Joseph Moriarty, Mediator and Arbitrator

Joseph Moriarty, Mediator and Arbitrator Fair, expeditious dispute resolution services by an experienced labor and employment lawyer.

11/07/2025

Looking forward to participating in an "Ask the Arbitrators" panel tomorrow at the Chicago-Kent 41st Public Sector Labor Relations Conference. Arbitrator Brian Clauss will moderate. My fellow panelists will be arbitrators Kevin Camden and Rebekah Smith. Come with questions.

Not a great night for the Anglers.
07/26/2025

Not a great night for the Anglers.

Last couple of days on the Cape. Took a ride down Rte 28 thru Harwich Port, Dennis down to Falmouth along the shore, whe...
07/25/2025

Last couple of days on the Cape. Took a ride down Rte 28 thru Harwich Port, Dennis down to Falmouth along the shore, where we had lunch with Carol and Bob Obrien and met Leo, their very friendly grand dog. Fun spending time with them. At Coast Guard Beach early this morning, watched one or more seals swimming by, popping its/their head(s) up occasionally and once swimming very close to shore. Gorgeous beach with easy access. Water is ridiculously cold; even the life guards were complaining about it. Lunch at a Tiki bar on Chatham’s really crowded Main Street. Cacia enjoyed it tho she was not always on her best behavior. May end the trip at a Chatham Anglers game tonight, weather permitting. Heading out early tomorrow. Great trip.

06/08/2025

The Seventh Circuit is one of four federal circuits that have added a requirement for plaintiffs in reverse discrimination cases to show so-called "background circumstances" that “support an inference that the defendant is one of those unusual employers who discriminates against the majority . . ." Mills v. Healthcare Services Corp., 171 F.3d 450 (7th Cir. 1999). The US Supreme Court unanimously rejected that added burden last week in the Sixth Circuit case of Ames v. Ohio Department of Youth Services, Case No. 23-1069 (Slip Op. June 4, 2025), which involved a straight woman's claims that she had been discirminated against on the basis of her sexual orientation. Justice Jackson wrote the court's opinion and said: "The Sixth Circuit implemented a rule that required certain Title VII plaintiffs - those who are members of majority groups - to satisfy a heighten evidentiary standard in order to carry their burden under the first step of the McDonnell Douglas framework. We conclude that Title VII does not impose such a heightened standard on majority group plaintiffs."

06/02/2025

HR 1 was passed by the US House and is pending in the US Senate. It would deprive US courts of the ability to enforce any injunction or temporary restraining order already entered or entered in the future by a US court that is not supported by security (bond).
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HR 1 Provides:

SEC. 70302. RESTRICTION ON ENFORCEMENT.

No court of the United States may enforce a contempt citation for failure to comply with an injunction or temporary restraining order if no security was given when the injunction or order was issued pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 65(c), whether issued prior to, on, or subsequent to the date of enactment of this section.

FRCP 65 (c) provides:

(c) Security. The court may issue a preliminary injunction or a temporary restraining order only if the movant gives security in an amount that the court considers proper to pay the costs and damages sustained by any party found to have been wrongfully enjoined or restrained. The United States, its officers, and its agencies are not required to give security.

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Despite the language of Rule 65, courts waive the security requirement in extraordinary circumstances such as the enforcement of constitutional rights or the indigency of the moving party. The prevailing thought has been that enforcement of constitutional or other rights should not be the exclusive province of the well-heeled movant, to the exclusion of those without the means to post the security.

HR 1 doesn't prevent courts from issuing injunctive relief with waivers of security, but it takes away courts' ability to enforce injunctions without security, which has the same effect and may have the additional effect of encouraging the enjoined to defy courts. Is that what the House of Representatives aims to do? Will vindication of constitutional rights become a privilege of wealthy and well-funded interest groups? Can this provision of HR 1, if it survives in the US Senate, withstand a constitutional challenge?

Yesterday (December 6th) was the IIT-Kent School of Law's 40th Annual Public Sector Labor Law Conference. I was pleased ...
12/07/2024

Yesterday (December 6th) was the IIT-Kent School of Law's 40th Annual Public Sector Labor Law Conference. I was pleased to present at a breakout session on tenure law for Illinois public school teachers with Laurel Baker, Graham Hill, and Thomas Garretson. You can access the program at https://ckcle.ce21.com Also see my article on the development of the Illinois tenure law there or on my website: https://www.moriartyarbmed.com/general-5

Chicago-Kent Continuing Legal Education offers a variety of continuing education classes offered in several formats to meet your Legal education needs.

10/28/2024

Texas district courts and the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals seem determined to remake the NLRB. In a 9-8 en banc opinion in Tesla v. NLRB, the Fifth Circuit held that an NLRB order violated the First Amendment because it was not obscene or perjurious. It reversed the NLRB order to delete Elon Musk's tweet threatening to take away employees' stock option benefits if they unionized.

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