By Calvin House | Published April 26, 2010 | Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off on California Supreme Court Alters Standard for Review of Employment Arbitration Awards
The California Supreme Court has ruled that trial courts may review the legal correctness of arbitration decisions involving employment claims based on statutory rights. This marks another swing in the pendulum marking judicial attitudes toward arbitration. Until the enactment of the Federal Arbitration Act in 1925 American courts were hostile to the ouster of judicial Read More
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On Monday, April 19, 2010, the U.S. Supreme Court heard argument in a case that involves public employee privacy interests in electronic messages delivered to pagers. The City of Ontario had audited text messages sent to pagers issued to its police officers to determine if the pagers were being misused for personal purposes. The Ninth Read More
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In these tough times, when employers are looking for every possible way to save money and students are desperate for jobs, be careful about practices that might run afoul of the wage and hour rules. Employers are frequently approached by students who are willing to work for nothing in order to make contacts that will Read More
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Allegations in a recent lawsuit against several McDonald’s franchisees in Monterey County raise an issue about application of the wage and hour laws to employees who work for more than one employer. The complaint filed on behalf of several hundred employees alleges that the franchisees used a “dual-shift” practice whereby a worker would be paid Read More
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The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals has ruled that the overtime requirements of the Fair Labor Standards Act apply to employees of a retail store owned and operated on the Puyallup Indian Reservation by members of the tribe. The store owners had argued that their tribe’s retained sovereignty barred overtime claims under the FLSA. Solis v. Read More
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The Risks Careerbuilder.com reports that 40 percent of respondents to a recent survey say that they have dated a co-worker. When employees get involved romantically, the employer can wind up getting sued, under several theories: 1. There is the case of the employee who will not take “no” for an answer. He or she pursues an Read More
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The Department of Homeland Security’s United States Citizenship and Immigration Services has delayed the effective date of its I-9 form revisions until April 3, 2009. Read the full text of the announcement. The revisions, announced in December 2008, will end authorization to accept expired documents, remove documents that are no longer issued from the list of Read More
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A recent decision in a class action by limousine drivers against their employer reminds us that sometimes employers may have to pay their employees for doing nothing. The Second District Court of Appeal in Los Angeles directed the trial court to consider whether the class of drivers should have been paid for gap time, which Read More
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An article in The New York Times on Saturday, January 31, reports on a trend that should come as no surprise — Layoffs Herald a Heyday for Employee Lawsuits. While the article is concerned chiefly with WARN notification requirements, other statutes pose much greater liability risks for employers who have to let employees go because of Read More
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The Second District Court of Appeal in Los Angeles has ruled that casinos may insist on tip pooling among their employees, but found that the Hawaiian Gardens Casinomay have violated the ban on participation in tip pools by supervisors. Lu v. Hawaiian Gardens Casino, Inc., Case No. B194209 (Jan. 22, 2009). We previously wrote about tip pooling Read More
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