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Articles Posted in Non competes and restrictive covenants

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New York Is Not Okay with Non-Competes

Author: Molly Donovan Update: In December 2023, New York Governor Kathy Hochul vetoed the legislature’s proposed prohibition against employee non-competes. The Governor indicated that her “top priority was to protect middle-class and low-wage earners, while allowing New York’s businesses to retain highly compensated talent.” Carve-outs to the bill for highly-compensated…

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MMA & Monopsony: MMA Fighters Win Class Certification Bout in Employment Monopolization Case

Authors: Luke Hasskamp & Molly Donovan In yet another important labor-monopsony case, a federal court in Nevada has declared a win for MMA athletes fighting against their promoter’s alleged misuse of monopsony power in the market for acquiring fighters’ services. Class certification has been granted to MMA fighters accusing their…

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California Gets Even Tougher on Non-Competes

Author:  Molly Donovan & Luis Blanquez California continues to lead the trend away from non-competes with a new law that packs yet another punch against employers’ use of these very common contractual restrictions on employee mobility. Non-competes—also called restrictive covenants—typically prohibit an employee from taking employment with a rival firm…

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Minnesota is the New California for Non-Compete Agreements

Author:  Aaron Gott In May of 2023, Minnesota enacted a new law that broadly bans employee non-compete agreements with few exceptions and also limits the use of forum-selection and choice-of-law clauses in employment agreements. You can read that law here (jump to 66.12). Note: the Federal Trade Commission is also…

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FTC’s Proposed Noncompete Ban Has Already Succeeded

Author: Steven Cernak Recently, the Federal Trade Commission proposed a nearly complete ban on noncompete provisions in employment agreements. Because it faces the usual lengthy rulemaking process and several expected legal challenges, the proposed rule might not become effective for months, if ever. Through the proposal and attendant publicity, however,…

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California Rarely Enforces Non-Compete Clauses Against its Residents and Sometimes Won’t Even Enforce Out-of-State Forum Selection and Choice-of-Law Clauses

Author: Luis Blanquez California’s long-standing public policy in favor of employee mobility over an employer’s ability to prohibit any worker from going to work for a competitor is included in California Business & Professions Code Section 16600. So how do employers outside of California try to get around this powerful…

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Is My Restrictive Covenant Legal Under California Law?

Author: Jarod Bona It depends. But probably not. Outside of California, courts may enforce these non-compete agreements arising out of an employment contract. Of course, most courts, no matter what the law and state, view them skeptically. In California, however, the policy against these agreements is particularly strong. A restrictive…