Labor

  • January 30, 2025

    Magistrate Judge Endorses Sanctions In Union Benefits Fight

    A New York federal magistrate judge overseeing a union benefits dispute recommended sanctioning an insulation hauling company that hasn't been responding to court paperwork, but stopped short of recommending that the district judge grant requests for default judgment against the company.

  • January 30, 2025

    6th Circ. Wonders If Trump NLRB Shake-Up Moots Memo Suit

    Sixth Circuit judges wrestled Thursday with what to do with a legal challenge to a memo penned by the National Labor Relations Board's former general counsel given her recent firing and expected shifts in the agency's policy direction under President Donald Trump.

  • January 30, 2025

    IUOE's Top Leader Pleads Guilty To Filing False DOL Reports

    A former International Union of Operating Engineers general president pled guilty to not disclosing $315,000 worth of event tickets in annual reports to the U.S. Department of Labor, according to federal court filings, with the ex-union leader facing a potential prison sentence and thousands in fines.

  • January 30, 2025

    Sea-Tac Pipeline Operators Fall Under NLRA, Official Says

    The National Labor Relations Board has jurisdiction over the pipeline operators employed by FSM Group LLC at Seattle-Tacoma International Airport, a board official has determined, rejecting the employer's argument that the agency that administers the Railway Labor Act has jurisdiction instead.

  • January 29, 2025

    'DO NOT RESPOND': CFPB Union Calls Buyout Email A Trap

    The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau's union has urged staff at the agency to refrain from responding to the Trump administration's buyout offer for federal employees, describing it as a potential trap and suggesting they consider marking it as spam instead.

  • January 29, 2025

    AFGE, AFSCME Fight Trump's Federal Workers Order

    Two unions representing thousands of federal government employees sued the Trump administration Wednesday, seeking to halt enforcement of a portion of the president's executive order rolling back a Biden-era regulation covering protections for career civil service workers.

  • January 29, 2025

    SkyWest Beats Union's Claim It Shirked DOL Reporting

    A flight attendants' union can't accuse SkyWest Airlines of failing to report its funding of an in-house employees' group to the U.S. Department of Labor, a Utah federal judge ruled Wednesday, saying only the secretary of labor can enforce the Labor Management Reporting and Disclosure Act's reporting requirements.

  • January 29, 2025

    Trump Easing Federal Worker Firings Could Hamper NLRB

    President Donald Trump's executive order making it easier to fire certain federal employees could hurt the National Labor Relations Board's ability to retain staff and damage the deliberative process the agency uses for prosecuting cases, former NLRB attorneys and other experts said.

  • January 29, 2025

    Mass. Judge Sends Stellantis' UAW Strike Suit To Calif.

    A Massachusetts federal judge has sent a Stellantis lawsuit accusing the UAW of violating a collective bargaining agreement by threatening mid-contract strikes to a California federal court where the automaker is pursuing identical claims over the union's tactics.

  • January 29, 2025

    4 Questions About Trump's Federal Worker Resignation Policy

    President Donald Trump’s offer of letting federal workers resign with several months of paid administrative leave raises questions about its legality and whether workers will actually get paid, attorneys said. Here, Law360 explores four questions that stem from the policy.

  • January 29, 2025

    Trump Fired NLRB Officers Over Lack Of 'Confidence'

    President Donald Trump fired National Labor Relations Board member Gwynne Wilcox and general counsel Jennifer Abruzzo because of doubts they would give employers a fair shake, asserting in a discharge letter obtained by Law360 on Wednesday that he may fire NLRB members at will.

  • January 29, 2025

    Southwest Worker Can't Yet Snag $2M Atty Fees In Bias Case

    A flight attendant cannot recover nearly $2.5 million in attorney fees incurred while litigating her suit in which she claimed Southwest terminated her after she sent pictures of aborted fetuses during a Transport Workers Union of America Local 556 action, a Texas federal judge ruled.

  • January 29, 2025

    Health Center Must Pay NLRB's Fees To End Challenge

    A Chicago health center may withdraw its constitutional challenge against the National Labor Relations Board if it shoulders the agency's legal fees, an Illinois federal judge ruled, noting the NLRB opposes the withdrawal because it believes the health center will sue again in a friendlier court.

  • January 29, 2025

    NLRB Shake-Up Not Basis To Delay Case, Agency Judge Says

    A building services company can't push back a hearing about a Cemex bargaining order on the grounds that the National Labor Relations Board lacks a general counsel or quorum on the board, an administrative law judge ordered, saying the reshuffle at the agency is "not a valid reason to postpone."

  • January 29, 2025

    Boeing's Pilot Layoffs Did Not Flout Labor Law, NLRB Says

    Boeing had valid, nondiscriminatory reasons for laying off a group of flight training airplane instructor pilots after they voted to keep their union, the National Labor Relations Board has ruled, reversing an agency judge's ruling.

  • January 28, 2025

    Trump Tells Federal Workers They're Welcome To Resign

    The Trump administration on Tuesday emailed about 2 million federal employees offering them the option to resign but continue to be paid to the end of September, in an effort to implement a campaign promise to drastically cut the federal workforce and only keep employees who are "loyal" and "trustworthy."

  • January 28, 2025

    3 Takeaways From Trump's NLRB Leadership Shake-Up

    The firings of National Labor Relations Board member Gwynne Wilcox and general counsel Jennifer Abruzzo will disrupt the agency's operations and ignite a legal battle over the president's power to remove board members, experts say. Here, Law360 looks at these and other takeaways from these consequential personnel moves at the top of the NLRB.

  • January 28, 2025

    Union Rates See Continued Drop In 2024, BLS Says

    The overall share of union-represented workers dipped in 2024, according to data released Tuesday by the U.S. Department of Labor's Bureau of Labor Statistics, marking another year of decreasing unionization rates while labor advocates say the data doesn't reflect ongoing organizing efforts.

  • January 28, 2025

    Creditors Seek To End Yellow Corp.'s Exclusive Ch. 11 Control

    The official committee of unsecured creditors in Yellow Corp.'s bankruptcy case filed a motion Tuesday to terminate the defunct trucking company's exclusive right to file a Chapter 11 plan, or alternatively, to convert the proceedings to a Chapter 7 liquidation.

  • January 28, 2025

    Union Worker Entitled To Higher Pension Benefits, Judge Says

    A plumbing union pension plan violated federal benefits law when it refused to increase a worker's monthly payments because he opted to retire late, a Minnesota federal judge ruled, finding the plan's terms didn't prevent him from receiving a bump.

  • January 28, 2025

    OPM Looking To Dodge USPTO's Union Telework Exception

    U.S. Patent and Trademark Office employees whose telework is protected in a collective bargaining agreement don't have to work in person, the agency has confirmed, but the federal government has told agencies to review how to change those agreements.

  • January 28, 2025

    Philly Whole Foods Workers Become Chain's First To Unionize

    Employees of a Whole Foods in Center City, Philadelphia, have become the Amazon-owned grocery chain's first workers to vote yes on union representation, with 57% of the staff voting in favor of affiliating with a United Food and Commercial Workers local.

  • January 28, 2025

    Freeman Mathis Bulks Up In Chicago, Nashville, Dallas And LA

    Freeman Mathis & Gary LLP has added new partners in Chicago, Nashville, Los Angeles and Dallas, with the hires underscoring the firm's "dedication to strategic expansion and delivering outstanding client service," a firm leader said Tuesday.

  • January 28, 2025

    Trump Removes NLRB General Counsel And Dem Member

    President Donald Trump removed National Labor Relations Board general counsel Jennifer Abruzzo and Democratic member Gwynne Wilcox overnight, leaving the agency's panel of adjudicators without a quorum and its prosecutor's office without a top official. 

  • January 27, 2025

    Purdue Nears Ch. 11 Deal, Yellow Corp. Fends Off WARN Suit

    From a looming settlement in the Purdue bankruptcy to a pair of retailers overcoming objections to their Chapter 11 plans, here are some of the biggest bankruptcy news from the past week.

Expert Analysis

  • Alternatives For Employers Considering Workforce Reduction

    Excerpt from Practical Guidance
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    Employers' reduction in force decisions can be costly, increase exposure to employment lawsuits and lower morale of remaining employees, but certain other approaches can help reduce labor costs while minimizing the usual consequences, say Andrew Sommer and Megan Shaked at Conn Maciel.

  • How Weingarten Rights May Operate In A Nonunion Workplace

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    A recent National Labor Relations Board memo signals an interest in giving nonunion employees a right to have a coworker representative present in disciplinary hearings, but concerned employers may find solace in limits the agency has placed on union employees' Weingarten rights over the years, say David Pryzbylski and Thomas Payne at Barnes & Thornburg.

  • Employer Discipline Lessons In DC Circ. Vulgar Protest Ruling

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    The D.C. Circuit's recent ruling in Constellium Rolled Products v. NLRB — that a worker was improperly fired for using profanity while protesting company policy — highlights confusion surrounding worker protections for concerted activity and the high bar for employers to prove discipline is unrelated to such activity, say John Hargrove and Anne Yuengert at Bradley Arant.

  • NLRB Reversal On Union Apparel Is A Warning For Employers

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    The National Labor Relations Board's recent reversal of Trump-era case law in its Tesla ruling significantly limits when employers may restrict union insignia on clothing in the workplace and provides multiple cautionary takeaways for employers, say attorneys at Shipman & Goodwin.

  • Proposed NLRB Rule Would Vastly Expand Joint Employment

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    The National Labor Relations Board’s recently proposed rule for determining when joint employment exists would replace a 2020 standard with expansive new definitions, including the problematic addition of workplace health and safety as an essential term and condition, says Todd Lebowitz at BakerHostetler.

  • Key Takeaways From Calif.'s Sweeping Fast-Food Wage Law

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    California Gov. Gavin Newsom recently signed a controversial wage bill that will have a major impact on fast-food employers and employees, will likely shape how the state regulates other industries in the future, and represents a radical step toward sectoral bargaining, says Pooja Nair at Ervin Cohen.

  • Prepare For NLRB Collaboration With Antitrust Agencies

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    The National Labor Relations Board's recent agreements with the Federal Trade Commission and the U.S. Department of Justice may herald increased interagency engagement on noncompete and no-poach issues, so companies that face scrutiny from one agency may well quickly be in the crosshairs of another, say attorneys at BakerHostetler.

  • Watson Discipline Case Shows NFL's Power In Labor Disputes

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    While the six-game suspension a disciplinary officer recently ordered against Cleveland Browns quarterback Deshaun Watson aligns with labor law standards, the NFL has authority to increase the punishment with little to no recourse for Watson or the NFL Players Association — thanks to the 2016 “Deflategate” case, says Michael Elkins at MLE Law.

  • Why Gig Platforms Should Be On Alert

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    The Federal Trade Commission and state attorneys general have set their sights on the gig economy and practices they view as deceptive and unfair, which will open gig platforms to more scrutiny — and past cases against gig-economy giants including Uber and Instacart are cautionary tales to keep in mind, say attorneys at Venable.

  • What New Captive Audience Law Means For Conn. Employers

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    Given a new Connecticut law that allows employees to opt out of captive audience meetings where employers share religious or political opinions, companies will need to address the liability risks posed by this substantial expansion of employee free speech rights, say attorneys at Shipman & Goodwin.

  • More Employment Regs May See 'Major Questions' Challenges

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    The U.S. Supreme Court's recent use of the major questions doctrine to strike down regulation has already been cited in lower court cases challenging U.S. Department of Labor authority to implement wage and hour changes, and could provide a potent tool to litigants seeking to restrain federal workplace and labor regulations, say Jeffrey Brecher and Courtney Malveaux at Jackson Lewis.

  • Wage Theft Bill Would Increase Risk, Severity Of FLSA Claims

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    A recently introduced bill would amend the Fair Labor Standards Act in extreme ways that go well beyond the commonsense idea that people should be paid the wages they have earned, thereby sharply increasing the threat of claims against employers, with implications for arbitration, collective bargaining and more, say Christopher Pardo and Beth Sherwood at Hunton.

  • 4 Labor Relations Lessons From Soccer League CBA

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    As a resurgent labor movement prompts employers to consider how to respond to unionization efforts, the first collective bargaining agreement between the National Women's Soccer League and the union representing its players provides important insights, says Chris Deubert at Constangy Brooks.

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