Discrimination
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March 07, 2025
Contractor Can't Bury Medical Marijuana Discrimination Suit
A Pennsylvania federal judge on Friday denied a Cleveland construction company's bid to escape a prospective employee's suit alleging that the company violated Pennsylvania's medical cannabis law when it rescinded his job offer, saying there are questions of fact about whether he would have been able to do the job.
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March 07, 2025
Ex-Novo Nordisk Worker Can't Reopen Harassment Suit
A former employee of Novo Nordisk can't revive her lawsuit claiming she was let go because she is a Jewish woman and had a back and hip injury, a California state appeals court ruled, finding no issue with a trial court tossing the case after she failed to oppose the move.
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March 07, 2025
Morgan Lewis Scoops Up Reed Smith Employment Atty
Morgan Lewis & Bockius has added a seasoned employment law attorney from Reed Smith to its Chicago office, bringing on a lawyer with more than two decades of experience litigating disputes ranging from benefits law to whistleblower complaints.
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March 07, 2025
Calif. School District Settles EEOC Age Bias Probe
A school district in California will pay $17,000 after a U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission investigation found it fired a 65-year-old math teacher due to the worker's age, the agency announced Friday.
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March 07, 2025
Sephora Must Face Retaliation Claims Over Hiring Practices
Sephora can't escape a Latina former store manager's claims that she was fired for refusing to prioritize white job applicants, with a Georgia federal judge ruling Friday it would be premature to trim her lawsuit ahead of discovery.
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March 07, 2025
Employment Lawyers' Weekly DEI Cheat Sheet
President Donald Trump issued an executive order calling on the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission to vet large law firms' diversity initiatives for compliance with Title VII, while a federal judge in Maryland refused to pause an injunction that stymied key parts of anti-DEI executive orders. Here, Law360 recaps DEI-related developments from the past week that employment lawyers should have on their radar.
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March 07, 2025
WWE Can't Take 'Red Pencil' To Assault Suit, Ex-Staffer Says
A former staffer accusing World Wrestling Entertainment Inc. and two of its former executives, including former CEO Vince McMahon, of assault and sex trafficking defended her bid to add more detail to her complaint, arguing Friday that her ex-employers seek to "take a red pencil" to unflattering truths.
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March 07, 2025
Housekeeping Co. Inks $400K Deal In EEOC Harassment Suit
A healthcare housekeeping provider has agreed to pay $400,000 to resolve a U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission suit claiming it failed to act when a housekeeper repeatedly complained that a male co-worker sexually harassed and assaulted her.
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March 07, 2025
Fired MGM Worker Seeks Atty Fees After COVID Vax Trial Win
A former MGM Grand Detroit casino worker who was fired for refusing to get a COVID-19 vaccination has asked a judge to award attorney fees and pre- and post-judgment interest on top of a Detroit jury's $133,000 verdict in his favor.
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March 07, 2025
Calif. Forecast: SF Transit Agency Seeks Vax Judgment Stay
In the coming week, attorneys should keep an eye out for the potential stay of a judgment pending an appeal in a vaccine mandate case against San Francisco's rapid transit agency. Here's a look at that case and other labor and employment matters coming up in California.
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March 07, 2025
NY Forecast: 2nd Circ. Hears Girl Scouts Whistleblower Suit
This week, the Second Circuit will consider whether to revive a lawsuit from former officers for a New York Girl Scouts chapter who claim they were retaliated and discriminated against after they complained that the group misused pandemic government loans. Here, Law360 looks at this and another notable case on the docket in New York courts.
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March 07, 2025
Workday Decries 'Staggeringly Broad' Age Bias Collective Bid
A lawsuit accusing Workday of using automated hiring tools to unlawfully screen out applicants over 40 should not be given collective action status, the human resources platform told a California federal court, arguing the group would contain millions of dissimilar workers and innumerable employers.
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March 07, 2025
Mich. Atty Says Ex-Mentee Wanted Hush Money Before Suing
A name partner who was sued by a former associate of the firm on allegations that he sexually harassed her, has filed a countersuit claiming the attorney first sought hush money before launching her claims.
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March 06, 2025
CAA, Disney Not Enmeshed In Weinstein Claim, NY Court Told
Creative Artists Agency, Disney and a Miramax entity told a New York appeals court Thursday that actress Julia Ormond's case against them over an alleged Harvey Weinstein assault should have been dismissed, with former U.S. Attorney General Loretta Lynch arguing for the talent agency that the complaint doesn't lay out a tort.
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March 06, 2025
What Employers Should Expect As GOP Congress Ramps Up
Republican lawmakers have hit the ground running this Congress with proposals targeting employers' inclusive pronoun policies, diversity programs and vaccine mandates, and experts said they may also wield their control of Congress to try to revise federal civil rights laws.
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March 06, 2025
Federal Workers File Mass Challenges To Firings In Admin Court
Federal workers who lost their jobs in the Trump administration's mid-February purge of the civil service have begun challenging their terminations through class action appeals to an administrative court, seeking the reinstatement of tens of thousands of probationary employees to about 20 federal agencies.
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March 06, 2025
Dems Propose Limits To Religious Freedom Law For 4th Time
A coalition of Democratic U.S. House and Senate lawmakers introduced a bill Thursday that would restrict how the Religious Freedom Restoration Act can be used, something they say is necessary to prevent weaponization of the statute against anti-discrimination laws.
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March 06, 2025
Meltzer Lippe, Fired Partner Agree To End Sex Bias Suit
Meltzer Lippe Goldstein & Breitstone LLP and a former partner have agreed to end her New York federal court suit claiming she was fired from the firm after she complained about its sexist work environment, according to a Thursday court filing.
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March 06, 2025
Texas Court Orders 400-Mile Transfer For Discrimination Suit
A Texas appeals court has granted a Fort Worth-based energy company's request to have a former employee's lawsuit accusing it of discrimination and libel transferred hundreds of miles from Hidalgo County to Tarrant County, where it is located.
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March 06, 2025
9th Circ. Nixes Challenge To Wash. Abortion Coverage Law
A split Ninth Circuit panel on Thursday rejected a Christian church's challenge to a Washington state law requiring employer health plans to cover abortion services, saying the church could invoke its religious beliefs to skirt the challenged obligations.
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March 06, 2025
Texas Panel Says Police Dept. Must Face Pregnancy Bias Suit
A Texas appeals court on Thursday said a police department cannot escape a former employee's lawsuit accusing it of firing her after she asked to take unpaid leave to recover from a cesarean section, but ruled the city encompassing the police department was not involved in employment decisions.
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March 06, 2025
Trump Tells Admin To Yank Perkins Coie Security Clearance
Perkins Coie LLP is the latest law firm to face the ire of President Donald Trump, with Trump ordering on Thursday the immediate suspension of the firm's security clearances over its diverse hiring efforts and its representation of certain political figures, including former presidential candidate Hillary Clinton.
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March 06, 2025
Adams Accuser's Bankruptcy Unlikely To End Sex Assault Suit
A state judge on Thursday heaped skepticism on New York City's bid to dismiss a sexual harassment lawsuit against Mayor Eric Adams based on the accuser filing for bankruptcy, noting a federal judge has now directed a trustee to pursue the claims.
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March 06, 2025
Penn State Guts White Prof's Suit Over Anti-Racist Programs
Penn State largely defeated a suit from an ex-professor who said white instructors had been vilified, with a Pennsylvania federal judge ruling Thursday that no reasonable juror could find that campuswide emails and workshops about anti-racist teaching methods created an intolerable work environment.
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March 06, 2025
States Say Teacher Training Grants Are Caught In DEI Dragnet
A group of eight states sued the U.S. Department of Education in Massachusetts federal court Thursday, seeking reinstatement of $600 million in teacher training and placement grants they say were unlawfully targeted by the Trump administration as diversity initiatives.
Expert Analysis
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Transgender Worker Rights: A Guide For California Employers
Excerpt from Practical Guidance
California employers should know their obligations under overlapping state and federal law to protect the rights of their transgender, nonbinary and gender-nonconforming workers, and implement best practices to avoid discriminating in how they hire and promote, offer medical benefits to, and prevent harassment of these employees, says Michael Guasco at Littler.
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The Self-Funded Plan's Guide To Gender-Affirming Coverage
Self-funded group health plans face complicated legal risks when determining whether to cover gender-affirming health benefits for their transgender participants, so plan sponsors should carefully weigh how federal nondiscrimination laws and state penalties for providing care for trans minors could affect their decision to offer coverage, say Tim Kennedy and Anne Tyler Hall at Hall Benefits Law.
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In Focus At The EEOC: Eliminating Recruiting, Hiring Barriers
While the recruiting and hiring segment of the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission’s recently finalized strategic enforcement plan spotlights the potential discriminatory effects of artificial intelligence, employers should note that it also touches on traditional bias issues such as unlawfully targeted job advertisements and application inaccessibility, say Rachel See and Annette Tyman at Seyfarth.
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A Look Into The Developing Regulation Of Employer AI
Although employers' use of artificial intelligence is still limited, legislators and companies have been ramping up their efforts to regulate its use in the workplace, with employers actively contributing to the ongoing debate, say Gerald Hathaway and Marc-Joseph Gansah at Faegre Drinker.
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In Focus At The EEOC: Advancing Equal Pay
The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission’s recently finalized strategic enforcement plan expresses a renewed commitment to advancing equal pay at a time when employees have unprecedented access to compensation information, highlighting for employers the importance of open communication and ongoing pay equity analyses, say Paul Evans at Baker McKenzie and Christine Hendrickson at Syndio.
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2nd Circ. Ruling Clarifies Title VII Claim Standards
The Second Circuit's recent opinion in Banks v. General Motors, although it does not break new ground legally, comes at a crucial time when courts are reevaluating standards that apply to Title VII claims of discrimination and provides many useful lessons for practitioners, says Carolyn Wheeler at Katz Banks.
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In Focus At The EEOC: Preventing Systemic Harassment
With the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission's recently finalized strategic enforcement plan identifying a renewed commitment to preventing and remedying systemic harassment, employers must ensure that workplace policies address the many complex elements of this pervasive issue — including virtual harassment and workers' intersecting identities, say Ally Coll and Shea Holman at the Purple Method.
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Cos. Must Reassess Retaliation Risk As 2nd. Circ. Lowers Bar
After a recent Second Circuit decision broadened the federal standard for workplace retaliation, employers should reinforce their nondiscrimination and complaint-handling policies to help management anticipate and monitor worker grievances that could give rise to such claims, says Thomas Eron at Bond Schoeneck.
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An Employer's Guide To EEOC Draft Harassment Guidance
Rudy Gomez and Steven Reardon at FordHarrison discuss the most notable aspects of the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission’s recently proposed workplace harassment guidance, examine how it fits into the context of recent enforcement trends, and advise on proactive compliance measures in light of the commission’s first update on the issue in 24 years.
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To Responsibly Rock Out At Work, Draft A Music Policy
Employers may be tempted to turn down the tunes after a Ninth Circuit decision that blasting misogynist music could count as workplace harassment, but companies can safely provide a soundtrack to the workday if they first take practical steps to ensure their playlists don’t demean or disrespect workers or patrons, says Ally Coll at the Purple Method.
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5 Surprises In New Pregnancy Law's Proposed Regulations
Attorneys at Baker McKenzie examine five significant ways that recently proposed regulations for implementing the Pregnant Workers Fairness Act could catch U.S. employers off guard by changing how pregnant workers and those with related medical conditions must be accommodated.
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How Employers Can Take A Measured Approach To DEI
While corporate diversity, equity and inclusion programs are facing intense scrutiny, companies need not abandon efforts altogether — rather, now is the time to develop an action plan that can help ensure policies are legally compliant while still advancing DEI goals, say Erin Connell and Alexandria Elliott at Orrick.
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Courts Should Revisit Availability Of Age Bias Law Damages
Federal courts have held that compensatory damages, including for emotional distress, are unavailable in Age Discrimination in Employment Act cases, but it's time for a revamped textualist approach to ensure plaintiffs can receive the critical make-whole remedies Congress intended the law to provide, say attorneys at Sanford Heisler.