By Amanda Bronstad | May 30, 2018
U.S. District Judge Peter Sheridan found that individual officers of New Jersey-based Bil-Jim Construction Co. Inc., a subcontractor hired to rebuild the beaches near Barnegat Bay, were not personally liable under the New Jersey Prevailing Wage Act.
By Mary-Christine Sungaila, Alex Stevens and Marco A. Pulido | May 30, 2018
The authors detail the impact of the high court's decision on FLSA claims and outline the decision's implications for the arbitrability of claims arising under California's Labor Code Private Attorneys General Act.
By Joseph Evans | May 30, 2018
Freshfields and Lewis Silkin named as advisers in letter sent to International Development Committee by charity's former chair
By Erin Mulvaney | May 30, 2018
Facebook is not a defendant in the case, but major U.S. companies are accused of violating employment law in recruitment practices that use the social media company's advertising platforms.
By Cheryl Miller | May 29, 2018
“The argument that these companies have tried to use in the past—that they're just a technology platform—doesn't pass the smell test,” San Francisco City Attorney Dennis Herrera says. “People go to Microsoft or Salesforce for software. People go to Uber or Lyft for a ride.”
By Erin Mulvaney | May 29, 2018
“The takeaway here is that algorithms may not care about civil rights laws, but we do and the law does,” Outten & Golden's Peter Romer-Friedman says. Facebook is not a defendant in the case, where major U.S. companies are accused of violating employment law in recruitment practices that use the social media company's advertising platforms.
By Charles Toutant | May 29, 2018
The Appellate Division upheld the disqualification of Kevin Barber and his firm, Niedweske Barber Hager of Morristown, from representing the plaintiff in a whistleblower case.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Barry Black and John B. Madden | May 29, 2018
New York courts have not yet decided whether they may hear sexual harassment lawsuits against religious institutions. Learn more in this Religion Law column by Barry Black and John B. Madden.
By Karen Sloan | May 29, 2018
Maggie Tsavaris alleges that Savannah Law School and Atlanta's John Marshall Law School have a pattern of terminating faculty before they come up for tenure.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By David B. Saxe and Danielle C. Lesser | May 29, 2018
The doctrine that faithless servants paid on a “task-by-task” basis need only to forfeit their salary relating to disloyal activities initially developed in federal courts interpreting New York law.
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