By Suzette Parmley | December 18, 2019
The measure, which recently passed the Senate, seeks to amend the Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification (WARN) Act and was prompted by the bankruptcy of Toys "R" Us.
By Dan Clark | December 5, 2019
The California Consumer Privacy Act goes into effect in 2020 and is expected to prompt other states to pass their own privacy legislation. In-house counsel are advocating at the federal level for a privacy bill that would have them focus on one standard rather than 50 different laws.
By Cheryl Miller | December 2, 2019
Software developers, bankers, insurers and other business representatives continue to complain that the new rules are too vague and cumbersome.
New York Law Journal | In Brief|News
By Dan M. Clark | November 18, 2019
Pei Pei Cheng-de Castro was most recently the director of investigations and enforcement at the Joint Commission on Public Ethics, the state panel tasked with investigating ethics violations by public officials, employees, and lobbyists.
By Dan M. Clark | September 26, 2019
"Dunkin' failed to protect the security of its customers," New York Attorney General Letitia James said. "And instead of notifying the tens of thousands impacted by these cybersecurity breaches, Dunkin' sat idly by, putting customers at risk."
Corporate Counsel | Expert Opinion
By Michael J. Rivera and Abby Yi | September 26, 2019
Counsel should be on the lookout for potential changes to the rules governing the stock trading plans corporate executives routinely rely on to trade company stock, or 10b5-1 plans.
By Cheryl Miller | September 18, 2019
Uber's top lawyer said last week the new worker classification rules won't change the company's stance that its drivers are contractors, not employees. There's already a lawsuit challenging the defiance.
By Ross Todd | September 12, 2019
"Uber's argument doesn't pass the straight-face test, because everyone in California knows that AB5 was intended to apply to the gig economy," said Shannon Liss-Riordan, who filed suit against Uber shortly after California lawmakers passed Assembly Bill 5.
By Cheryl Miller | September 11, 2019
Legal threats loom as worker classification legislation, Assembly Bill 5, heads to the governor's desk. The new rules could upend how the gig economy is structured.
By Cheryl Miller | September 10, 2019
The late amendment appears to give significant litigation power to municipal attorneys in Los Angeles, San Diego, San Francisco and San Jose. Gig companies responded: "We are concerned that this provision effectively weaponizes the statute."
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