Amazon revoked a warehouse employee's medical accommodations and forced her to perform duties that worsened her injury after a stepladder fall, later terminating her employment, according to a lawsuit filed in Nevada federal court.
As the summer hiring season approaches, attorneys said restaurant owners should get ready to navigate tip-credit requirements at both the federal and state levels, monitor side work, make sure paychecks are accurate and tip-pooling practices are compliant. Here, Law360 offers four tips for complying with tip-credit rules.
The proposed rule that the U.S. Department of Labor unveiled Wednesday advising when multiple employers are jointly liable for wage and hour violations is a scaled-back version of one from President Donald Trump's first administration, to account for the high court's Loper Bright ruling, attorneys said.
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Amazon revoked a warehouse employee's medical accommodations and forced her to perform duties that worsened her injury after a stepladder fall, later terminating her employment, according to a lawsuit filed in Nevada federal court.
As the summer hiring season approaches, attorneys said restaurant owners should get ready to navigate tip-credit requirements at both the federal and state levels, monitor side work, make sure paychecks are accurate and tip-pooling practices are compliant. Here, Law360 offers four tips for complying with tip-credit rules.
The proposed rule that the U.S. Department of Labor unveiled Wednesday advising when multiple employers are jointly liable for wage and hour violations is a scaled-back version of one from President Donald Trump's first administration, to account for the high court's Loper Bright ruling, attorneys said.
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April 24, 2026
A pair of former Maggie McFly's servers have filed a proposed class and collective action against the restaurant chain in Connecticut federal court, claiming the business failed to pay them minimum wage for all the hours they worked and also unlawfully required them to pay for costly uniforms.
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April 24, 2026
A proposed rule clarifying when multiple employers are jointly liable for wage violations could reshape the risk landscape for employers that rely on contractors to supply temporary foreign workers, potentially making them joint employers by default.
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April 24, 2026
Salesforce selected a senior solutions consultant for layoff while he was on approved family medical leave because of his father's recurring cancer, and later fired him, the former consultant said in a lawsuit filed in Connecticut federal court.
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April 24, 2026
Waffle House was sued in Georgia federal court by a former unit manager who alleged that the restaurant chain depleted her medical leave without authorization, denied her reasonable accommodations and twice demoted her due to her pregnancy.
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April 24, 2026
The U.S. Department of Labor secured a roughly $202,000 default judgment against a company specializing in technology, real estate, energy and healthcare that was accused of failing to pay workers, after the business did not retain counsel and stopped defending the case, according to a Kansas federal court filing.
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April 24, 2026
The U.S. Department of Labor has urged a Kentucky federal judge to toss a tobacco farm’s constitutional challenge to its H-2A enforcement system, arguing that hiring foreign workers is a government-granted privilege rather than a private right.
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April 24, 2026
A California caregiver placement business and its owners face more than $4.4 million in citations after a state investigation found they misclassified 144 caregivers as independent contractors and denied them basic workplace protections, the California Labor Commissioner's Office said.
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April 24, 2026
A former Sacramento City Council member has reached a plea deal regarding charges that he directed unauthorized immigrants employed at his grocery stores to lie to U.S. Department of Labor investigators, agreeing to pay over $1.4 million in restitution.
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April 24, 2026
A former biology professor should get more than $300,000 on his claims that a community college fired him out of retaliation for taking two days off work to care for his sick father, a South Carolina federal jury said.
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April 24, 2026
A concrete products manufacturer has wrongly classified maintenance managers as overtime-exempt despite their routine, nonmanagerial duties, a former employee has alleged in a proposed collective and class action in Georgia federal court.
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April 24, 2026
A dairy farm misclassified certain workers as exempt agricultural employees and failed to pay them full overtime wages, a milk processor told a Pennsylvania federal court Friday in a proposed collective action.
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April 24, 2026
This week, the Second Circuit will consider a former Louis Vuitton attorney's lawsuit claiming the luxury brand ignored her reports that another employee sexually assaulted and harassed her and ultimately fired her in retaliation for her complaints. Here, Law360 looks at this and other cases on the docket in New York.
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April 24, 2026
Two restaurant operators required workers to perform unpaid off-the-clock duties, denied legally required meal and rest breaks and manipulated time records, according to a proposed class action filed in Washington state court.
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April 23, 2026
A Colorado federal judge declined Thursday to rule on meatpacking giant JBS USA Food Co.'s bids to dismiss a suit and strike class allegations that Haitian workers suffered race-based discrimination and labor violations while working at the facility.
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April 23, 2026
A home improvement company's nationwide sales model is built on a misclassification scheme that shortchanged workers, a group of former sales representatives said in a proposed collective and class action filed in Colorado federal court.
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April 23, 2026
A North Carolina federal judge refused to certify a new round of collective and class claims against an auto parts manufacturer, finding that workers challenging off-the-clock work failed to show their claims could be efficiently resolved on a group basis after several years of litigation.
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April 23, 2026
An Oregon restaurant will pay more than $200,000 in back wages and civil penalties after an investigation found it misclassified workers as exempt from overtime and operated an illegal tip pool, the U.S. Department of Labor said.
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April 23, 2026
H&M has been hit with a proposed collective and class action in Illinois federal court alleging that the fashion retailer denied overtime pay to customer service workers who were required to complete computer setup tasks before clocking in each day.
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April 23, 2026
Morgan & Morgan PA has added a Seyfarth Shaw LLP attorney to lead and build a California employment division for the injury law firm.
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April 23, 2026
A Sixth Circuit panel signaled during a hearing Thursday that a trial court prematurely dismissed a school superintendent's lawsuit challenging her continued placement on leave, but the judges wondered if the school official had enough evidence to win at a later phase of litigation.
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April 23, 2026
A federal jury sided with a South Carolina county in a lawsuit accusing the county of failing to pay overtime wages to an emergency medical worker, finding that she qualified for a firefighter exemption under the Fair Labor Standards Act.
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April 22, 2026
The Eleventh Circuit on Wednesday affirmed a lower court's decision tossing former Delta Air Lines Inc. pilots' claims that they were forced out of their jobs for taking military leave, ruling the pilots would have been forced out anyway for abusing their sick leave.
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April 22, 2026
A First Circuit panel said Wednesday that workers for a nonprofit organization that received Federal Emergency Management Agency funds for Hurricane Maria relief efforts cannot sue the federal government for unpaid wages because the agency was not their employer.
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April 22, 2026
Virginia's Legislature greenlighted a law Wednesday that will allow workers to take paid family and medical leave through a statewide insurance program, approving Gov. Abigail Spanberger's proposed changes.
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April 22, 2026
A logistics company wrapped up a suit Wednesday from a worker who said he was forced to retire in his 70s after his managers refused to train him in a new computer system and ignored his medical accommodation requests, according to a filing in North Carolina federal court.