Cook Brown - Labor and Employment Law Podcast
What do Duke and North Carolina have in common with the nation’s favorite fast food chains? In this podcast, we'll discuss this and how to protect your business with no-poach and non-solicitation agreements.
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This is a question we get from employers a lot, “How do we compensate employees for travel time to the job site? The reason they’re asking is partly because of the lack of legislative guidance on the subject of travel pay. And it’s especially tricky when there’s not a fixed work site involved, as is often the case in the construction industry. But thanks to a November 2018 California Appellate Court decision, we finally have some helpful guidance on compensable time for employees who are provided with company vehicles.
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In this installment of Cook Brown's series of podcasts on employment, construction, and labor law issues for California employers, partner Brian Bertoss talks about payment remedies available to construction contractors on construction projects performed in California.
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California is a battleground for wage and hour litigation. There are a number of reasons why. One is the difficulty that even the best intentioned employers have managing and enforcing meal and rest breaks for hourly employees. What does the law say? Cook Brown Partner Terry Wills looks at California meal and rest break law and offers steps that employers can take to enhance compliance.
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Retaliation claims by employees against their employers are easy claims to make and difficult to defend. They are now, in fact, the most common employment claim asserted against employers, ahead of discrimination and harassment claims. Why, and what can an employer do to guard against them? In this podcast, Cook Brown Partner Barbara Cotter discusses retaliation claims – the grounds for these claims, how and when they are alleged, and the policies that employers can enact to help avoid them.
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Poorly drafted handbooks can run afoul of the National Labor Relations Act when they overstep certain employee rights. Steve McCutcheon looks at the case of In-and-Out Burger and the "Fight for $15" button.
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Hello. Welcome to the Cook Brown Labor and Employment Law Podcast. I’m Lisa Ryan, a partner here at the firm. Cook Brown is a California-based labor and employment law firm. We represent public and private sector employers in everything from routine advice to complex class action litigation. We also represent employers who have operations in a variety of states. But employers doing business in the Golden State are confronted with more legal challenges from their employees than are those in just about any other state. Really, almost all of them. And that’s what we’re going to talk about...
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California is not a friendly place for employers, and it is not a matter of whether an employer will be forced to deal with an employee claim, it is a matter of when. That makes it important for employers to understand some key points about alternative dispute resolution, and whether and how it can be a more efficient and reasonable solution that a formal court dispute. In this podcast, Steve McCutcheon explains the difference between arbitration and mediation, and what the arbitration process involves
info_outlineWhat do Duke and North Carolina have in common with the nation’s favorite fast food chains? In this podcast, we'll discuss this and how to protect your business with no-poach and non-solicitation agreements.