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A Federal Appellate Court Finds the NLRB to Be Unconstitutional

The following article by Harold Meyerson appeared in The American Prospect. The National Labor Relations Act—that pillar of American democracy that gives workers the right to bargain collectively with their employers—was enacted 90 years ago this summer. Its constitutionality was upheld two years later by the Supreme Court, and no successful challenge to its constitutionality…

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Trump Widens His Attack on Unions Just Days Before Labor Day

The president has widened his attack on federal worker unions just days before Labor Day. GovExec.com reports: “President Trump on Thursday signed a new executive order targeting unions at more than half a dozen agencies, again under the auspices of national security. The edict, which was published within minutes of Trump’s proclamation marking Monday’s Labor…

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Pull up a chair and read this:

Imagine standing at a cash register for eight hours, day after day, without a single chance to sit. Or clocking in and realizing you won’t be paid for the last hour you worked. For decades, corporations treated these issues as minor complaints. But California workers fought back — and won millions. This blog covers the landmark seating and wage-hour cases that reshaped workplace rights. From CVS’s Supreme Court showdown to Walmart’s $65 million bombshell, these are stories of dignity, health, and the law. Case 1: Kilby v. CVS (2016 Supreme Court Decision) CVS cashiers and customer reps stocked shelves, bagged groceries, cleaned counters — and rang up sales. Most tasks could have been done sitting. But CVS forbade it. The California Supreme Court ruled in 2016 that employers must examine each specific task: If a job reasonably permits sitting, seats must be provided. Employers cannot argue “the overall job requires standing” as an excuse. This case set the legal foundation for every settlement that followed. Case 2: Bank of America – $15 Million Settlement Tellers across California stood behind counters, even when processing paperwork or waiting on customers. The work could be done seated, but chairs were denied. After years of litigation, Bank of America paid $15 million. Three named plaintiffs received $25,000 each. Workers collectively received millions in payouts. BofA had to implement a new seating policy and inform employees of their rights. As one teller put it: “We weren’t asking for luxury. We just wanted chairs.” Case 3: Safeway – $12 Million Settlement Cashier Eva Sharp led a class action spanning nearly eight years. She and thousands of Safeway cashiers stood long shifts without stools, despite registers allowing seating. The 2019 settlement totaled $12 million: Eva received ~$14,000. 30,000+ cashiers split about $1.8 million. Safeway promised to supply seating for two years. It was a small fortune for many minimum-wage workers — and proof persistence pays off. Case 4: Target – $9 Million Settlement Target’s bright red stores carried a dark reality: over 90,000 cashiers in California were denied seating. The company agreed to pay $9 million, with roughly $3.9 million in attorney fees. Though workers’ individual payouts were modest, the scale was enormous — showing how widespread the issue was. Case 5: Walmart – $65 Million Bombshell The largest seating case ever. Nearly 100,000 Walmart cashiers joined forces after years of standing at registers. Walmart agreed to pay $65 million in 2018. Individual payouts reached $25,000 per worker. Walmart changed practices nationwide. It wasn’t just a California win. It set off a national conversation: do workers deserve dignity at the register? The answer was clear. Case 6: AutoZone (Meda v. AutoZone, 2022) AutoZone claimed it “provided seats.” In reality, two chairs were tucked away in management areas, far from the registers. Workers didn’t even know they could sit. The court ruled that “mere availability” isn’t enough. Seats must be accessible at the workstation. Workers must be informed they’re allowed to sit. This case clarified that employers can’t just check a box — they must genuinely make seating available. Case 7: Ralphs (LaFace v. Ralphs, 2022) In a rare loss for workers, Ralphs argued its cashiers never had downtime. Courts agreed, ruling that constant customer flow meant no obligation to provide seating. The case also confirmed that PAGA seating claims are bench trials (decided by judges, not juries). This showed the law isn’t automatic — context matters. Broader Impact These cases changed more than policy. They changed lives: Health: Less back pain, fewer leg injuries. Dignity: Workers finally treated like humans, not props. Financial Relief: Payouts gave families breathing room. And beyond California, they inspired other states and employers to review seating rules voluntarily. Conclusion From CVS to Walmart, workers proved one truth: when they stand together, they win the right to sit. At WRCA, we fight to keep this momentum going. 👉 Join WRCA today. Subscribe, share, and support workers’ rights.

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Former Union Leader Now Head Of European Country

A former union leader is now the prime minister of a European country. EuroNews reports: “Lithuania’s parliament elected a former labour union leader and relative political newcomer as the country’s new prime minister on Tuesday, weeks after her predecessor resigned following investigations into his business dealings. Lawmakers approved Inga Ruginienė as the new head of government…

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Our Union-Made Labor Day Picnic Guide

Labor Day is around the corner and that means parades, a salute to labor successes, and, of course, picnics! Support good union jobs this Labor Day with our exclusive shopping guide above and use your wallet to support a better economy for workers. Happy Labor Day from all of us at Labor 411 Hot Dogs,…

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Make It A Workers’ Film Festival on Labor Day

Feature Films “On the Waterfront” (1954) “The Molly Maguires” (1970) “Norma Rae” (1979) “Matewan” (1987) “Bread and Roses” (2000) “North Country” (2005) “Made in Dagenham” (2010) Documentaries “Native Land” (1942) “American Factory” (2019) “Roger & Me” (1989) “Harlan County U.S.A.” (1976) “The Willmar 8” (1982) “At the River I Stand” (1993) “Miles of Smiles: Years…

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Viral Burger King Worker Fired After Running Store Alone: A Wake-Up Call for Workers’ Rights

Introduction

When a video of a single mother running an entire Burger King shift by herself went viral, the internet rallied in support. Here was a woman, balancing motherhood with back-breaking work, keeping an entire restaurant afloat alone. Yet instead of recognition, she was fired. Her story exposes the painful truth faced by millions of American workers: dedication doesn’t guarantee dignity.

The Problem

The fast-food industry has long relied on underpaid and overworked employees. Hamilton’s story is not unique—many workers are asked to carry unreasonable workloads with little support. When they push back or fall short due to family responsibilities, employers often punish rather than protect them. For working parents, especially single mothers, this creates an impossible cycle: work long hours to provide for your kids, but lose your job if childcare interferes.

Legal Context

Federal labor law requires safe and reasonable working conditions, and some states—including California—have stronger protections for parents. Yet loopholes abound. Employers often cite “attendance” or “policy violations” to cover up retaliation, leaving workers vulnerable. In Hamilton’s case, the company policy prohibited employees from working alone—yet enforcement only came after she went viral. This contradiction exposes how policies are selectively applied, usually to the worker’s detriment.

In California, recent cases involving retaliation against caregivers show courts beginning to side with employees. But nationally, protections remain patchy. Without strong advocacy and enforcement, more parents will face the same cruel choice: job or family.

Worker Impact

Hamilton’s words resonate with so many: “My kids come first… y’all don’t pay for no babysitter.” Millions of parents are forced into the same trade-off. Low wages don’t cover childcare, yet missing work risks termination. The result? Burnout, poverty, and broken families—all while billion-dollar corporations profit.

Her viral video made her a symbol of resilience, but the firing revealed the fragility of worker protections in industries built on exploitation.

Call to Action

Stories like Hamilton’s are why the Workers Rights Compliance Alliance (WRCA) exists. Workers should never be punished for protecting their families. By joining WRCA, you can help hold corporations accountable, demand fair scheduling, and push for laws that prioritize human dignity.

No parent should have to choose between their job and their children. Stand with us—because workers deserve better.

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Five Takeaways from Rory Sutherland’s Alchemy

Over the summer, I like to expand my reading list into different topics. This year I discovered Rory Sutherland and his book Alchemy: The Power of Ideas That Don’t Make Sense. Sutherland is a British marketing executive and vice chairman of Ogilvy, but his insights go far beyond advertising. His book weaves together ideas from economics, psychology, evolutionary biology, and philosophy. It’s packed with practical wisdom for personal growth as well as for running and marketing a business.

While the book is full of insights on nearly every page, here are five key takeaways that I found especially relevant for employers and business leaders.

1. “If you are wholly predictable, people learn to hack you.”

Sutherland argues that the best ideas often come from unexpected places. He urges readers not to rely solely on logic, but also to leave room for chance, counterintuitive thinking, and the quirks of human psychology.

One of his fascinating examples comes from bee colonies: roughly 20% of bees ignore the “waggle dance” instructions that tell them where to find pollen. Instead, they set off in random directions, often discovering new sources of food. Without these “adventurer bees”—which I like to think of as modern venture capitalists—the hive would eventually fail once its known sources ran dry.

Takeaway: There’s risk mitigation in being unpredictable. Businesses benefit when they experiment, explore new opportunities, and avoid becoming entirely predictable.

2. Psycho-logic

Sutherland introduces the idea of “psycho-logic”:

“Logic is what makes a successful engineer or mathematician, but psycho-logic is what has made us a successful breed of monkey, that has survived and flourished over time. This alternative logic emerges from a parallel operating system within the human mind, which often operates unconsciously, and is far more powerful and pervasive than you realize. Rather like gravity, it is a force that nobody noticed until someone put a name to it.”

He points out that strict logic always leads to the same place as your competitors. The problem is that business often underestimates—and even ignores—the role of psychology in determining whether a product or service succeeds.

Takeaway: Employers and business leaders should remember that psychology, not just logic, drives customer and employee behavior.

3. Rethinking Hiring

Sutherland makes an important observation:

“[W]e are much more likely to take risks when hiring ten people than when hiring one.”

This, he argues, can naturally lead to more diversity without imposing quotas. He even says he’d interview a candidate with a “rotten” degree if that person were also the reigning under-25 UK backgammon champion. Why? Because unusual achievements signal qualities you won’t uncover by applying identical hiring criteria across the board.

Takeaway: Be wary of hiring averages. Standardized criteria produce standardized hires. Employers who take calculated risks in hiring can uncover exceptional and unexpected talent.

4. Two Types of Businesses

Sutherland describes two business models:

  1. The tourist restaurant approach – focused on maximizing profit from a single transaction.
  2. The local pub approach – focused on cultivating long-term relationships and repeat visits.

The latter model is built on trust. For example, businesses that resolve customer problems at their own expense demonstrate they are invested in long-term relationships. On the other hand, businesses that squeeze for short-term profits often come across as untrustworthy.

Takeaway: Employers should ask themselves whether they’re building for one-time transactions—or building for loyalty.

5. Why Branding Matters

Sutherland explains:

“Without the feedback loop made possible by distinctive and distinguishable petals or brands, nothing can improve.”

His example comes from Soviet factories, which were once required to produce a quota of rivets each month. Since the rivets couldn’t be stamped with the factory’s name, no one could tell which factories were producing poor-quality rivets. Over time, the incentive to care about quality disappeared – and the factories found it was easier to hit monthly quotas of rivets of poor-quality. Without names, the rivets became commodities. Once factories were required to stamp their names on the rivets, quality improved dramatically.

Takeaway: Branding provides accountability, feedback, and differentiation. Without it, quality suffers and products become commodities.

Alchemy is filled with unconventional wisdom that challenges the way we think about business and human behavior. These five lessons only scratch the surface, but they highlight the importance of embracing unpredictability, understanding psychology, taking smart risks in hiring, building long-term trust, and valuing the power of branding.

For employers, Sutherland’s message is clear: the best solutions often don’t make sense at first glance—but that’s exactly what makes them powerful.

The post Five Takeaways from Rory Sutherland’s Alchemy appeared first on California Employment Law Report.

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A Simple Payment Error is not a Waiver of the Right to Arbitrate

I have some good news for California employers seeking to enforce arbitration agreements. The California Supreme Court just held that non-payment of arbitration fees does not automatically waive the right to arbitrate. Employers still cannot engage in the strategic nonpayment of arbitration fees. However, when the nonpayment is the result of a good faith mistake, inadvertence, or excusable neglect, then the right to arbitrate is not automatically extinguished. This is great news for California companies who want to keep employment claims in arbitration.

In the past, a simple calendaring error, or a bill that came in late and got lost in the shuffle, could trigger a motion by opposing counsel asserting a violation of California Code of Civil Procedure Section 1281.98, and essentially a waiver of the right to arbitrate. In fact, we blogged on this risk. Thankfully, the California Supreme Court ruled that a more fact-based inquiry was required, and as long as the mistake was genuine, and not gamesmanship, then a simple error would not waive the right to arbitrate.

This ruling makes sense. An inadvertent mistake should not punish the party seeking to arbitrate. Whew!

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