Starting October 29, 2025, Massachusetts employers must follow a new law focused on salary transparency. Titled “An Act Relative to Salary Range Transparency,” this law requires certain companies to display salary ranges in job postings and share this information with applicants and employees upon request. The Massachusetts Attorney General’s Office has also provided helpful guidance...

BOSTON — Massachusetts Attorney General Andrea Joy Campbell reached an $865,000 settlement with online grocery delivery companies Weee! Logistics LLC, Weee! OD Foods LLC, and their president Min Liu. This resolves claims related to worker misclassification and violations of earned sick time rights. The Attorney General’s Office found that Weee!: Misclassified delivery drivers as independent...

A recent federal court decision highlights employer obligations under Massachusetts disability discrimination law, especially regarding employee treatment after medical leave. In Thomas v. Liv Group Inc., et al., the U.S. District Court for the District of Massachusetts ruled that a former project manager could proceed with his disability discrimination lawsuit after alleging a pattern of...

Yes—for now. Massachusetts still allows employers to fire, refuse to hire, or pay someone less based solely on their weight, despite growing awareness of bias. Federal laws like Title VII and the ADA don’t clearly protect against size discrimination, and state efforts to pass legislation have repeatedly stalled. This type of workplace discrimination could soon...

The 1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals recently issued a pivotal decision regarding the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) and the statute of limitations in collective actions. In Kwoka v. Enterprise Rent-A-Car Company of Boston, the court clarified that while delays in providing notice for an FLSA collective action may justify tolling (pausing) the statute...

A recent First Circuit decision in Dahua Technology USA Inc. v. Zhang highlights the high stakes of contract drafting and the courts’ increasing willingness to consider ambiguity claims even late in litigation. The dispute involves a severance provision that promised former executive Feng Zhang “monthly severance payments… in the amount of $680,000 for sixteen (16)...

According to Attorney General Andrea Campbell, several fast-food franchise operators in Massachusetts, including Dunkin’, McDonald’s, and Subway, have been fined for violating child labor laws. Cafua Management Company, which operates over 80 Dunkin’ locations across the state, was fined $140,000 for violations between 2020 and 2023. Offenses included allowing minors to work: Without required work...

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