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September 26, 2024
Humana Inc. refused to pay call center employees for the time they spent booting up their computers and preparing for their workdays despite requiring them to be ready to accept calls within one minute of clocking in, a proposed class action filed in Kentucky federal court said.
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September 26, 2024
A group of San Francisco city nurses said that a Ninth Circuit panel drew an "extreme" difference in how federal salary tests apply in the public and private sectors, urging the full appeals court to intervene in their overtime suit.
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September 26, 2024
Off-road vehicle manufacturer Polaris forced a pregnant worker to resign when it wouldn't forgive her medical absences or excuse her from mandatory overtime, the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission alleged in the latest suit of its wave of Pregnant Workers Fairness Act cases.
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September 26, 2024
A Washington federal judge ejected one worker from a suit accusing Amazon of demoting or firing workers who took time off for military service, but teed up for trial another worker's claim alleging he was removed from consideration for a promotion after he said he was going to be deployed.
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September 25, 2024
A Fourth Circuit panel appeared reluctant on Wednesday to block the Biden administration's new wage rule for H-2A visa workers, doubting whether the rule should have accounted for illegal immigration and whether that issue was even properly before the court.
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September 25, 2024
The federal program allowing employers to pay subminimum wages to workers with disabilities needs to be eliminated in a way that respects these workers' rights and avoids turmoil for them, experts say, one year after the U.S. Department of Labor began reexamining the program.
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September 25, 2024
A Seventh Circuit judge appeared inclined Wednesday to let the Illinois Supreme Court weigh in on whether Illinois' minimum wage law incorporates a similar limitation created by an amendment to the Fair Labor Standards Act that clarifies preliminary activities like COVID-19 screenings aren't compensable.
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September 25, 2024
Office Depot urged a California federal court to permanently throw out a former worker's proposed class action accusing the office supply company of failing to pay overtime, saying he blew his one last chance to amend his case by failing to adequately fix its deficiencies.
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September 25, 2024
A Washington-based hospital operator misclassified its workers as independent contractors and underpaid them for their overtime as a result, a registered nurse said in a proposed class and collective action in Washington federal court.
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September 25, 2024
The U.S. departments of Labor and Transportation in a letter Wednesday called on three major freight railroad companies to guarantee paid sick leave to all of their employees.
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September 25, 2024
Jones Day will have to defend its parental leave policy at trial, after a D.C. federal judge declined on Wednesday to shut down a long-running suit filed by two married ex-associates that claims the firm discriminates by offering female attorneys more leave than male attorneys.
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September 25, 2024
Labor and employment firm Ogletree Deakins Nash Smoak & Stewart PC has grown its Chicago office with the addition of a Seyfarth Shaw LLP partner.
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September 25, 2024
A New York City homeless shelter failed to pay a former supervisor for the work she did outside the office despite requiring her to be on call at all times, according to a complaint filed in a federal court in Manhattan.
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September 25, 2024
A cargo airline has agreed to pay female workers more than $84,000 in back wages and interest to resolve a U.S. Department of Labor investigation alleging it paid them less than their male counterparts, the federal agency announced.
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September 25, 2024
The Tenth Circuit on Wednesday flipped a district court decision tossing an overtime suit against Amazon, saying that the Colorado Supreme Court's ruling that holiday pay must be part of overtime calculations solves a worker's appeal.
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September 25, 2024
A stricter standard requiring employers to prove by clear and convincing evidence that their employees are overtime-exempt is necessary to maintaining federal labor law's public purpose, a group of sales representatives for an international food distributor told the U.S. Supreme Court.
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September 25, 2024
A New York federal judge threw out a proposed class action that golf caddies brought against a country club accusing it of classifying them as independent contractors to avoid paying them wages, saying they failed to show the company willfully violated federal labor law.
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September 25, 2024
A Los Angeles-based household appliance company failed to pay 185 workers their overtime wages, the U.S. Department Labor said in a suit filed in California federal court.
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September 24, 2024
Washington state Supreme Court justices expressed doubt Tuesday that the state's moonlighting protections included an exception allowing companies to ban employees from other businesses in the same industry, saying that would contradict the noncompete statute's aim of supporting mobility for low-wage earners.
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September 24, 2024
A Tenth Circuit judge suggested Tuesday that the maker of Wonder bread wanted the court to set employment precedent without crucial information, saying the court lacked detail about a wholesaler's relationship with the food manufacturer.
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September 24, 2024
Darden Restaurants failed to pay workers for their overtime hours and did not provide them with full, uninterrupted meal and rest periods, a former employee said in a Private Attorneys General Act lawsuit filed in California state court.
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September 24, 2024
A North Carolina federal judge trimmed a suit by workers accusing a staffing firm of unpaid wages, saying their overtime and minimum wage claims under state law are based on their Fair Labor Standards Act ones for improper deductions.
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September 24, 2024
The co-leader of Paul Hastings LLP's wage and hour practice group has jumped to Sheppard Mullin Richter & Hampton LLP in California, the firm said Tuesday.
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September 24, 2024
A New York federal judge approved on Tuesday emergency medical services workers to proceed as a class in their lawsuit alleging New York City paid them less in relation to their almost exclusively white, male counterparts at the fire department, despite differences in rank and responsibility.
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September 24, 2024
Five 7-Eleven franchise owners told the First Circuit on Tuesday that a Massachusetts district court's decision against them should stay in place after the state's top court recently ruled that they aren't the chain's employees.