President Donald Trump's nominees for key U.S. Department of Labor roles told a U.S. Senate panel Wednesday they will go after unlawful child labor and enforce prevailing wages under the Davis-Bacon Act, painting a picture of what the agency could look like as its leadership team rounds out.
Employment law practitioners are confronting a wage and hour landscape in flux, with the federal independent contractor rule in limbo as states develop more worker-friendly tests and artificial intelligence becoming a regular part of work. Here, Law360 explores these and other issues employers and attorneys should keep in mind in the coming months.
Elon Musk should be held personally liable for workers' unpaid severance benefits claims, the former X Corp. employees told a Delaware federal court, saying he retained so much control over the social media company that the company alone cannot be at fault.
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President Donald Trump's nominees for key U.S. Department of Labor roles told a U.S. Senate panel Wednesday they will go after unlawful child labor and enforce prevailing wages under the Davis-Bacon Act, painting a picture of what the agency could look like as its leadership team rounds out.
Employment law practitioners are confronting a wage and hour landscape in flux, with the federal independent contractor rule in limbo as states develop more worker-friendly tests and artificial intelligence becoming a regular part of work. Here, Law360 explores these and other issues employers and attorneys should keep in mind in the coming months.
Elon Musk should be held personally liable for workers' unpaid severance benefits claims, the former X Corp. employees told a Delaware federal court, saying he retained so much control over the social media company that the company alone cannot be at fault.
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June 18, 2025
A California federal judge doubted Wednesday whether a named plaintiff can adequately represent a proposed class of Bank of America employees who claim they weren't paid for unused vacation time when they left the bank, observing during a hearing that her individualized issues "could make her very differently situated."
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June 18, 2025
A Nevada federal court has refused a nurse staffing executive's bid to undo his conviction on wage-fixing and wire fraud charges, and threatened his attorneys with sanctions for allegedly making repeated misrepresentations to the court.
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June 18, 2025
A Senate panel announced on Wednesday a June 26 vote that will affect who will chair the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission and the Trump administration's picks to lead the U.S. Department of Labor's Wage and Hour Division and employee benefits arm.
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June 18, 2025
Thompson Coburn LLP announced Wednesday that a five-attorney labor and employment team of three partners and two associates joined the firm's Los Angeles office from Epstein Becker Green.
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June 18, 2025
A court executive has claimed that the New Jersey judiciary is guilty of retaliating and discriminating against her by allegedly reducing her pay raise because she went on maternity leave, according to a new state complaint.
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June 18, 2025
The operator of New York City-area Applebee's restaurants entered into a National Labor Relations Board settlement after a former server claimed he was fired after complaining about Black workers getting paid less than white employees, advocacy group One Fair Wage announced Wednesday.
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June 18, 2025
A personal injury law firm fired a paralegal under the guise of downsizing one month after she informed the firm she was pregnant, a lawsuit in Pennsylvania federal court says.
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June 18, 2025
A Massachusetts construction company will shell out nearly $246,000 in back wages and liquidated damages to end a U.S. Department of Labor suit in federal court accusing the shop of failing to pay overtime to 63 workers and letting a minor operate a circular saw.
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June 18, 2025
A personal injury law firm will pay nearly $21,000 to resolve a paralegal's lawsuit accusing the firm of misclassifying her as exempt from earning overtime and failing to compensate her for the five to 10 additional hours she worked each week, a filing in Georgia federal court said.
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June 18, 2025
A waste disposal company requires employees to work seven days a week and more than 10 hours a day but does not pay them all the overtime wages they are entitled to, a proposed collective action filed in Louisiana federal court said.
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June 18, 2025
An Idaho grocery store will shell out about $250,000 in a settlement with the U.S. Department of Labor after investigators found it violated child labor laws by having six minors perform hazardous duties, the department said.
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June 17, 2025
A New York federal court refused Tuesday to reconsider a decision finding there are still questions over whether field organizers for Michael Bloomberg's 2020 presidential campaign are individually covered under federal wage law, and denied the entity's bid for an immediate appeal in the workers' suit claiming unpaid minimum wage.
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June 17, 2025
Agri Beef, the Indiana Packers Corporation and a proposed class of workers at red meat processing plants have reached settlements totaling $2.5 million in a suit alleging a nationwide conspiracy to suppress wages.
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June 17, 2025
Humana Inc. and Humana Government Business Inc. were hit with a proposed class action in Georgia federal court on Tuesday over allegations they failed to pay registered nurse case managers proper overtime wages.
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June 17, 2025
The chair of the Republican-led U.S. House Committee on Education and the Workforce on Tuesday praised a U.S. Department of Labor watchdog for investigating the agency over allegations it shared confidential information with plaintiffs attorneys, which comes after the panel called for an investigation in November.
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June 17, 2025
Northwestern University cannot show that a volunteer baseball coach wasn't technically an employee eligible for wages, an Illinois federal judge ruled, saying the worker was performing the duties of three full-time jobs and the school paid him $10,000 for the 100 hours he was working each week.
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June 17, 2025
UMB Financial Corp. said an ex-executive's suit claiming she was illegally denied leave to recover from chemotherapy treatments can't stay in Colorado federal court, telling a judge her request to extend her monthslong leave was ultimately approved after the company initially raised concerns about her changing return-to-work date.
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June 17, 2025
A onetime executive assistant has expanded a federal lawsuit against her ex-employer Stone Hilton PLLC — founded by former top prosecutors in the Texas attorney general's office — to include a sexual harassment claim after the Texas Workforce Commission found there is reasonable cause.
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June 17, 2025
A respiratory therapist's proposed collective is far too expansive and "amorphous" and is based on scant evidence that HCA Healthcare Inc. illegally manipulated workers' time sheets, the company told a North Carolina federal court, urging it to deny certification.Â
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June 17, 2025
Nationwide Life and Annuity Insurance failed to pay remote workers for the time they spent booting up and logging into their computers before their scheduled shifts, a proposed class action in California state court claims.
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June 17, 2025
A California federal court gave the initial sign-off Monday on a nearly $1 million deal to resolve a long-running wage and hour class action against business services companies MM 879 Inc. and Barret Business Services Inc. that paid a visit to the Ninth Circuit.
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June 17, 2025
Spa workers accusing a Waldorf Astoria resort of misclassifying them as independent contractors adequately supported their claims for unpaid wages, unjust enrichment and retaliation, a Hawaii federal judge ruled, turning down the resort's bid to trim the suit.
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June 17, 2025
PepsiCo instructs hourly paid employees to only document their scheduled hours and not the time they actually spend working, causing workers to lose out on overtime wages and not receive pay for skipped meal breaks, a Private Attorneys General Act suit filed in California state court said.
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June 16, 2025
A class of tipped servers should be broken up, a steakhouse at the Foxwoods Resort Casino told a Connecticut state court, saying the workers cannot show that they all performed untipped side work that caused them to lose out on wages.
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June 16, 2025
A former Giphy engineer should arbitrate her lawsuit claiming Meta, and later Shutterstock, paid her less than male colleagues when they took over the online GIF database, the tech companies told a New York federal court, arguing she can't avoid an agreement she signed when Meta began its acquisition.