations arguing that the DOL didn't provide enough backup for the rescission while others saying the move is in line with the fall of Chevron deference.
Federal government efforts to end diversity, equity and inclusion programs; states’ industry-specific wage hikes that have reached new heights and a National Labor Relations Board that is stuck without a quorum are employment law trends to watch, Littler Mendelson PC’s Workplace Policy Institute said in an annual report. Here, Law360 explores the report’s findings.
Previous
Next
The U.S. Department of Labor is planning to undo an independent contractor rule and potentially put in place guidance on joint employer liability, among other updates, according to a regulatory agenda unveiled Thursday. Here’s a look at the wage and hour actions in the agenda.
The U.S. Department of Labor received over 5,000 comments on its plan to rescind an Obama-era rule that expanded wage protections for home care workers, with advocacy organizations arguing that the DOL didn't provide enough backup for the rescission while others saying the move is in line with the fall of Chevron deference.
Federal government efforts to end diversity, equity and inclusion programs; states’ industry-specific wage hikes that have reached new heights and a National Labor Relations Board that is stuck without a quorum are employment law trends to watch, Littler Mendelson PC’s Workplace Policy Institute said in an annual report. Here, Law360 explores the report’s findings.
-
September 04, 2025
A Nevada federal judge opted against sanctions for Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman LLP partner Mark Krotoski, and instead issued a formal admonishment on the "entitlement" behind "misleading arguments and representations" about the reason an expert witness was unavailable during a wage-fixing and wire fraud trial.
-
September 04, 2025
A lawsuit accusing prominent figures at Fox Sports of sexual harassment — including an allegation that popular host Skip Bayless offered $1.5 million for sex — has been dismissed by a California state judge after a hairstylist who formerly worked for the network reached a settlement with Fox Sports and the personalities.
-
September 04, 2025
Washington state's high court held in a 6-3 ruling Thursday that a job applicant may sue a prospective employer for violating a state law requiring job postings to include wage scales without proving they are a "bona fide" or "good faith" applicant, rejecting employers' bid to narrow that definition amid a wave of lawsuits.
-
September 04, 2025
A California federal judge agreed Thursday to toss a suit accusing Walmart of not paying all wages upon termination to workers, following a $28.5 million settlement in a related case in state court.
-
September 04, 2025
A Fourth Circuit decision undoing classes of Bojangles managers is a significant change of law that should dismantle five classes in a wage and hour suit that snagged $839,000 from an Apple-affiliated repair company, the company told a North Carolina federal court.
-
September 04, 2025
Seward & Kissel LLP has hired a former McDermott Will & Schulte LLP attorney as co-head of its employment practice, touting her expertise advising clients on both litigation and the employment aspects of corporate transactions in its announcement on Wednesday.
-
September 04, 2025
A Tennessee behavioral healthcare provider failed to pay its employees for work they performed off the clock and automatically deducted unpaid time for meal breaks they didn't take, a technician said in a proposed collective action in federal court.
-
September 04, 2025
The former leader of Liff Walsh & Simmons' employment and labor practice, who worked as a counselor to the solicitor of the U.S. Department of Labor and in several other public service roles, has joined Fisher Phillips as a partner in Washington, D.C.
-
September 03, 2025
A man who claims the Denver Sheriff Department violated Title VII of the Civil Rights Act by promoting three women to captain over him as part of a self-imposed quota for female officers has asked a Colorado federal judge to deny the sheriff's department summary judgment.
-
September 03, 2025
A former U.S. Air Force assistant general manager told an Arizona federal court that he supported his claims that he was denied paid safety leave during the coronavirus pandemic because of his disability, urging the court to keep his case standing.
-
September 03, 2025
A delivery company and a courier who alleged overtime violations said Wednesday they have reached an agreement and asked an Ohio federal court to dismiss the case, which went to the Sixth Circuit.
-
September 03, 2025
X waived its arbitration rights in a $20 million severance suit and should not be able to challenge a district court's decision keeping the case in court, Twitter's former chief marketing officer told the Ninth Circuit.
-
September 03, 2025
Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg said Wednesday that his office plans to be the first to use New York's criminal antitrust laws against companies that collude to keep workers' wages low.
-
September 03, 2025
Former President Joe Biden's minimum wage for federal contractors is no longer in place after President Donald Trump's executive order revoked it, the Fifth Circuit said, ending a case that challenged the Biden-era wage.
-
September 03, 2025
Arnold & Porter Kaye Scholer LLP continues to grow its West Coast team, announcing Wednesday two more longtime K&L Gates LLP attorneys have joined as partners — a labor and employment expert in Seattle and a business litigation pro in Los Angeles.
-
September 02, 2025
The discovery the Second Circuit required in a case accusing Uber of making improper deductions from drivers' wages shows that the drivers primarily engaged in intrastate commerce, the ride-hailing company said, urging a New York federal court to send the case to arbitration.
-
September 02, 2025
A Nevada federal judge has rejected Ultimate Fighting Championship's motion seeking to deny class certification for fighters suing it over alleged suppressed wages, saying the request is premature.
-
September 02, 2025
A class of mental health workers seeking overtime compensation can't recover pay for training completed prior to the first day of work, as a North Carolina federal judge upheld a previous order finding that the time is not compensable under the federal Fair Labor Standards Act.
-
September 02, 2025
An Atlanta attorney suing her former law firm, John Foy & Associates, is seeking to put arbitration on hold while her claims for harassment and retaliation play out in Georgia federal court, saying that allowing the two matters to proceed simultaneously risks "duplicative proceedings, inconsistent findings and unnecessary expense."
-
September 02, 2025
Courts can't sort out who pays arbitration fees, and employers' refusal to pay such fees isn't a failure to arbitrate, the Second Circuit ruled Tuesday, siding with X in a case accusing the social media platform of owing workers severance.
-
September 02, 2025
A Charter Communications sales supervisor sufficiently supported her claims that the cable giant cheated her and others out of overtime, she told a New York federal court, also arguing that the company is mischaracterizing other court rulings to push for her suit's dismissal.
-
August 29, 2025
Two logistics companies have failed to escape a proposed class action accusing them of misusing a professional worker visa program to lure workers from Mexico, with a Georgia federal judge trimming out some discrimination and fair labor claims, but allowing several others to proceed.
-
August 29, 2025
California Gov. Gavin Newsom and California lawmakers announced Friday that they reached a deal with Uber and Lyft to back a measure allowing the state's hundreds of thousands of gig drivers to unionize while treating them as independent contractors.
-
August 29, 2025
A former management assistant for the city of Dallas failed to demonstrate that she was paid less than a colleague because of her race and her retaliation and discrimination claims also could not stand, the Fifth Circuit ruled Friday.
-
August 29, 2025
This week, the Second Circuit will consider whether to revive a suit brought by former healthcare workers who claimed they were discriminated against on the basis of their religion when they were fired for refusing to take the COVID-19 vaccine.