Labor News & Commentary July 15, 2024 Bronx Public Defenders Union announces a ULP strike next week & more
https://onlabor.org/july-15-2024/
By Holden Hopkins
Holden Hopkins is a student at Harvard Law School.
In todays News & Commentary, Workday will have to defend against claims of algorithmic hiring bias, the Department of Labor plans to require companies to report executive pay spent on anti-union activities, and the Bronx Public Defenders Union announces a ULP strike next week.
Esther reported back in April that Workday, a company that produces human resources management software, is facing a lawsuit alleging bias in its algorithmic hiring decision-making tools. While Workday sought dismissal of the suit on the grounds that it is a technology company rather than an employment agency, Judge Rita Lin of the Northern District of California held on Friday that the company could still be liable as an agent of the companies which use it. Judge Lin also ruled that the plaintiff, Derek Mobley, had adequately alleged disparate impact bias by showing that he was rejected from over 100 positions by the Workday software. The lawsuit, Mobley v. Workday, now proceeds to the fact-finding stage.
The Department of Labor has proposed a rule which would require companies to disclose manager and executive pay spent engaging in anti-union activity. This information would have to be reported on the companys LM-10 form, which is required by the LMRDA and tracks employer spending on consultants and other activities intended to persuade employees in the (non)exercise of their collective bargaining rights or during a labor dispute. Now, the DOL is seeking split-income reporting on the LM-10, tracking the pro rata share of the supervisors wages that were spent undertaking the reportable activity, according to a summary from the Office of Labor Management Standards.
FULL story at link above.