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February 18, 2025
President Donald Trump signed an executive order Tuesday to limit the autonomy of independent agencies such as the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission and Federal Communications Commission by requiring them to submit draft regulations for presidential review.
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February 18, 2025
A Tennessee federal judge should let a jury consider a lawsuit accusing a Henry County pork producer of retaliating against two H-2A workers who filed a complaint over unpaid wages, the U.S. Department of Labor said Tuesday.
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February 18, 2025
Claims under North Carolina state law by a proposed class of Campbell Soup Co. drivers who alleged they were misclassified as independent contractors instead of employees must be tossed because they're preempted by the federal law, the food giant argued Tuesday.
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February 18, 2025
A Washington federal judge has rejected a farmworker union's claims that the U.S. Department of Labor violated a court injunction by greenlighting H-2A contracts that do not include 2020 prevailing wage rates for the upcoming cherry and apple harvests.
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February 18, 2025
Tyson Foods misclassified production supervisors as overtime-exempt even though they performed nonmanagerial work, a former employee claimed in a proposed class and collective action filed Tuesday in Arkansas federal court.
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February 18, 2025
Republican attorneys general in Texas, Mississippi and Louisiana called on the full Fifth Circuit to reconsider a panel's decision backing the Biden administration's contract worker minimum wage hike, saying the ruling contradicts at least 11 other precedential decisions.
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February 18, 2025
A customer service company failed to pay call center workers for the time they spent either setting up their computers or troubleshooting the computers, according to a proposed class and collective action in Kentucky federal court.
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February 18, 2025
The full Fifth Circuit refused to reconsider its decision finding the U.S. Department of Labor has the authority to create a salary threshold as part of its role in defining overtime exemptions, rejecting a Dairy Queen franchise owner's argument that the opinion conflicts with U.S. Supreme Court precedent.
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February 18, 2025
A landscaping company urged a Kansas federal court to grant it a win in a workers' class action accusing it of stiffing them on overtime wages, saying by loading trucks and performing safety checks on trailers, the workers fall under a Fair Labor Standards Act exemption.
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February 18, 2025
A FedEx contractor will pay $5,000 to a driver who claimed he was misclassified as a salaried employee and cheated out of overtime as a result, as a New York federal court signed off Tuesday on a judgment agreed on by the parties.
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February 17, 2025
A Washington, D.C. federal judge again declined to block Elon Musk's Department of Government Efficiency from accessing three federal agencies' data, saying worker and consumer advocates haven't shown that the department's agents don't belong.
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February 14, 2025
The Center for Investigative Reporting told the Ninth Circuit on Friday that federal contractors' workforce demographic reports were not protected by a commercial data exemption to the Freedom of Information Act, as there was no "intimate information" in those reports.
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February 14, 2025
Democratic members of the House Committee on Education and the Workforce demanded that the U.S. Department of Labor provide details about why certain worker safety documents were removed from the federal government's website, saying some information seems to have been arbitrarily removed because it referenced "diversity" or "gender."
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February 14, 2025
A Washington, D.C., federal judge said he plans to rule "promptly" on a request by worker and consumer advocates to stop the Department of Government Efficiency from accessing three federal agencies' data but couldn't say when following a wide-ranging hearing on the bid.
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February 14, 2025
A Third Circuit panel's decision in a U.S. Department of Labor suit that a home health agency needed to pay $7 million to home health aides for travel time creates a new, unsupported law, the company said, urging the full court to jump in.
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February 14, 2025
In the coming week, attorneys should keep an eye out for the final approval of a $4 million deal in a wage and hour class action involving transportation company CRST. Here's a look at that case and other labor and employment matters coming up in California.
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February 14, 2025
New York Gov. Kathy Hochul's proposal to require businesses to notify the state if artificial intelligence is a factor in certain layoffs or plant closures is probably another public policy misfire in the effort to manage AI's encroachment on the workforce, attorneys say.
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February 14, 2025
A challenge to the U.S. Department of Labor's final rule updating the math for Davis-Bacon Act prevailing wages needs to be paused while the department's top brass catches up on the litigation, the DOL and the groups suing told a Texas federal court Friday.
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February 14, 2025
Former digital media startup The Messenger has struck a deal to end a class action alleging it failed to give hundreds of workers enough notice about its impending layoffs and shutdown, the company told a New York federal court.
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February 14, 2025
A Massachusetts portfolio manager says Fiera Capital Inc. lured him to the asset management firm with promises he could earn up to $850,000 a year, then sidelined him so he was unable to qualify for bonuses and forced him out a year later.
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February 14, 2025
This week the Second Circuit is to consider whether to revive a lawsuit brought by a former senior vice president at a global investment firm claiming it discriminated against him due to his race and religion and gave him false poor performance reviews before firing him.
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February 14, 2025
The U.S. Department of Justice said it will appeal to the Ninth Circuit after a federal judge tossed its suit accusing the state of Nevada and its public employees retirement system of overcharging service members for pension credits.
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February 13, 2025
Washington's highest court grilled attorneys on both sides of a debate over state pay transparency law on Thursday, with some justices suggesting the employer's stance put too much onus on workers while another expressed doubt the protections should extend to people who apply for jobs they have no chance to get.
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February 13, 2025
A D.C. federal judge extended his temporary restraining order barring USAID from placing thousands of employees on administrative leave for another week on Thursday, saying he needed more time to rule on the plaintiff employees unions' preliminary injunction request to stop the agency's overhaul while the case proceeds.
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February 13, 2025
A paving company told a D.C. federal court Thursday that it has agreed to shell out $370,000 to 34 workers who claimed they were paid below the prevailing wage while working on public works projects.