Close
Login to MyACC
ACC Members


Not a Member?

The Association of Corporate Counsel (ACC) is the world's largest organization serving the professional and business interests of attorneys who practice in the legal departments of corporations, associations, nonprofits and other private-sector organizations around the globe.

Join ACC

ACC Member Portal and Web Services are back online
ACC's member portal and web services are available following a scheduled upgrade. However, our team is monitoring and resolving issues promptly. Please be sure to reset your password here.
Thank you for your patience. Please contact our team with any questions.

Search Filters

Time is money and corporate mergers and acquisitions are often under pressure to get closed in a rapid time frame.  Attorneys from Steptoe & Johnson will help attendees understand the dangers of overlooking important labor and employment implications, from employment agreements and non competes to employee benefits (and multiple things in between!).

Shar Bahmani, and Katya M. Lancero, Sacks Tierney (a Meritas law firm)

This article explains whether private-sector employers are required to acknowledge federal holidays and provide premium holiday pay, it highlights Juneteenth National Independence Day and provides ways for companies to celebrate the holiday, and it summarizes federal contractor holiday pay requirements and religious accommodation obligations.  Finally, this article underscores the importance of a holiday pay policy, identifies “do’s and don’ts” for holiday parties, and sets forth public-sector employer holiday pay requirements. 

Resource Details
Interest Area: Employment and Labor
Region: United States
Catherine T. Barbieri and Pamela A. Thein, Fox Rothschild LLP
6 pages

The US Supreme Court held in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, that the Constitution does not confer a right to abortion, overruling long-standing precedent in Roe v. Wade and Planned Parenthood of Southeastern Pennsylvania v. Casey. Since the Dobbs decision, trigger laws in 13 states have banned or will shortly ban abortions, and another 13 states are expected to follow suit. While trigger laws are being challenged in court, there is no question that many states will successfully ban, or severely curtail, abortions within their borders. Moreover, a number of those states would impose criminal penalties on abortion providers, pregnant people, and/or individuals or entities that “aid and abet” abortions. The Dobbs decision and states’ efforts to ban, curtail and/or criminalize abortions have created multiple legal issues that affect individuals and employers.

Resource Details
Interest Area: Employment and Labor
Region: United States
Subscribe to Employment and Labor