The Pacific Northwest Regional Council of the Carpenters and Joiners of America recently agreed to pay Hoffman Construction Co. $450,000 and to settle a lawsuit over alleged unlawful picketing during a 2007 strike in Oregon. The Carpenters have also agreed to pay an additional $200,000 into an escrow account until the union has trained its members
Oregon
BOLI Seeking Comments on Changes to Family Leave Regulations
The Oregon Bureau of Labor and Industries (BOLI) will hold three public forums on possible regulatory changes to the Oregon Family Leave Act (OFLA) to better align it with the recently revised federal Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA). BOLI is also seeking public comments through its regular comment process. After receiving and reviewing the…
Oregon BOLI: No Changes to OFLA Regulations (yet…)
As previously reported here at the Stoel Rives World of Employment, new federal Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA) regulations went into effect on January 16, 2009. Oregon has its own analog to FMLA, the Oregon Family Leave Act (OFLA), with its own regulations. FMLA applies to employers with 50 or more employees, while…
Oregon Issues New Rest Break Regulations
The Oregon Bureau of Labor and Industries (BOLI) issued a revised regulation earlier this week on employees’ meal breaks which will be of interest to many smaller employers.
The revised regulation, which is effective as of January 12, 2009, retains the basic requirement that employees normally be provided with a 30-minute, unpaid meal period in which…
Washington’s Minimum Wage To Rise to $8.55 January 1, 2009
Washington employers get ready to give your minimum-wage employees a raise: effective January 1, 2009, Washington’s minimum wage will increase to $8.55 per hour, allowing Washington to maintain the highest minimum wage in the country. For more information, click here to read the Department of Labor and Industries’ Press Release. Washington’s current minimum wage…
Oregon’s New Smokefree Workplace Law Takes Effect January 1, 2009
Since 2002, the Oregon Smokefree Workplace Law has made most workplaces smokefree. Effective January 1, 2009, a new law will expand the number of indoor workplaces that are required to be smokefree, and prohibit smoking within 10 feet of entrances, exits, windows that open, and ventilation intakes of workplaces and public places.
Workplaces and public places…
Free Lunch Seminar on California Law for Oregon Employers October 30
Do you have an office or a facility in California? Do you have any employees who work in California? If you’ve had to confront the challenges of complying with California’s unique employment laws and regulations, you’ll want to join us.
We will have a lively discussion led by Tony DeCristoforo, a labor and employment…
Oregon: Arbitration Agreements Need Not Contain Express Waiver of Jury Trial
Late last month, the Oregon Court of Appeals held that an arbitration agreement between an employer and an employee need not contain an express waiver of the employee’s right to a jury trial to be enforceable. The opinion can be read here: Hays Group, Inc. v. Biege.
In Hays Group, a trial court denied an employer’s motion…
Oregon Announces New Minimum Wage of $8.40 Effective January 1, 2009
The Oregon Bureau of Labor and Industries recently announced that Oregon’s minimum wage will increase from the current $7.95 an hour to $8.40 an hour effective January 1, 2009. For Oregon Labor Commissioner Brad Avakian’s press release, click here.
As a result of Ballot Measure 25, passed by voters in 2002, the minimum wage…
What Labor and Employment Law Question Would You Ask the Presidential Candidates?
The Presidential election is less than two months away, and the candidates’ campaigns are in full swing. Oddly enough, the candidates have been strangely silent on labor and employment law issues, focusing their attention on other pressing national security concerns, such as putting lipstick on pigs. Glad to see they’re taking the high road.
In…