Supreme Court Says Employers Can Bar Worker Class-Action Lawsuits

SB85

Well-Known Member
A divided U.S. Supreme Court ruled that employers can force workers to use individual arbitration instead of class-action lawsuits to press legal claims. The decision potentially limits the rights of tens of millions of employees.

The justices, voting 5-4 along ideological lines, said for the first time Monday that employers can enforce arbitration agreements signed by workers, even if those accords bar group claims. The majority rejected contentions that federal labor law guarantees workers the right to join forces in pressing claims.


The ruling builds on previous Supreme Court decisions that let companies channel disputes with consumers and other businesses into arbitration. The latest decision applies directly to workers’ wage-and-hour claims, and its reasoning might let employers avoid class action job-discrimination suits as well.

The policy may be debatable but the law is clear: Congress has instructed that arbitration agreements like those before us must be enforced as written," Justice Neil Gorsuch wrote for the majority.



Arbitration supporters say that forum is cheaper and more efficient than traditional litigation. Critics say companies are trying to strip individuals of important rights, including the ability to band together on claims that as a practical matter are too small to press individually.

Justices Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Stephen Breyer, Sonia Sotomayor and Elena Kagan dissented. Ginsburg called the ruling "egregiously wrong."

"The inevitable result of today’s decision will be the underenforcement of federal and state statutes designed to advance the well-being of vulnerable workers," Ginsburg wrote.

The workers in the case said the National Labor Relations Act guarantees them the right to press claims as a group, either in arbitration or in court. The 1935 law protects "concerted activities" by workers, without explicitly mentioning lawsuits.

The majority said that language wasn’t specific enough to overcome a separate 1925 law that says arbitration agreements must be enforced like any other contract.

About 25 million employees have signed arbitration accords that bar group claims, a lawyer for the workers in the case told the court.




https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2018-05-21/supreme-court-says-employers-can-bar-worker-class-action-suits-jhgbqpz0
 

Andrewk420

Well-Known Member
I made a sarcastic Facebook post congratulating my friends who were employees and voted conservative. I said that it was a big win and that soon enough you'd only have to sign away basic human rights for the privelige of a job before long.

People started commenting #MAGA and telling me that shit like this was the reason wages stagnated and that it is a big win for employees. It's unreal that people could read the Reuters article that I posted with it that's not really opinionated either way, and come to that conclusion. All these Alex Jones worker camp NWO conspiracy theorist right wingers are just paving the way for corporations to run our government and society. And they think it's somehow better than elected government.
 

SB85

Well-Known Member
I made a sarcastic Facebook post congratulating my friends who were employees and voted conservative. I said that it was a big win and that soon enough you'd only have to sign away basic human rights for the privelige of a job before long.

People started commenting #MAGA and telling me that shit like this was the reason wages stagnated and that it is a big win for employees. It's unreal that people could read the Reuters article that I posted with it that's not really opinionated either way, and come to that conclusion. All these Alex Jones worker camp NWO conspiracy theorist right wingers are just paving the way for corporations to run our government and society. And they think it's somehow better than elected government.




Alex Jones is at the forefront when it comes to being the ring leader of spreading right wing stupidity
 

Fogdog

Well-Known Member
A divided U.S. Supreme Court ruled that employers can force workers to use individual arbitration instead of class-action lawsuits to press legal claims. The decision potentially limits the rights of tens of millions of employees.

The justices, voting 5-4 along ideological lines, said for the first time Monday that employers can enforce arbitration agreements signed by workers, even if those accords bar group claims. The majority rejected contentions that federal labor law guarantees workers the right to join forces in pressing claims.


The ruling builds on previous Supreme Court decisions that let companies channel disputes with consumers and other businesses into arbitration. The latest decision applies directly to workers’ wage-and-hour claims, and its reasoning might let employers avoid class action job-discrimination suits as well.

The policy may be debatable but the law is clear: Congress has instructed that arbitration agreements like those before us must be enforced as written," Justice Neil Gorsuch wrote for the majority.



Arbitration supporters say that forum is cheaper and more efficient than traditional litigation. Critics say companies are trying to strip individuals of important rights, including the ability to band together on claims that as a practical matter are too small to press individually.

Justices Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Stephen Breyer, Sonia Sotomayor and Elena Kagan dissented. Ginsburg called the ruling "egregiously wrong."

"The inevitable result of today’s decision will be the underenforcement of federal and state statutes designed to advance the well-being of vulnerable workers," Ginsburg wrote.

The workers in the case said the National Labor Relations Act guarantees them the right to press claims as a group, either in arbitration or in court. The 1935 law protects "concerted activities" by workers, without explicitly mentioning lawsuits.

The majority said that language wasn’t specific enough to overcome a separate 1925 law that says arbitration agreements must be enforced like any other contract.

About 25 million employees have signed arbitration accords that bar group claims, a lawyer for the workers in the case told the court.




https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2018-05-21/supreme-court-says-employers-can-bar-worker-class-action-suits-jhgbqpz0
This one has to be high on the list to fix the first year Democrats control congress.
 

Fogdog

Well-Known Member
I made a sarcastic Facebook post congratulating my friends who were employees and voted conservative. I said that it was a big win and that soon enough you'd only have to sign away basic human rights for the privelige of a job before long.

People started commenting #MAGA and telling me that shit like this was the reason wages stagnated and that it is a big win for employees. It's unreal that people could read the Reuters article that I posted with it that's not really opinionated either way, and come to that conclusion. All these Alex Jones worker camp NWO conspiracy theorist right wingers are just paving the way for corporations to run our government and society. And they think it's somehow better than elected government.
Wow

I had no idea that anybody who works for somebody else couldn't understand the implications. They say it's going to show up in better wages? I could imagine that a twisted mind might feel their employer "needed" this protection from evil lawyers but to think it will improve their lot...

boggles the mind.
 

Andrewk420

Well-Known Member
Wow

I had no idea that anybody who works for somebody else couldn't understand the implications. They say it's going to show up in better wages? I could imagine that a twisted mind might feel their employer "needed" this protection from evil lawyers but to think it will improve their lot...

boggles the mind.
It really is baffling. I have always had an outlaw mind and resented the idea of making money for someone else, so I understand that I have a bias. But it doesn't seem hard to take an objective look at this and see it as another huge loss for the overwhelming majority of people in the US who are employees.
 

potroastV2

Well-Known Member
I made a sarcastic Facebook post congratulating my friends who were employees and voted conservative. I said that it was a big win and that soon enough you'd only have to sign away basic human rights for the privelige of a job before long.

People started commenting #MAGA and telling me that shit like this was the reason wages stagnated and that it is a big win for employees. It's unreal that people could read the Reuters article that I posted with it that's not really opinionated either way, and come to that conclusion. All these Alex Jones worker camp NWO conspiracy theorist right wingers are just paving the way for corporations to run our government and society. And they think it's somehow better than elected government.

I bet those people heard "yanni."

:lol:


:mrgreen:
 
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