work injury

Do you work for a leasing company and have been discriminated against?

Many people for an employer through a staff leasing company. Their paycheck comes from a staff leasing company but that actually work for another employer and staff leasing company pays their paycheck and benefits. This has always been a difficult problem for employees who are discriminated against or injured at work. Typically, the employer (the […]

Do you work for a leasing company and have been discriminated against? Read More »

If you have a disability or a work injury and want a reasonable accommodation such as time off, you must have a doctors note!

I hear it every day from fired and injured workers in El Paso, Texas. They have a work injury or non-work injury and they need some time off to recuperate — they ask for a reasonable accommodation like a few days off or a leave of absence, do they have to have a doctors note?

If you have a disability or a work injury and want a reasonable accommodation such as time off, you must have a doctors note! Read More »

Filing a discrimination case with the EEOC/Texas Workforce Commission- Civil Rights Division

If you have been discriminated against by your employer in Violation of Federal Law (Title VII – race, color, gender, religion, national origin or disability under the Americans with Disability Act “ADA”) you are generally required by law to file a claim with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission within 300 days of the violation. If

Filing a discrimination case with the EEOC/Texas Workforce Commission- Civil Rights Division Read More »

The Department of Labor new overtimes rules have been blocked by a Texas Federal District Judge.

The Department of Labor new overtimes rules have been blocked by a Texas Federal District Judge. A Texas federal judge on Tuesday entered a nationwide injunction blocking the U.S. Department of Labor from implementing a controversial rule that would have expanded overtime protections, saying the rule improperly created a de facto salary test for determining

The Department of Labor new overtimes rules have been blocked by a Texas Federal District Judge. Read More »

Court of Appeals says an employer continually calling employee “old man” was not evidence of age discrimination

In a surprise opinion by the Corpus Christi Court of Appeals the Court held that an age discrimination plaintiff’s evidence that a supervisor routinely called him ‘viejo,’ Spanish for ‘old man,’ was not “direct” evidence of age discrimination and was insufficient to create an issue of fact or to overcome an public employer’s plea to

Court of Appeals says an employer continually calling employee “old man” was not evidence of age discrimination Read More »

District Judge holds that truck driver reassigned from long haul to local was not being retaliated against because he could now spend nights at home instead of out on the road therefore he had no claim.

It is illegal for an employer to retaliate against you if you file a discrimination claim with the EEOC or with your client. However, the retaliation must be “material adverse” before you can sue your employer. There have been many cases as to what is “materially adverse”. Recently in the case of Marlow v. McClatchy

District Judge holds that truck driver reassigned from long haul to local was not being retaliated against because he could now spend nights at home instead of out on the road therefore he had no claim. Read More »

Does Texas law cover you if you suffer retaliation after you have been fired or left employment including bad references?

In a major opinion In Burlington N. & S.F.R. v. White, 548 U.S. 53 (2006), the U.S. Supreme Court held that Title VII’s anti-retaliation provision prohibits retaliation by adverse employment or non-employment actions, including post-employment actions (such as adverse job references). This was a major victory for employees because it kept employers from retaliating against

Does Texas law cover you if you suffer retaliation after you have been fired or left employment including bad references? Read More »

You’re being harassed at work but you have not been fired. Can you sue for wrongful termination? Maybe not.

You file a complaint of discrimination from your supervisor with the EEOC or your employers HR department. Your supervisor starts to retaliate by harassing you. Do you have a case of retaliation? In the recent case of Esparza v. University of Texas at El Paso, __ S.W.3d ___, 2015 WL 4711612 (Tex. App.—El Paso 2015),

You’re being harassed at work but you have not been fired. Can you sue for wrongful termination? Maybe not. Read More »

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