Labor

  • December 11, 2025

    A 'Lost Year': Lawyers Look Back At NLRB Without A Quorum

    Labor attorneys have spent the last year in a holding pattern as they counsel clients on dealing with a National Labor Relations Board that has gone the bulk of 2025 without enough members to decide cases. 

  • December 11, 2025

    High Court Arb. Jurisdiction Case May Impact W&H Cases

    The U.S. Supreme Court's decision to take up a case about federal jurisdiction over the final say on arbitration awards is a technical battleground that may reaffirm state court power over such agreements, including those involving wage and hour claims, experts say.

  • December 11, 2025

    RLA Doesn't Confer Arb. Right Without Union, NY Judge Says

    The Railway Labor Act doesn't give airline workers the right to compel arbitration against their employers before a System Board of Adjustment if their union isn't representing them, a New York federal judge ruled, tossing a fired United Airlines technician's bid to compel arbitration without a Teamsters local's involvement.

  • December 11, 2025

    NJ Cannabis Co. Challenges Law Requiring Deal With Unions

    A cannabis company is urging a New Jersey federal court to pause an upcoming arbitration proceeding with a United Food and Commercial Workers local over its firing of several employees, claiming that it had been coerced into entering an agreement with the union by an unconstitutional state law.

  • December 10, 2025

    Gov't Urges Justices To Review ERISA Pleading Standard Split

    The U.S. solicitor general and the solicitor of labor said the U.S. Supreme Court needs to clarify that workers must back their suits targeting underperforming retirement funds with proper comparison proof, urging the justices to take up a case taking aim at Parker-Hannifin Corp.'s retirement plan management.

  • December 10, 2025

    Judge Weighs Security Claims In Federal Bargaining Case

    A D.C. federal judge declined to immediately reinstate collective bargaining agreements for U.S. Patent and Trademark Office and National Weather Service employees Wednesday, saying the case brought by the workers was more "complicated" and "difficult" than other federal worker bargaining suits he'd recently enjoined.

  • December 10, 2025

    AFA-CWA Must Face Conspiracy Claims From SkyWest Group

    The Association of Flight Attendants must keep facing allegations that it conspired with SkyWest workers to access confidential information held by SkyWest's employee group during an organizing drive, a Utah federal judge has ruled, preserving the SkyWest Inflight Association's conspiracy counterclaims against the Communications Workers of America-affiliated union.

  • December 10, 2025

    Minneapolis Schools' Teacher Layoff Policy Biased, DOJ Says

    The U.S. Department of Justice told a Minnesota federal court that Minneapolis Public Schools has union-negotiated rules that give employees from underrepresented backgrounds an illegal leg up when decisions about layoffs are made.

  • December 10, 2025

    6th Circ. Mulls NLRB's Injunction Burden After Justices' Tweak

    A Sixth Circuit panel on Wednesday probed a judge's inference that Michigan hospital workers would suffer without an order making their employer resume dealing with their union in the circuit's first National Labor Relations Board injunction case since the U.S. Supreme Court altered the courts' test last year.

  • December 10, 2025

    Utah Lawmakers Repeal Public-Sector Bargaining Ban

    The Utah Legislature has voted to repeal a controversial bill that banned public-sector unions from collective bargaining, a move that comes after months of backlash from labor unions.

  • December 10, 2025

    4th Circ. Icy To Reviving Retired Miners' Health Coverage Fight

    The Fourth Circuit seemed disinclined Wednesday to reopen a dispute over lifetime retirement health and life insurance benefits from a proposed class of retired coal miners, as two judges knocked the coal company's attempt to pick apart the results of a seven-day bench trial that broadly favored them.

  • December 10, 2025

    Unions Push For New Block On Federal Worker Layoffs

    A California federal judge who blocked State Department layoffs set for Dec. 5 should halt the government from dismissing any Education and State Department employees until Jan. 30, a union coalition argued, saying Congress set that timeline in its appropriations bill and the government is trying to defy it.

  • December 09, 2025

    7th Circ. Mulls Pension Plan's Decision To Expel Penske Unit

    A Seventh Circuit judge on Tuesday suggested Penske's push for the judicial review of trustees' internal decision-making was a "long and new stretch" in a dispute over whether a Teamsters pension plan had the power to expel a Penske bargaining unit in Dallas, questioning what law authorizes such scrutiny.

  • December 09, 2025

    Ohio Clinic Beats Firing Case Before NLRB Judge

    An Ohio addiction treatment clinic's 2022 firing of a receptionist didn't violate federal labor law, a National Labor Relations Board judge ruled Tuesday, finding that a pair of letters the receptionist co-signed about work conditions that year didn't factor into her dismissal.

  • December 09, 2025

    United Says Labor Contract Pushes Wage Row To Arbitration

    Federal labor law requires United Airlines Inc. flight attendants to arbitrate their proposed wage class action, the airline told a New Jersey federal court, saying resolution of the claims hinges on the parties' collective bargaining agreement.

  • December 09, 2025

    NJ Builder Says Court Can Decide Tunnel Labor Row

    The Third Circuit's finding that federal labor law blocks courts from stopping National Labor Relations Board cases doesn't apply to a builder's bid to block an imminent bidding deadline on the lucrative Hudson Tunnel Project, the builder and a unionized employee told a New York federal judge.

  • December 09, 2025

    Ind. Casino Workers Vote For Teamsters After 7-Week Strike

    Workers at an Indianapolis casino have voted for representation by a Teamsters unit, ending a seven-week strike demanding that the casino recognize the unit as their representative.

  • December 09, 2025

    3rd Circ. Won't Let Post-Gazette Duck Benefits Injunction

    A Third Circuit panel is standing by its decision to let an injunction against the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette remain active while the newspaper appeals, saying it won't reconsider its Nov. 24 refusal to stay an injunction requiring the paper to restore its workers' pre-2020 benefits.

  • December 08, 2025

    11th Circ. Vacates Benefits Ruling In Black Lung Case

    The Eleventh Circuit on Monday vacated a ruling that awarded survivors benefits to the widow of a railroad engineer who died after yearslong exposure to coal dust, finding the U.S. Department of Labor review board wrongly determined that a preparation plant was part of an underground coal mine. 

  • December 08, 2025

    Conservative Justices Probe 'Husk' Of FTC Firing Protections

    The U.S. Supreme Court's conservative majority pushed back Monday against the 90-year-old precedent permitting the removal only for cause of Federal Trade Commission members, and perhaps those serving other independent agencies, calling those safeguards a "dried husk" and wondering where to draw the line for protected agencies.

  • December 08, 2025

    NY Hotel Ordered To Pay $4.1M In Union Benefits Dispute

    A Manhattan hotel operator must hand over $4.1 million to a hotel and hospital workers union, a New York federal judge ruled, finding that the operator has failed to respond to accusations that it owes money to multiple health benefit funds.

  • December 08, 2025

    Pa. Court Halts Bucks College Project Over Labor Agreement

    Bucks County Community College in eastern Pennsylvania can't move ahead with a $2 million expansion of its HVAC training program because a potential bidder convinced a majority of the Commonwealth Court on Friday that the school's preexisting "public labor agreement" was likely discriminatory to nonunion workers and met no urgent need.

  • December 08, 2025

    Teamsters Local Defends Call Not To Arbitrate Worker's Firing

    A Teamsters local asked a Michigan federal judge to remove it as a defendant in a Black construction worker's bias lawsuit, saying it decided not to arbitrate the employee's firing grievance not because of his race, but because it didn't think it could win.

  • December 08, 2025

    Justices Block Union From Appealing 5th Circ. SpaceX Ruling

    The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday denied a union's bid to seek review of a Fifth Circuit ruling that entitles employers targeted by the National Labor Relations Board to court orders blocking the agency's cases.

  • December 08, 2025

    Arbitrator Erred In Tossing Firing Grievance, Union Tells Court

    An Indiana federal judge should vacate an arbitration award that allowed a landfill employee's firing to stand, the ex-worker's union argued, saying the arbitrator based his award not on the language of the union contract but on a rule that he "invented."

Expert Analysis

  • Basics Of Collective Bargaining Law In Principle And Practice

    Excerpt from Practical Guidance
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    Rebecca Bernhard and Jennifer Service at Barnes & Thornburg discuss the nuts and bolts of what the National Labor Relations Act requires of employers during collective bargaining, and translate these obligations into practical steps that will help companies prepare for, and succeed during, the negotiation process.

  • The Risks Of Employee Political Discourse On Social Media

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    As election season enters its final stretch and employees increasingly engage in political speech on social media, employers should beware the liability risks and consider policies that negotiate the line between employees' rights and the limits on those rights, say Bradford Kelley and James McGehee at Littler.

  • Proposed Law Would Harm NYC Hospitality Industry

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    A recently proposed New York City Law that would update hotel licensing and staff coverage requirements could give the city commissioner and unions undue control over the city's hospitality industry, and harm smaller hotels that cannot afford full-time employees, says Stuart Saft at Holland & Knight.

  • US Labor And Employment Law Holds Some Harsh Trade-Offs

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    U.S. labor and employment laws have evolved into a product of exposure-capping compromise, which merits discussion in a presidential election year when the dialogue has focused on purported protections of middle-class workers, says Reuben Guttman at Guttman Buschner.

  • Water Cooler Talk: Immigration Insights From 'The Proposal'

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    Tracey Diamond and Evan Gibbs at Troutman Pepper chat with their colleague Robert Lee about how immigration challenges highlighted in the romantic comedy "The Proposal" — beyond a few farcical plot contrivances — relate to real-world visa processes and employer compliance.

  • Insuring Lender's Baseball Bet Leads To Major League Dispute

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    In RockFence v. Lloyd's, a California federal court seeks to define who qualifies as a professional baseball player for purposes of an insurance coverage payout, providing an illuminating case study of potential legal issues arising from baseball service loans, say Marshall Gilinsky and Seán McCabe at Anderson Kill.

  • Preparing For The NLRB's New Union Recognition Final Rule

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    The National Labor Relations Board's impending new final rule on union recognition puts the employer at a particular disadvantage in a decertification election, and best practices include conducting workplace assessments to identify and proactively address employee issues, say Louis Cannon and Gerald Bradner at Baker Donelson.

  • The Big Issues A BigLaw Associates' Union Could Address

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    A BigLaw associates’ union could address a number of issues that have the potential to meaningfully improve working conditions, diversity and attorney well-being — from restructured billable hour requirements to origination credit allocation, return-to-office mandates and more, says Tara Rhoades at The Sanity Plea.

  • It's Time For A BigLaw Associates' Union

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    As BigLaw faces a steady stream of criticism about its employment policies and practices, an associates union could effect real change — and it could start with law students organizing around opposition to recent recruiting trends, says Tara Rhoades at The Sanity Plea.

  • Key Steps To Employer Petitions For Union Elections

    Excerpt from Practical Guidance
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    Since the National Labor Relations Board shifted the burden of requesting formal union elections onto employers in its Cemex decision last year — and raised the stakes for employer missteps during the process — companies should be prepared to correctly file representation management election petitions and respond to union demands for recognition, says Adam Keating at Duane Morris.

  • 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.

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