The proposed rule that the U.S. Department of Labor unveiled Wednesday advising when multiple employers are jointly liable for wage and hour violations is a scaled-back version of one from President Donald Trump's first administration, to account for the high court's Loper Bright ruling, attorneys said.
The U.S. Department of Labor announced its proposed rule Wednesday for clarifying when multiple employers are jointly liable for wage and hour violations.
The U.S. Department of Labor is likely to continue undoing Biden-era wage and hour policies and seeking to implement new ones despite the departure of President Donald Trump's labor secretary, agency veterans and other observers say.
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The proposed rule that the U.S. Department of Labor unveiled Wednesday advising when multiple employers are jointly liable for wage and hour violations is a scaled-back version of one from President Donald Trump's first administration, to account for the high court's Loper Bright ruling, attorneys said.
The U.S. Department of Labor announced its proposed rule Wednesday for clarifying when multiple employers are jointly liable for wage and hour violations.
The U.S. Department of Labor is likely to continue undoing Biden-era wage and hour policies and seeking to implement new ones despite the departure of President Donald Trump's labor secretary, agency veterans and other observers say.
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April 22, 2026
A logistics company wrapped up a suit Wednesday from a worker who said he was forced to retire in his 70s after his managers refused to train him in a new computer system and ignored his medical accommodation requests, according to a filing in North Carolina federal court.
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April 22, 2026
Frontier Airlines underpaid flight attendants by compensating them only for time spent in the air while requiring hours of unpaid work before and after each flight, according to a proposed class action filed in New Jersey federal court.
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April 22, 2026
A regional American Airlines subsidiary has resolved a former pilot's lawsuit claiming she was forced to resign because the company denied requests for time off to deal with depression and anxiety exacerbated by intense training exercises, according to Colorado federal court filings.
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April 22, 2026
The Fourth Circuit dismissed an appeal by an Apple-affiliated repair company in a long-running federal wage lawsuit after the employer failed to move the case forward by missing key filing deadlines.
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April 22, 2026
Legal tech company LinkSquares Inc. and inside sales representatives who claimed they were misclassified as overtime-exempt reached a settlement to avoid a jury trial that was set to begin in Boston federal court Tuesday.
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April 22, 2026
YouTuber MrBeast's companies demoted an executive for complaining that women were being sidelined and harassed by male colleagues and then fired her for taking leave after giving birth, the former employee said Wednesday in North Carolina federal court.
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April 22, 2026
Yelp failed to pay hourly workers for the minutes they spent waiting for their work computers to boot up before they could clock in for each shift, a former worker alleged in a proposed class action in California state court.
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April 22, 2026
Uber and DoorDash cannot temporarily block New York City laws regulating how they display gratuity options as an appeal moves forward, the Second Circuit ruled, finding the companies failed to show that an injunction is warranted.
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April 21, 2026
An association of builders failed to show it would succeed on its claims challenging a Biden-era executive order requiring labor agreements for all federal contracts exceeding $35 million, the Eleventh Circuit ruled, affirming a federal court's decision rejecting the group's request for an injunction.
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April 21, 2026
A California federal judge trimmed a former warehouse worker's proposed class and collective action against Levi Strauss & Co., dismissing a Nevada overtime claim as preempted while allowing waiting-time and timely pay claims to move forward.
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April 21, 2026
A group of nurses urged a Colorado federal judge to grant preliminary approval to a $14 million class action settlement resolving claims that their employer failed to properly calculate overtime and provide required breaks.
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April 21, 2026
The Ninth Circuit found that an Oregon federal court erred in dismissing claims and denying a bid for class certification by workers who alleged Jack in the Box failed to pay them for interrupted meal breaks, amending its earlier decision.
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April 20, 2026
A former housekeeper for Kylie Jenner has sued the celebrity influencer in California state court, alleging the housekeeper was forced to do additional work without pay, mocked by colleagues for her accent, treated as inferior due to her Salvadoran background, and that "things got violent" when she complained to her supervisors.
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April 20, 2026
A senior Stella McCartney America Inc. executive accused the fashion brand and its former co-owner LVMH of bias for denying him compensation raises, job security and promotions under a "Europe-first hierarchy" that prioritized European female executives over American employees.
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April 20, 2026
Delivery drivers who say a freight company's deductions left them with no pay and sometimes owing money, asked an Illinois federal judge Monday to authorize notice to a nationwide collective of their right to join a federal wage suit.
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April 20, 2026
A government contractor accused of retaliating against a former chief engineer has asked a Colorado federal judge to dismiss the worker's False Claims Act suit, arguing the former employee's complaint never identified any completed transaction with the government.
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April 20, 2026
President Donald Trump's labor secretary stepped down on Monday amid fallout from an internal investigation by the U.S. Department of Labor watchdog that apparently probed a relationship she allegedly had with a subordinate, and other issues.
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April 20, 2026
Bank of America will pay approximately $21,500, including attorney fees and costs, to resolve a Fair Labor Standards Act lawsuit alleging employees were not paid for time spent booting up and shutting down their computers, after a North Carolina federal judge signed off on the settlement.
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April 20, 2026
Uber failed to provide drivers with a process for challenging deactivations under California's Proposition 22, which provided certain benefits for app-based drivers and exempted them from an independent contractor classification law, a ride-hailing driver advocacy group alleged Monday in state court.
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April 20, 2026
A New York attorney has filed a $3.1 million contract suit against her former employer, accusing an Oklahoma-based national litigation firm of terminating her employment after she requested an overdue invoice, following more than three years of full-time contract work without benefits.
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April 20, 2026
A group of Wilmington police captains who say they were denied overtime pay for years asked a Delaware federal judge on Monday to rule in their favor without a trial, arguing undisputed evidence shows they are frontline officers entitled to overtime under federal law.
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April 20, 2026
An agricultural labor contractor and his company charged illegal recruitment fees to H-2A migrant workers, underpaid the workers and confiscated their passports to prevent them from leaving their jobs, according to a proposed class and collective action in North Carolina federal court.
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April 17, 2026
A software engineer for Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. has alleged the microchip-maker systematically discriminates against women by hiring them less frequently than men, underpaying women and fostering a "sexually-charged environment" rife with innuendo and harassment.
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April 17, 2026
A proposed class action filed in Illinois federal court accuses a multifamily property management company of deliberately paying its employees less overtime by making them work off the clock and of using technology to collect their face scans without written consent.
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April 17, 2026
A data science platform said Friday that a former executive, who claims he was not paid after investing $750,000 into the business, cannot drag three out-of-state people loosely connected to the company into a North Carolina federal court and that key claims should be trimmed.