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December 13, 2024
From blue state voters’ rejection of minimum wage ballot measures to presidential candidates’ proposals to stop taxing tips, there were a handful of significant wage and hour surprises this year. Here, Law360 explores five of this year’s surprising wage and hour developments.
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December 12, 2024
A Pennsylvania chemical company and a former worker who accused it of violating state and federal wage laws by requiring uncompensated preshift work of its employees came together and asked a Keystone State judge to approve a $300,000 settlement for the proposed class action.
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December 12, 2024
A Washington federal judge on Thursday said Amazon cannot throw out proposed class and collective claims that it systematically paid women less than their male counterparts, saying the case is not "so hopeless" that certification is impossible down the road.
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December 12, 2024
Former University of Michigan football players seeking more than $50 million from the NCAA and Big Ten Network asked a judge to certify their proposed student-athlete class on Thursday, while noting it was "admittedly early" in the case to do so.
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December 12, 2024
An Idaho-based ice cream manufacturer and retailer will pay nearly $450,000 for sharing tips with management and allowing children to work dangerous jobs and at times the law does not allow, the U.S. Department of Labor announced Thursday.
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December 12, 2024
A Pittsburgh-based home health care company and its counsel from Saul Ewing LLP are improperly shuffling assets in order to avoid paying future judgments, according to a lawsuit by representatives of a proposed wage class seeking $12.2 million.
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December 12, 2024
The Second Circuit voided its prior ruling that a bakery's delivery drivers must arbitrate claims alleging they were misclassified as independent contractors, saying Thursday the question of whether they are exempt from arbitration is up in the air after the U.S. Supreme Court weighed in on the suit.
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December 12, 2024
Filmmaker Woody Allen fired a personal chef because he repeatedly complained he wasn't being properly paid and had to take time off to participate in military exercises as a member of the U.S. Army Reserve, according to a lawsuit filed in New York federal court.
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December 12, 2024
A suit accusing a restaurant chain of dodging tip credit rules ended when a Kentucky federal judge granted the company and the servers' request to dismiss the Fair Labor Standards Act case Thursday.
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December 12, 2024
A Missouri federal judge greenlighted a $1.75 million deal that resolves a suit involving nearly 27,000 employees who accused a health system of failing to fully compensate hourly employees, putting an end to the dispute after a trip to the Eighth Circuit in 2023.
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December 11, 2024
Federal and state enforcers scored key victories Tuesday with a pair of court rulings blocking the planned $24.6 billion merger between Kroger and Albertsons that largely adopted their allegations about the deal and rejected a proposal to unload nearly 600 stores to save it.
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December 11, 2024
A New York federal judge refused to toss a lawsuit a former vice president lodged against an NFT company alleging he was fired after asking to take parental leave, saying he was eligible for the leave despite not working for the company for a year when he requested it.
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December 11, 2024
Google was sued in California state court Wednesday by a former training manager who says the tech giant chose her and six colleagues for layoffs last year because of their decisions to take parental leave.
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December 11, 2024
United Airlines cheated employees out of pay by requiring them to work during breaks and mandating unpaid COVID-19 screenings, a former employee said in her Private Attorneys General Act suit in California state court.
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December 11, 2024
The U.S. Chamber of Commerce told a Texas federal court to ignore the U.S. Department of Labor's notice that a Tennessee magistrate judge recommended tossing a lawsuit launched against the department's independent contractor rule, saying its own suit is nothing like the case in Tennessee.
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December 11, 2024
The U.S. Department of Labor's proposed rule to end employers' ability to pay workers with disabilities less than the federal minimum wage comes as time is running out to end the long-standing but controversial program before Republicans take back the White House and Congress. Here, Law360 explores the debate over the program in a new audio feature.
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December 11, 2024
Workers urged a Pennsylvania federal judge to sign off on an $800,000 deal ending a suit alleging the paint manufacturing company PPG Industries stiffed them on full wages after a Kronos ransomware attack took out the company's payroll system, according to a Pennsylvania federal court filing.
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December 11, 2024
A California appeals panel flipped a lower court's decision awarding about $54,000 in post-offer costs to an auto body shop after winning a former employee's wage and hour suit, saying that two sections of the California Labor Code preclude such awards.
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December 11, 2024
A former manager for an auto parts company urged the Fourth Circuit to rethink its opinion in favor of the company, saying the court held him to too high a standard to show that he adequately put the company on notice of his unpaid overtime complaints.
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December 11, 2024
Grocery giant Albertsons, in a Wednesday lawsuit in the Delaware Court of Chancery, said Kroger did not put forth its "best efforts" into getting their planned $24.6 billion megamerger cleared while also announcing official plans to nix the deal, moves that came just one day after two judges blocked the proposed acquisition.
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December 10, 2024
The AFL-CIO on Tuesday backed the U.S. Department of Labor's efforts to toss a suit in North Carolina federal court challenging the department's final rule protecting union-related activities for agricultural workers on seasonal H-2A visas, saying that it doesn't violate federal labor law.
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December 10, 2024
U.S. Department of Labor Solicitor Seema Nanda said she is not slowing down in the waning days of the Biden administration and warns of an administrative agency enforcement landscape complicated by recent high court decisions. Here, Law360 speaks with Nanda about her tenure and legacy.
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December 10, 2024
A New Jersey appeals court upended Jersey City's win in a firefighters union's lawsuit challenging two city policies pertaining to sick leave, finding Tuesday the union put forward enough information to defeat the city's dismissal bid.
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December 10, 2024
Swift Transportation truckers can move forward as a class with their suit accusing the company of denying them overtime by paying them at a per-mile rate, a Washington federal judge ruled, saying the court can determine whether state law applies to the case using classwide evidence.
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December 10, 2024
A contractor for New York City and ConEd will pay $3 million to resolve excavation workers' lawsuit accusing the company of failing to pay them a prevailing wage and compensate them for time spent commuting between job sites, a filing in New York federal court said.