The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission's walkback on enforcing sexual orientation and gender identity discrimination protections has fostered a hostile environment for LGBTQ+ people within the agency, a former commission senior official said in a discrimination charge announced Thursday.
The track record of a law from former President Joe Biden's administration that curbed mandatory arbitration for sexual harassment allegations showed that enacting a similar ban shielding age bias claims won't trigger an avalanche of suits, Senate lawmakers were told Wednesday.
A Ninth Circuit panel declined on Tuesday to revive a group of Washington firefighters' suit against their employer for refusing them religious exemptions from a state COVID-19 vaccination mandate, concluding the fire agency would've faced "substantial costs" had it allowed them to continue working without the shot in 2021.
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The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission's walkback on enforcing sexual orientation and gender identity discrimination protections has fostered a hostile environment for LGBTQ+ people within the agency, a former commission senior official said in a discrimination charge announced Thursday.
The track record of a law from former President Joe Biden's administration that curbed mandatory arbitration for sexual harassment allegations showed that enacting a similar ban shielding age bias claims won't trigger an avalanche of suits, Senate lawmakers were told Wednesday.
A Ninth Circuit panel declined on Tuesday to revive a group of Washington firefighters' suit against their employer for refusing them religious exemptions from a state COVID-19 vaccination mandate, concluding the fire agency would've faced "substantial costs" had it allowed them to continue working without the shot in 2021.
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September 04, 2025
Seward & Kissel LLP has hired a former McDermott Will & Schulte LLP attorney as co-head of its employment practice, touting her expertise advising clients on both litigation and the employment aspects of corporate transactions in its announcement on Wednesday.
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September 04, 2025
A Colorado federal judge tossed a U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission suit claiming an appliance retailer illegally fired a worker who requested more medical leave to treat her long COVID, ruling the agency failed to show how she made a formal accommodation request.
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September 04, 2025
A former NFL player's deletion of references to the league's collective bargaining agreement should not save his suit against the NFL over his punishment for violating its substance abuse policy, the league and his former team told a Colorado federal judge in a bid to drop the suit.
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September 03, 2025
A man who claims the Denver Sheriff Department violated Title VII of the Civil Rights Act by promoting three women to captain over him as part of a self-imposed quota for female officers has asked a Colorado federal judge to deny the sheriff's department summary judgment.
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September 03, 2025
A subsidiary of car rental giant Enterprise asked a Florida federal judge Wednesday to approve a $1.8 million deal that aims to end a U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission suit claiming the company refused to hire older applicants for a management training program.
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September 03, 2025
A former U.S. Air Force assistant general manager told an Arizona federal court that he supported his claims that he was denied paid safety leave during the coronavirus pandemic because of his disability, urging the court to keep his case standing.
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September 03, 2025
The Trump administration illegally froze more than $2 billion in grants earmarked for Harvard University when it failed to offer an explanation as to how cutting the funds addressed the government's stated goal of ending antisemitism on campus, a Massachusetts federal judge ruled Wednesday.
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September 03, 2025
The city of Hartford will not have to face a lawsuit alleging the police mishandled a state representative's sexual assault report, for the time being, with a Connecticut federal judge saying the claims are "conclusory and simply state a legal conclusion" that the department customarily mistreats women and Muslims.
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September 03, 2025
A former records manager told a Pennsylvania federal court that Ballard Spahr LLP and a legal tech provider unlawfully passed her over for jobs in favor of younger men and ultimately forced out because of her health problems.
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September 03, 2025
The former general counsel of TransDigm Group Inc., an aerospace parts manufacturer, has filed a complaint in Ohio state court alleging she was terminated in retaliation for reporting two instances of sexual harassment and antitrust compliance concerns.
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September 03, 2025
A fired referee suing the NBA for religious discrimination asked a New York federal court to reconsider its ruling that denied him front and back pay, arguing the judge overlooked controlling case law that makes the decision "inappropriate."
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September 03, 2025
An Indiana federal judge has recommended sanctioning an attorney representing a woman in an employment discrimination suit against a county court's juvenile detention center after the lawyer included faulty citations in a discovery brief, regardless of how the citations got there.
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September 03, 2025
Arnold & Porter Kaye Scholer LLP continues to grow its West Coast team, announcing Wednesday two more longtime K&L Gates LLP attorneys have joined as partners — a labor and employment expert in Seattle and a business litigation pro in Los Angeles.
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September 02, 2025
A Canadian cannabis company urged a Florida federal court to toss a whistleblower lawsuit brought by its former chief operating officer alleging he was wrongly terminated for attempting to bring facilities into compliance with safety standards, saying the complaint fails to state a plausible claim.
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September 02, 2025
The Sixth Circuit refused Tuesday to revive a suit from a former health system executive who said his push to become CEO got him fired because the company wanted a woman in the role, finding that his subversion of the company's succession plan — not his gender — got him canned.
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September 02, 2025
A former finance director for a Novo Nordisk unit hit the company with a sex and age bias lawsuit last week, saying in a North Carolina federal court complaint that her career was cut short after she complained about workplace safety and discrimination.
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September 02, 2025
The Eleventh Circuit upheld Tuesday a Georgia county's victory over a Black former police officer's discrimination suit, saying he didn't show that race played a part in his termination.
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September 02, 2025
Federal government efforts to end diversity, equity and inclusion programs; states’ industry-specific wage hikes that have reached new heights and a National Labor Relations Board that is stuck without a quorum are employment law trends to watch, Littler Mendelson PC’s Workplace Policy Institute said in an annual report. Here, Law360 explores the report’s findings.
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September 02, 2025
A Pennsylvania federal judge tossed a suit Tuesday from a Christian worker who claimed 3M fired her out of religious bias when she refused its COVID-19 vaccine mandate, ruling her termination was fair game because letting her remain unvaccinated would have made the company less competitive.
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September 02, 2025
The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission announced Tuesday it reached a pair of deals worth $145,000 with a Virginia-based Dairy Queen franchise after finding evidence that female workers, some of them teenagers, faced sexual harassment at two of its locations.
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September 02, 2025
Courts can't sort out who pays arbitration fees, and employers' refusal to pay such fees isn't a failure to arbitrate, the Second Circuit ruled Tuesday, siding with X in a case accusing the social media platform of owing workers severance.
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September 02, 2025
A former kindergarten teacher did not properly back up her case alleging she was denied proper classroom support and micromanaged because she's older, the Seventh Circuit found, declining to reinstate her suit but concluding that the Age Discrimination in Employment Act can cover harassment claims.
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September 02, 2025
A Maryland federal judge tossed a Black electrical engineer's suit claiming defense contractor Northrop Grumman handed him lackluster promotions and pay raises out of racial bias, saying he hasn't put forward evidence that prejudice was the reason for the offers he received.
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August 29, 2025
The Fourth Circuit will consider whether a trial court rightly blocked parts of two Trump administration executive orders targeting diversity, equity and inclusion programs, and the Fifth Circuit will consider whether United Airlines employees correctly won class certification for Title VII claims challenging the company's COVID-19 accommodation practices. Here are five argument sessions that discrimination attorneys should keep tabs on in the coming month.
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August 29, 2025
Two logistics companies have failed to escape a proposed class action accusing them of misusing a professional worker visa program to lure workers from Mexico, with a Georgia federal judge trimming out some discrimination and fair labor claims, but allowing several others to proceed.