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2026 Labor and Employment Outlook for Manufacturers

By Abby Warren & Guest Contributor on January 13, 2026
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This post was co-authored by Labor + Employment Group lawyer Christopher Costain.

As we look ahead to 2026, several significant employment law developments and trends are on the horizon, especially with regard to local and state laws. Below are a few key issues likely to impact manufacturers in 2026:

Regulation of the Use of Artificial Intelligence in Employment

Employers, including human resource professionals, are increasingly turning to generative artificial intelligence (AI) to help sort applicant and employee data and make employment decisions, including related to screening and hiring. Although AI has increased efficiency in these processes, employers must ensure compliance with rapidly evolving state laws, some of which require employers to prepare risk assessments related to the use of AI in employment decision-making, provide pre-use notices to affected individuals, and provide opt-out rights. In addition to the burgeoning patchwork of state AI legislation, President Trump signed an Executive Order in December 2025, titled “Ensuring a National Policy Framework for Artificial Intelligence,” which, in part, sets out the Trump administration’s plan to target state AI laws which are deemed to “embed ideological bias within models.” While it remains unclear which state AI laws may run afoul of the executive order, and how the federal government’s enforcement efforts will take shape, manufacturers should stay up to date on applicable state and federal AI laws when using AI.

Expansion of State Anti-Discrimination Protections

In recent years, state anti-discrimination laws have expanded to incorporate more protected classes, including hairstyle or hair texture, immigration status, and status as a victim of family violence or sex trafficking, among others. These expansions are likely to continue at state and local levels, especially as the federal government turns its enforcement focus to unlawful diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives, among others. 

Expansion of State Family and Medical Leave Programs

State family and medical leave laws and income-replacement programs continue to expand to cover more employees and provide greater benefits for a wider array of qualifying reasons. In recent years, qualifying reasons for the use of state family and medical leave programs have grown, with some providing job-protected leave in connection with prenatal care and certain pregnancy-related complications. Manufacturers should also be vigilant for changes in state income-replacement programs, including whether employees may use their accrued paid time off to supplement state paid leave benefits, and increases to the amount of benefits available and contribution amounts.

Heightened Scrutiny of Non-Compete Agreements at State Level

One of the Trump administration’s top priorities in 2025 was to roll back the Federal Trade Commission’s Biden-era “Final Rule” which would have banned nearly all non-compete agreements in employment. In executing that plan, the federal government withdrew its appeals pending before the Fifth and Eleventh Circuit Courts of Appeal, after District Courts in Texas and Florida struck down the Final Rule on the grounds that the FTC did not have authority to issue it. While the federal government abandoned the non-compete ban, in the months that followed, non-compete legislation continued to percolate at the state level, and more regulation is likely to follow in 2026. A number of state non-compete statutes limit the circumstances under which non-competes can be used by employers such as limitations based on salary thresholds, non-exempt status, job duties and industry type, and geographic and temporal scope, in addition to other criteria. As these restrictions continue to expand at the state level, manufacturers should review their non-compete agreements and avoid using broad restrictions, instead developing and implementing narrowly tailored provisions that protect a specific, articulable business interest and are compliant with applicable state law.

Changes at the National Labor Relations Board

The National Labor Relations Board spent much of 2025 without a quorum until the Senate appointed President Trump’s nominees in December, restoring the Board’s quorum and allowing it to roll out its enforcement and rulemaking agendas in 2026. The Board is expected to swiftly begin reversing or narrowing many of the Biden-era labor protections and issuing its own binding decisions. In addition, the Board will also likely begin to process a substantial backlog of unfair labor practices charges and appeals that were left pending when the Board did not have a quorum. Manufacturers should revisit any pending matters with the NLRB and be prepared for the NLRB to renew its enforcement activities, albeit within a new landscape and focus.

Photo of Abby Warren Abby Warren

As an attorney in Robinson+Cole’s Labor, Employment, Benefits + Immigration Group, I represent manufacturers in all areas of labor and employment law.  This includes discharge and discrimination issues, workplace investigations, affirmative action compliance, employee discipline, wage and hour issues, disability and reasonable accommodation…

As an attorney in Robinson+Cole’s Labor, Employment, Benefits + Immigration Group, I represent manufacturers in all areas of labor and employment law.  This includes discharge and discrimination issues, workplace investigations, affirmative action compliance, employee discipline, wage and hour issues, disability and reasonable accommodation, family and medical leave, unemployment, training, and defense in federal and state court and before administrative agencies. My full firm bio can be accessed here.

I represent manufacturers in the aerospace, consumer goods, machinery and other industries, which involves identifying practical, cost-effective and realistic solutions that prioritize and solidly execute the client’s objectives.  Manufacturers face unique challenges stemming from compliance with ever-changing industry regulations, including those impacting federal contractors.  Early in my career, I toured a client’s facility facing union-related struggles and realized that only through observing the workplace on the ground level can an attorney successfully understand and represent businesses.  As an employment attorney, I work alongside clients as a true partner to further their key personnel and human resources goals, including efficient and safe operations, recruitment and retention of talent, diversity and inclusion, among other issues. Whether advising on a leadership transition or on compliance with wage payment laws, the aim is always the same – to solve problems so clients can focus their attention on doing what they do best – manufacturing.

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  • Posted in:
    Corporate & Commercial
  • Blog:
    Manufacturing Law Blog
  • Organization:
    Robinson & Cole LLP
  • Article: View Original Source

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