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Nonprofit

International Union of Bricklayers and Allied Craftworkers

3 federal employment cases from public court records (20262026)

What public court records show

Public federal court records list International Union of Bricklayers and Allied Craftworkers as an employer in 3 employment matters since 2026.

The most common claims on record were Discrimination, Retaliation, and Wrongful Termination.

Cases were filed across 1 state (DC).

These figures summarize publicly available U.S. federal court records only. Most workplace disputes are resolved privately and never appear in litigation. A case outcome reflects many factors and is not a finding that any employer violated the law.

3
Federal Cases
1
States
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About this employer

International Union of Bricklayers and Allied Craftworkers appears in 3 federal employment-law court rulings on record. These cases sit within the nonprofit sector, where mission-alignment defenses sometimes complicate Title VII analysis. The set below covers rulings that produced written federal-court decisions; private settlements, EEOC charges resolved without litigation, and state-court cases are not included.

The cases primarily involve Discrimination, Retaliation, Wrongful Termination. Browse the linked claim hubs for outcome statistics and other employers facing the same allegations. Discrimination, Retaliation and Wrongful Termination.

Applicable statutes referenced across these rulings include: NLRA (29 U.S.C. §§ 151-169) — The National Labor Relations Act (NLRA) protects the rights of employees to organize, form or join labor unions, bargain collectively through representatives of their choosing, and engage in other concerted activities for mutual aid or protection. See the NLRA reference page for filing deadlines, employee thresholds, and remedies. NLRA.

Rulings span District of Columbia. District of Columbia is an EEOC deferral state, which extends the federal Title VII / ADA / ADEA filing deadline from 180 to 300 days. Browse state-specific employment rulings for jurisdictional patterns. District of Columbia rulings.

States

Related Laws

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Data sourced from public federal court records via CourtListener.com. Case outcomes extracted using AI analysis. This information is for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. The presence of an employer on this page does not imply wrongdoing — many cases are dismissed or resolved without findings of liability.