Let us entertain you with summer evening indie folk sounds while you enjoy appetizers, sangria and of course our delicious wine selections! June 13th July 11th August 8th 5:00pm-10:00pm. See you there!
Full invite details HERE.
Let us entertain you with summer evening indie folk sounds while you enjoy appetizers, sangria and of course our delicious wine selections! June 13th July 11th August 8th 5:00pm-10:00pm. See you there!
Full invite details HERE.
Last week, the United States Supreme Court clarified employers may enforce mandatory arbitration agreements that contain waivers preventing employees from pursuing legal claims as a group. In light of this decision, employers should (re)evaluate whether it is in their best interest to use arbitration agreements with their employees. If so, employers must confirm the arbitration agreement is drafted to comply with specific obligations in order to be enforceable.
To read the FULL article, please click HERE.
The National Labor Relations Act (the “Act”) is a Federal law that provides all employees with the right to engage in certain protected activities related to the terms and conditions of their employment. The National Labor Relations Board (“NLRB”), the administrative agency that enforces the Act, increasingly scrutinized employee handbooks during the past decade. Oftentimes, the NLRB found common and seemingly neutral policies were unlawful because those policies could be “reasonably construed” by employees to prohibit the exercise of the rights protected by the Act. Many employers responded by revising or removing such policies. The NLRB, however, recently adopted a new test that will likely allow employers more flexibility to maintain such policies.
Please follow this link to read the full article… Feb 2018 Employment Law Update
Under a newly enacted Wisconsin law, minors aged 16-17 are no longer required to obtain a work or street trade permit. In fact, the Department of Workforce Development (“DWD”) has stated it will no longer issue such permits to individuals who are 16 or 17 years old.
Read the full article HERE.
Employers may experience high absence rates this upcoming Friday February 17, 2017, because a national “General Strike Against Trump” is being arranged by a grassroots movement called “Strike4Democracy.” The strike (the first in a proposed series, the next of which is set for March 8) encourages individuals to participate in myriad methods, one of which is to miss work. Employers whose employees miss work to participate in this, or any other, “strike” should analyze the particular circumstances surrounding the absence before disciplining an employee. Otherwise, the employer may face an unfair labor practice charge.
Read the entire article HERE.
The Department of Labor (“DOL”) released its final rule updating the overtime exemptions for “white collar” positions under the Fair Labor Standards Act (“FLSA”). The new rule goes into effect on December 1, 2016 and will extend overtime pay protections to over 4 million workers within the first year of implementation. Under the new rule, employees still must satisfy a two-part test to be considered exempt: the duties test and the salary test. The new rule did not change the duties test. It did, however, change the salary thresholds for both standard exemptions and the highly compensated employee exemption.
Please read the full article HERE.
The Department of Labor (“DOL”) will release final rule later this year that will greatly reduce the number of employees who are exempt from the overtime requirements of the Fair Labor Standards Act (“FLSA”).
Please read the full article HERE
The National Labor Relations Board (“NLRB”) recently announced a new standard for determining joint employer status under the National Labor Relations Act (“NLRA”). This announcement changed decades of precedent and expanded the definition of the joint employer relationship.
Please read the full article HERE.
“Wisconsin has joined fellow Midwestern states Indiana, Iowa, and Michigan in enacting “right to work” legislation. Under the new law, no person may be required, as a condition of employment, to: (1) refrain or resign from a union; (2) become a member of a union; or (3) pay dues or provide anything of value to a union.”
Please read the full article HERE
Mawicke & Goisman, S.C. congratulates Jennifer Walther who was named one of the Wisconsin Law Journal’s 2013 Women of the Year. She was one of twenty-seven outstanding female members of the state’s legal community honored at the annual event held at Milwaukee’s Pfister Hotel on June 25th.
Please read… Wisconsin Law Journal’s 2013 Women in the Law Press release on Jennifer Walther and the event.