LexBlog Law Network Roundup – 7/13/09
July 13, 2009
Another weekend passes by and our bloggers return to the workweek with some really strong content. It seems like there’s a lot of employment and business-related news in today’s roundup with a minimum wage change in Florida, insight on employee handbooks and Wisconsin business lawyer Todd Goodwin advising LLCs to consider keeping a minute book.
- Idaho Supreme Court rules for aviation whistleblower – Richard Renner of the National Whistleblower Center on their Whistleblowers Protection Blog
- The Employee Handbook: Sword and Shield – New Jersey lawyer Anne Bancroft of Fox Rothschild on the firm’s blog Managing Work Force Reductions
- Consider Keeping Minute Book for your LLC – Wisconsin attorney Todd Goodwin of Schober Schober & Mitchell on the firm’s Wisconsin Business Lawyer Blog
- Employer’s Uniform Classification of Its Own Employees Does Not Justify Class Treatment — Wells Fargo Home Mortgage Overtime Pay Litigation – Los Angeles lawyer Anthony Zaller of Van Vleck Turner & Zaller in the firm’s California Workforce Resource Blog
- Gov. Rell Vetoes Several Bills Affecting Employers Including “Green Jobs”, Health Insurance, and “Standard Wage” – Hartford attorney Daniel Schwartz of Pullman & Comley in his Connecticut Employment Law Blog
- Minimum Wage Rises for Tipped Employees in Florida – Miami lawyer Richard Tuschman of EpsteinBeckerGreen on the firm’s Wage & Hour Defense Blog
- An Act Ensuring Less Privacy of Massachusetts Residents’ Data: Part 4 of 5 – Boston attorney Kevin Whitaker on his blog, Privacy & Policy
- Countdown to Copenhagen: The debate over technology transfers and the protection of intellectual property – Washington, DC lawyer Cyrus Frelinghuysen of Howrey on the firm’s Global Climate Law Blog
- Goodwill Gone Bad: How Closing Conditions Can Protect a Buyer’s Contractual Rights to a Seller’s Key Employees – New York attorney Geoffrey Parnass at his blog, the Private Equity Law Review
- Touch Trademarks and Tactile Brands With Mojo: Feeling the Strength of a Velvet, Turgid, Touch Mark? – Minneapolis lawyer Steve Baird of Winthrop & Weinstine on the firm’s Duets Blog
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