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Meal or Rest Break Premiums Do Not Trigger Waiting Time or Wage Statement Penalties | Davis Wright Tremaine LLP

To embed, copy and paste the code into your website or blog: Update February 10, 2021: This blog has been updated to reflect current guidance about California meal and rest break laws. On September 26, 2019, California’s Second District Court of Appeals in Gustavo Naranjo, et al. v. Spectrum Security Services, Inc. held that unpaid premium wages for meal break violations do not entitle employees to additional remedies under the California Labor Code for inaccurate wage statements or waiting time penalties. By limiting employees’ ability to bring derivative inaccurate wage statement and unpaid wage claims, the decision immediately decreases employers’ overall exposure for Labor Code penalties, class counsel’s attorneys’ fees, and civil penalties under the Private Attorneys General Act (PAGA).

NCAA Tells Panel McNair Shouldn t Get New Defamation Trial

ADVERTISEMENT ADVERTISEMENT NCAA Tells Panel McNair Shouldn t Get New Defamation Trial Law360 (January 13, 2021, 10:53 PM EST) The National Collegiate Athletic Association urged a California appellate panel Wednesday to block a new defamation trial for former University of Southern California assistant football coach Todd McNair, arguing that the lead juror should not have been disqualified after the verdict. The NCAA s attorney Donald B. Verrilli Jr. of Munger Tolles & Olson LLP told California s Second District Court of Appeal during oral arguments that it should reverse a Los Angeles judge s decision ordering a new trial and overturning the 2018 jury verdict in McNair s suit arising from sanctions for his role in the Reggie Bush scandal arguing that.

Court Rules That LA County s On-Site Dining Ban Stays Put Until February

California’s Second District Court of Appeal allowed LA County officials to continue its ban on outdoor dining yesterday, stating they can do so until at least early February. This decision leaves the decision up to county officials and supersedes the state rules, writes the The last two months saw busy activity concerning indoor dining in LA. As cases began to surge throughout the region, LA County rolled back outdoor dining for three weeks on November 25. A lawsuit by the California Restaurant Association and local restaurants followed, who hoped to block the ban. But on December 2, L.A. County Superior Court Judge James Chalfant gave public health officials one week to make a data-driven case as to why restaurants should temporarily cease on-site dining. That early December period also saw considerably fewer coronavirus infection rates. As of December 29, the daily number of infected LA residents was 11,806.

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