Top 10 in Law Blog: Debt Collection, Internet of Marijuana, Lunch at Work
Welcome back to the week! In a world of benefits arm-races to attract the top talent, I explore whether period leave—already in place around the world—could be the future of employer benefits. And now the top 10:
- Debt Collection Tops 2015 List of Most Common Consumer Complaints – Venable lawyers Michael S. Isselin, Christopher L. Boone, and Amy Ralph Mudge writing on the firm’s All About Advertising Law blog
- Please Don’t Pass the Salt (Labels): The Fight Over NYC’s Sodium Labeling Rule – Seattle attorney Daniel J. Vecchio of Garvey Schubert Barer writing on their Duff on Hospitality
- Is mentoring required by the Rules of Professional Conduct? – Minority director of the State Bar of Texas Board of Directors Rehan Alimohammad of Alimohammad & Zafar on the Texas Bar Blog
- Scents and Sensibility in Canadian Workplaces – Norton Rose Fulbright John Mastoras writing out of Toronto on their Global Workplace Insider
- The Battle Over the Status of Uber and Lyft Drivers Continues – Atlanta attorney Brennan Bolt of McGuire Woods on Labor Relations Today
- Public demands what feds suggest: Traceability via food labels – Megan Pellegrini writing on Food Safety News
- Marijuana and the Internet of Things, Part 2 – Seattle lawyer Hilary Bricken of Harris Moure on the firm’s Canna Law Blog
- Monday Morning Regulatory Review – 3/7/16 – Washington, D.C. lawyer Leland E. Beck on his Federal Regulations Advisor
- The Olympus Debacle: Why Internal Whistleblowing is a Good Thing for Compliance – Richmond, Virginia attorneys Ryan E. Bonistalli, Alex J. Brackett, and Jeremy Byrum of McGuire Woods on their Subject to Inquiry blog
- Unreported Working Lunches May Still Be Work Time – Chicago lawyer Bill Pokorny of Franczek Radelet on the firm’s Wage & Hour Insights
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