By Michael A. Mora | May 12, 2020
If OSHA inspects the building, the government agency will examine whether the company is failing to provide a safe environment, and will focus its attention on policies the company has in place to mitigate the risks of not social distancing.
Daily Report Online | Commentary
By Amanda Farahany and Todd Stanton | May 12, 2020
Deciding who to bring back could be more challenging than originally deciding who to let go, and all the same laws and regulations apply.
By Katherine S. Catlos | May 12, 2020
In an interesting twist involving an employment law dispute, a recent case, 'Balubhai Patel, et al. v. Manuel Chavez', addressed the applicability of anti-SLAPP to federal law claims, specifically §1983 of title 42 of the United States Code.
New Jersey Law Journal | Commentary
By Fredric Paul Gallin and Eric Harrison | May 11, 2020
The Third Circuit strikes a blow for objective truth in the post-truth era.
New York Law Journal | Analysis|Expert Opinion
By Marc A. Lieberstein | May 8, 2020
In his Franchising column, Marc Lieberstein discusses what effect the current COVID‑19 pandemic is having on franchising and what the future will look like afterwards.
By Jenna Greene | May 8, 2020
"What we did was prove that the women's team in fact made more than the men's team in total compensation and on a per game basis,' said Latham & Watkins partners Jamie Wine and Michele Johnson.
By Jane Wester | May 7, 2020
The airline accepted $5 billion in April as part of the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act, and it agreed to "refrain from conducting involuntary layoffs or furloughs, or reducing pay rates and benefits," according to the complaint, which was filed Tuesday.
By Samantha Stokes | May 7, 2020
Mark Kanyuk, 62, claims Shearman & Sterling falsely accused him of taking vendor kickbacks as "a pretext for their plan to terminate their older employee" during the COVID-19 crisis.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Max Mitchell | May 7, 2020
The complaint said meat processing and packaging plants are particularly susceptible to the spread of infectious diseases.
By Mike Scarcella | May 7, 2020
Welcome to Labor of Law. On tap this week: As businesses open, lawsuits loom over covid-19 exposure | In legal recruitment case, stop playing 'games,' Texas judge warns | L&E headlines: Workplace surveillance in focus amid pandemic. Scroll down for Who Got the Work, and all the big moves. Thanks for reading!
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