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Following a suit filed in New York federal court, employers are advised to be extremely careful about how they communicate changes to employees’ hours.
April 1 - Finance and investment-related court cases
MetLife beat back a U.S. attempt to label it too big to fail, which would’ve put America’s biggest life insurer under tougher government scrutiny and forced it to put more money in reserves.
March 30 -
For labor unions, the death of Justice Antoin Scalia is is truly an instance of deus ex machina — a miraculous ending that doesn’t fit the rest of the play.
March 29Harvard University -
Benefit plan sponsors will have to be more careful about recording workers’ hours and paying appropriate compensation.
March 28 -
From the Affordable Care Act to the EEOC’s retaliation guidance, the world of benefits law is always rapidly evolving, says lawyer Richard Meneghello.
March 23Fisher & Phillips -
Justice Antonin Scalia’s death and ACA developments have created legal uncertainties that employers and their advisers should know about.
March 17Fisher & Phillips -
Merrick Brian Garland, President Obama’s nominee for Supreme Court Justice, is considered a moderate, but at least one business group is expressing concerns about his record as an appellate court judge.
March 17 -
In the first case of its kind, a federal court in New York City has recently given employers some potential instruction on how it views the inevitable interplay between the ERISA and the ACA.
March 10Foley & Lardner -
When it comes to producing documents in employment litigation, the deck is usually stacked in favor of the employee, except in unusual situations when an employee is squirreling away documents in an effort to build a case against the employer.
February 25Foley & Lardner -
The Supreme Court Justice’s passing calls into question the future of some benefits-related decisions.
February 19Fisher & Phillips