Labor

  • January 07, 2026

    UAW Seeks Quick Exit In Battery Plant Worker's Firing Suit

    A United Auto Workers local is fighting to escape a battery plant worker's hybrid discrimination lawsuit, telling a Tennessee federal court that the employee failed to show the union mishandled his work grievance.

  • January 07, 2026

    NLRB Gets Up To Speed As Members And GC Are Sworn In

    The National Labor Relations Board is set to resume deciding cases after two new members arrived at the agency Wednesday along with President Donald Trump's pick to lead the Office of the General Counsel.

  • January 07, 2026

    NLRB Judge Backs Washington Post In Salary Info Dispute

    The Washington Post escaped claims that it violated federal labor law by refusing to disclose name-linked salary data of its employees to the Washington-Baltimore NewsGuild, a National Labor Relations Board judge ruled, finding that the paper was justified in refusing to provide the information.

  • January 06, 2026

    Court's Block Leaves Little Of Calif. NLRB Fill-In Law

    A recent decision that blocked California regulators from filling in for the National Labor Relations Board while it lacks a quorum kept other parts of the novel law in place, though those vestiges leave the state little of the new role it asserted in private-sector labor relations.

  • January 06, 2026

    Wilcox Asks DC Circ. To Protect NLRB's Independence

    The D.C. Circuit should reverse a decision by two of its judges that would end the National Labor Relations Board's independence if allowed to stand, former board member Gwynne Wilcox argued, seeking to nix a ruling that lets President Donald Trump remove and replace NLRB members at will.

  • January 06, 2026

    NLRB Judge Orders Raises For Metal Manufacturing Workers

    An Illinois metal manufacturer must provide annual wage increases it previously withheld from a group of workers historically represented by a Teamsters local in a consolidated bargaining unit, a National Labor Relations Board judge has ruled.

  • January 06, 2026

    'Jersey Boys' Producer Slips $1M Pension Tab At 9th Circ.

    The Ninth Circuit on Tuesday reversed a win for a stagehands union pension plan in a dispute with a producer for the jukebox musical "Jersey Boys," saying an entertainment industry exemption to federal benefits law shielded the production company from approximately $1 million in withdrawal liability. 

  • January 06, 2026

    Exxon Must Hand Over Work Info To Union, NLRB Judge Says

    Exxon Mobil violated federal labor law by withholding certain workplace information requested by a United Steel Workers local between 2021 and 2023 and by forbidding two employee union leaders from meeting to discuss grievances during the workday, a National Labor Relations Board judge ruled.

  • January 06, 2026

    NY Civil Legal Services Provider Plans To Unionize

    Staff members at the civil legal services organization Build Up Justice NYC announced Monday that they plan to join the Association of Legal Advocates and Attorneys, a union representing more than 3,400 public-interest workers across the greater metropolitan area.

  • January 06, 2026

    Mich. Hospital Illegally Ousted Union, NLRB Judge Says

    A Michigan hospital violated federal labor law by withdrawing recognition from a Service Employees International Union affiliate shortly after the union was certified as representing a bargaining unit, a National Labor Relations Board judge has ruled.

  • January 05, 2026

    PG&E Inks $100M Deal To Settle Investors' Wildfire Suit

    California utility Pacific Gas & Electric Co., its brass and its underwriters have reached a $100 million deal ending investor claims over allegedly misleading statements about the company's safety practices ahead of deadly wildfires in the past decade.

  • January 05, 2026

    Kaiser Worker Fights To Keep Job Bias Suit Alive

    A San Francisco Bay Area employee urged a California federal judge to keep his amended lawsuit alleging that Kaiser Permanente denied his request to switch jobs because of his race, arguing that he has met the requirements needed to have his claims move forward.

  • January 05, 2026

    NYC Eateries Should Face Workers' Wage Suit, Judge Says

    A pair of Chinese restaurants in Midtown Manhattan should face claims they underpaid their delivery workers and waiters, a New York federal magistrate judge has said, recommending that the district court preserve the central allegations in the workers' wage and hour suit.

  • January 05, 2026

    Union Urges Enforced Rehire Of Driver Who Hit Pedestrian

    A labor union representing drivers for a busing contractor urged a Virginia federal court to confirm an arbitration award ordering the company to rehire a driver who hit a pedestrian, rejecting the company's claims that the arbitrator overstepped his authority in issuing the award.

  • January 05, 2026

    Airline Industry Group Challenges Michigan Sick Leave Law

    A national airline trade group is challenging a Michigan law requiring employers to provide workers with earned sick time, telling a Michigan federal court that the measure is preempted by federal law and weakens the airlines' collective bargaining agreements.

  • January 05, 2026

    Mich. Construction Co. Seeks To Ax Worker's Race Bias Suit

    A Michigan construction company's decision to fire a union-represented worker was motivated entirely by the fact that he punched his co-worker, the company has told a Michigan federal judge in response to a discrimination suit, saying the worker's race didn't factor into the decision.

  • January 02, 2026

    Starbucks Beats Investors' Labor Relations Suit On Appeal

    A Washington state appeals court has sided with Starbucks and its corporate leadership in two shareholders' proposed class action claiming union-busting activity hurt the coffee giant's reputation, concluding the district court should throw out the case because the investors failed to show intentional wrongdoing by company directors.

  • January 02, 2026

    Distillery Opposes Rehiring Worker After Bereavement Leave

    A Kentucky bourbon distillery is looking to dodge an order requiring it to reinstate a worker whom it fired for violating its attendance policy, telling a federal judge it was allowed to terminate the longtime employee for taking off to be with his uncle as he died.

  • January 02, 2026

    5 Labor Cases To Watch In 2026

    The new year is poised to be consequential for labor practitioners as courts mull states' power to act and the U.S. Supreme Court considers whether to wade into a circuit split over the National Labor Relations Board's remedial powers. Here, Law360 looks at these and other labor cases to watch in 2026.

  • January 02, 2026

    Judge Reverses Trump Admin's Cuts To Mediation Agency

    The Trump administration shouldn't have laid off 93% of the staff of the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service last spring, a New York federal judge ruled, reinstating the mediators who resolve labor disputes in the public and private sector.

  • January 02, 2026

    Think Tank Sues Oregon Over Union Impersonation Law

    A free market think tank is challenging an Oregon law that allows unions to sue anyone that falsely impersonates union representatives, according to a new lawsuit filed in Oregon federal court, arguing that the new law suppresses their speech amid an "ongoing and constitutionally necessary debate" over union dues.

  • January 02, 2026

    Employers Can't Freeze NLRB Cases, 9th Circ. Says

    Federal labor law forbids courts from halting administrative suits by the National Labor Relations Board based on employers' assertions that those suits are invalid because the agency's powers are unconstitutional, the Ninth Circuit has said in a ruling that deepens a circuit split.

  • January 02, 2026

    Ex-Biden Wage Chief Tapped As Va. Labor Secretary

    Virginia's incoming Democratic governor has chosen a Biden administration-era U.S. Department of Labor appointee who previously led the agency's Wage and Hour Division to serve as the Old Dominion state's next secretary of labor.

  • January 02, 2026

    NLRB Constitutional Questions To Get Answers In 2026

    The courts may finally resolve the debate over the National Labor Relations Board's constitutionality this year, with uncertain stakes for the agency charged with protecting private-sector workers' rights to organize.

  • January 02, 2026

    Guns, Taxes & Labor: Cannabis Litigation Trends To Watch

    In 2026, courts throughout the U.S. will consider cases weighing Second Amendment rights of cannabis users, a punitive federal tax policy that affects state-legal marijuana businesses, labor peace requirements in the cannabis space, and whether a constitutional doctrine bars states from preferencing their residents in doling out marijuana licenses.

Expert Analysis

  • Focus On Political Stances May Weaken Labor Unions

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    Recent lawsujits and a bill pending in the U.S. House of Representatives call attention to the practice of labor unions taking political stances with which their members disagree — an issue that may weaken unions, and that employers should stay abreast of, given its implications for labor organizing campaigns, workplace morale and collective bargaining, says Daniel Johns at Cozen O'Connor.

  • NLRB Ruling Highlights Rare Union Deauthorization Process

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    A recent National Labor Relations Board decision about a guard company's union authorization revocation presents a ripe opportunity for employees to review the particulars of this uncommon process, and employer compliance is critical as well, say Megann McManus and Trecia Moore at Husch Blackwell.

  • Latest 'Nuclear Verdict' Underscores Jury-Trial Employer Risk

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    A Los Angeles Superior Court jury's recent $900 million verdict in a high-profile sexual assault and harassment case illustrates the increase in so-called nuclear verdicts in employment cases, and the need for employers to explore alternative methods of resolving disputes, say Anthony Oncidi and Morgan Peterson at Proskauer.

  • After Chevron: What Loper Bright Portends For The NLRB

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    While the U.S. Supreme Court has a long history of deferring to the National Labor Relations Board's readings of federal labor law, the court's Loper Bright v. Raimondo decision forces courts to take a harder look at the judgment of an agency — and the NLRB will not be immune from such greater scrutiny, says Irving Geslewitz at Much Shelist.

  • What's Next After NLRB Ruling On Overbroad Noncompetes

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    If the National Labor Relations Board's recent ruling on noncompete provisions and its extension of Section 7 rights to limit noncompetes is adopted, this interpretation of the National Labor Relations Act will have to survive scrutiny by the courts without the deference previously afforded under the U.S. Supreme Court's recent overturning of Chevron, say attorneys at Littler.

  • Justices' Starbucks Ruling May Limit NLRB Injunction Wins

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    The U.S. Supreme Court’s recent decision in Starbucks v. McKinney, adopting a more stringent test for National Labor Relations Board Section 10(j) injunctions, may lessen the frequency with which employers must defend against injunctions alongside parallel unfair labor practice charges, say David Pryzbylski and Colleen Schade at Barnes & Thornburg.

  • A Way Forward For The US Steel-Nippon Deal And Union Jobs

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    Parties involved in Nippon Steel's acquisition of U.S. Steel should trust the Pennsylvania federal court overseeing a key environmental settlement to supervise a way of including future union jobs and cleaner air for the city of Pittsburgh as part of a transparent business marriage, says retired judge Susan Braden.

  • Big Business May Come To Rue The Post-Administrative State

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    Many have framed the U.S. Supreme Court’s recent decisions overturning Chevron deference and extending the window to challenge regulations as big wins for big business, but sand in the gears of agency rulemaking may be a double-edged sword, creating prolonged uncertainty that impedes businesses’ ability to plan for the future, says Todd Baker at Columbia University.

  • After Chevron: Various Paths For Labor And Employment Law

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    Labor and employment law leans heavily on federal agency guidance, so the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision to toss out Chevron deference will ripple through this area, with future workplace policies possibly taking shape through strategic litigation, informal guidance, state-level regulation and more, says Alexander MacDonald at Littler.

  • Eye On Compliance: A Brief History Of Joint Employer Rules

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    It's important to examine the journey of the joint employer rule, because if the National Labor Relations Board's Fifth Circuit appeal is successful and the 2023 version is made law, virtually every employer who contracts for labor likely could be deemed a joint employer, say Bruno Katz and Robert Curtis at Wilson Elser.

  • Top 5 Issues For Employers To Audit Midyear

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    Six months into 2024, developments from federal courts and regulatory agencies should prompt employers to reflect on their progress regarding artificial intelligence, noncompetes, diversity initiatives, religious accommodation and more, say Allegra Lawrence-Hardy and Lisa Haldar at Lawrence & Bundy.

  • Crafting An Effective Workplace AI Policy After DOL Guidance

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    Employers should take proactive steps to minimize their liability risk after the U.S. Department of Labor released artificial intelligence guidance principles on May 16, reflecting the reality that companies must begin putting into place policies that will dictate their expectations for how employees will use AI, say David Disler and Courtnie Bolden at ​​​​​​​Porzio Bromberg.

  • Politics In The Workplace: What Employers Need To Know

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    As the 2024 election approaches and protests continue across the country, employers should be aware of employees' rights — and limits on those rights — related to political speech and activities in the workplace, and be prepared to act proactively to prevent issues before they arise, say attorneys at Littler.

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