By Calvin House | Published March 7, 2020 | Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off on CDC Advice for Employers on Coronavirus
As the coronavirus spreads, many employers have questions about how to respond. The federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has the following advice: Actively encourage sick employees to stay home. Employees who appear to have acute respiratory illness symptoms (i.e. cough, shortness of breath) upon arrival to work or become sick during the day Read More
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In response to a question from the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, the California Supreme Court has explained what the term “hours worked” means, as it is used in the California wage orders. The case involved a class action claim that Apple should pay its retail store employees for the time Read More
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The California Trucking Association has obtained a temporary restraining order against application of AB 5 to independent truckers. As explained in an earlier post, AB 5 would expressly incorporate the ABC test for employment (as articulated by the California Supreme Court in the Dynamex decision) into the Labor Code. United States District Judge Roger T. Benitez issued the TRO on December Read More
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Attribution: Alpha Stock Images – https://alphastockimages.com/ Uber, Postmates, Uber driver Lydia Olson and Postmates courier Miguel Perez have filed a lawsuit seeking to have AB 5 declared unconstitutional in the United States District Court for the Central District of California in Los Angeles. Lydia Olson v. State of California, Case No. 2:19-cv-10956. (Read the complaint here.) Read More
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AB 51 purported to ban arbitration agreements as a condition of employment, continued employment, or the receipt of any employment-related benefit, by adding new section 432.6 to the Labor Code, effective January 1, 2020. On Monday, December 30, 2019, United States District Judge Kimberly J. Mueller issued a temporary restraining order against enforcement, pending a hearing to Read More
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A paragraph from a recent article in the Los Angeles Times about the “Revenge of the showbiz assistants” prompts a few words of caution. The article quotes a spokeswoman for WME (a talent agency) as saying that “each assistant automatically has 10 hours of overtime allotted into their paycheck each week.” While the details of Read More
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Image provided by www.quotecatalog.com Uber, Lyft and Doordash have launched a campaign to pass an initiative that would limit the impact of AB 5, a new California law that seeks to increase the number of workers entitled to protections for employees under California law. If passed by voters next year, the initiative would add new provisions Read More
Read MoreWe represent Los Angeles School Police Officer Daniel East in a lawsuit claiming that Officer East participated in the unlawful prosecution of a juvenile adjudicated a murder, whose conviction was overturned. Our appeal from the District Court’s refusal to grant summary judgment was heard by a 3-judge panel of the Ninth Circuit on October 15, Read More
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Governor Newsom has signed AB51 into law. The new statute purports to prohibit employers from requiring applicants or employees to waive their rights bring lawsuits to vindicate their labor and employment claims. It adds new Labor Code section 432.6, which, effective January 1, 2020, will provide: (a) A person shall not, as a condition of employment, Read More
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The Ninth Circuit has affirmed a summary judgment that dismissed claims against McDonald’s Corp. in a class action alleging various violations of the California Labor Code. The plaintiffs had claimed that McDonald’s was a joint employer with its franchisees. Salazar v. McDonald’s Corp., Case No. 17-15673 (Oct. 1, 2019), the Court rejected three theories that Read More
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