Labor News & Commentary May 14, 2024 Eleventh Circuit rules in favor of a transgender sheriff deputy & more
https://onlabor.org/may-14-2024/
By Sunah Chang
Sunah Chang is a student at Harvard Law School.
In todays news and commentary: Massachusetts misclassification lawsuit against ride-share companies goes to trial, the Eleventh Circuit rules in favor of a transgender sheriff deputy in a Title VII lawsuit over gender-affirming surgery, and the Alabama governor signs legislation disincentivizing companies from voluntarily recognizing unions.
Yesterday marked the first day of the non-jury trial of the Massachusetts attorney generals lawsuit against Lyft and Uber. Originally filed in 2020 by then-Attorney General Maura Healey, the lawsuit alleges that Lyft and Uber have misclassified their drivers as independent contractors in violation of state employment law. The lawsuit contends that these drivers are employees who are entitled to benefits, such as minimum wage, overtime, and earned sick time. If the state prevails at trial, Lyft and Uber would face large penalties for failing to properly classify their drivers.
The trial commences several months before an industry-backed ballot measure determining whether ride-share drivers should be classified as independent contractors will reach Massachusetts voters in November. The attorney generals office has stated that should Uber and Lyft lose the trial but win at the ballot box, the ballot measure would only govern the companies conduct in the future and not eliminate their liability for past misclassifications.
Also yesterday, the Eleventh Circuit affirmed a lower courts ruling that a Georgia countys refusal to cover a sheriff deputys gender-affirming surgery qualified as discrimination under Title VII. Applying the Supreme Courts ruling in Bostock v. Clayton County, the Eleventh Circuit reasoned that the countys blanket denial of coverage for gender-affirming surgery amounted to discrimination based on sex. The Eleventh Circuit held: By drawing a line between gender-affirming surgery and other operations, the plan intentionally carves out an exclusion based on ones transgender status. . . [S]ex is inextricably tied to the denial of coverage for gender-affirming surgery.
FULL story at link above.