Jacqueline F. Langland has spent the entirety of her law practice exclusively representing employers and members of management in labor and employment law.
Jacqueline routinely defends lawsuits and administrative charges alleging violation of federal, state, and local employment laws, such as Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. 1981, The Arizona Civil Rights Act, the Iowa Civil Rights Act, the Nebraska Fair Employment Practice Act, the Family and Medical Leave Act, the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), Arizona’s Fair Wages and Healthy Families Act (FWHFA), and the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA). Jacqueline also brings and defends against unfair competition actions on behalf of employers, including claims for breach of noncompete, nonsoliciation, and nondisclosure agreements. Jacqueline prepares and litigates claims through trial.
Outside of litigation, a significant portion of Jacqueline’s practice is also devoted to litigation prevention. She regularly provides day-to-day advice and counseling on issues like accommodations, disciplinary actions, terminations, and other employment issues. She prepares policies and guides employers through best practices in implementing them, ensuring consistent application, and trains members of management and employees on company policies and best legal practices.
Jacqueline also has experience handling wage and hour audits before the Department of Labor and defending claims before the National Labor Relations Board.
Prior to becoming a management-side labor and employment attorney in 2014, Jacqueline served as the sole law clerk for all of the judges in Iowa’s District 8A from 2012 to 2014. In law school, she was a full-tuition Law Merit Scholarship recipient, earned a Jurisprudence Award, was an articles editor on a journal, and was a research assistant for a professor.