• 01.16.18

    New Tax Bill Deletes Deduction for Sexual Harassment Settlements

    Employers, take note: The new Tax Cuts and Jobs Act contains a provision that prohibits deductions for settlements or payments related to sexual harassment or abuse if the payment is subject to a nondisclosure agreement.

  • 12.21.17

    NLRB’s Noteworthy Developments

    Recent decisions from the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) find the board overturning two of its previously established standards.

  • 12.12.17

    EEOC Touts 'Significant Progress' in FY 2017 Report

    The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission commended itself in the agency’s annual Performance and Accountability Report, highlighting “significant progress” in managing the pending inventory of Fiscal Year 2017 charges with the lowest number of cases in the past decade.

  • 11.16.17

    California Court Tosses Arbitration Agreement ‘Permeated’ by Unconscionability

    Concluding that an arbitration agreement was both substantively and procedurally unconscionable, a California appellate panel affirmed denial of an employer’s motion to compel arbitration.

  • 11.07.17

    California Employers Face Multiple New Laws

    With several new employment-related measures recently signed into law, California employers should start preparing themselves now.

  • 10.30.17

    California Appellate Court Sides With Plaintiff in PAGA Suit

    A plaintiff seeking civil penalties under the Private Attorneys General Act (PAGA) for a violation of the Labor Code is not required to satisfy the “injury” and “knowing and intentional” requirements of the statute, a California appellate panel has concluded.

  • 10.20.17

    Employer Bound by Oral Contract, California Appellate Court Affirms

    Upholding an oral contract, the California Court of Appeal agreed with an employee that she should be paid a commission for certain work—despite an employment letter that expressly stated it superseded any oral agreements.

  • 09.21.17

    More Obama-Era Policies—Pay Data Collection, Overtime Rule—Fall

    Continuing the rollback of Obama-era policies, the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) hit pause on the collection of Employer Information Report (EEO-1) pay data and the battle over the Department of Labor’s (DOL) white collar overtime exemption rule came to an end.

  • 08.31.17

    Court Shoots Down Officers’ FLSA Claim for Off-Duty Work

    Chicago police officers seeking compensation for work performed using their mobile devices while the officers were off duty could not recover when their employer did not know the overtime work was not being reported or paid, the U.S. Court of Appeals, Seventh Circuit has ruled.

  • 08.10.17

    Deferred Vacation Policy Lawful, California Appellate Court Rules

    A vacation policy that employees do not begin to earn vacation time until after their first year of employment is lawful, the California Court of Appeal has ruled, affirming dismissal of a former employee’s lawsuit.

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