D Magazine, "Best Lawyers in Dallas" - 2016-2017
Texas Monthly, Super Lawyer - 2014-2023
Texas Monthly, Super Lawyer Rising Star - 2005, 2009-2013
The right Dallas employment lawyer makes a difference. Whether you're an employee, contractor, or an employer, you want solutions to your employment law problems. You want an innovative advisor and an aggressive litigator. And, above all else, you want a firm hand to personally guide you through the process--not some "mix-and-match" combination of junior lawyers or paralegals.
Employment attorney Barry Hersh delivers strategic advice and intelligent litigation solutions for individuals and businesses faced with today's most pressing workplace issues: overtime pay, non-compete agreements, non-solicitation agreements, commissions and bonus disputes, wrongful termination, sexual harassment, independent contractor misclassification, and other complex employment litigation.
Barry also drafts, reviews, and negotiates severance agreements, non-compete agreements, and other employment contracts, and assists individuals and businesses in minimizing the legal obstacles often associated with ending an employment relationship and other workplace disputes.
Barry opened his Dallas employment law firm in 2004 to provide employees and employers with tenacious representation and savvy legal advice explained in easily understood terms--not legalese. Because his law firm represents "both sides," Barry understands from experience what motivates plaintiffs and defendants in workplace disputes. This dual perspective, and Barry's focus on business-minded solutions, shapes not just his litigation strategy, but also his employment law firm's approach to resolving workplace disputes.
Who better than Barry's peers to recognize that his practical and personalized approach works? In 2016 and 2017, D Magazine recognized Barry as one of the "Best Lawyers in Dallas" in the Labor and Employment Law category. Texas' top lawyers and Texas Monthly have selected Barry as a "Texas Super Lawyer" from 2014 to 2024, and a "Texas Super Lawyer Rising Star" from 2009 to 2013.
Barry and his employment law firm represent clients throughout the state of Texas, including Dallas, Fort Worth, Plano, Allen, McKinney, Frisco, Southlake, Irving, Richardson, Mesquite, Garland, Arlington, Grand Prairie, Denton, Sherman, Houston, Austin, San Antonio, El Paso, Tyler, Wichita Falls, and more.
Contact Dallas employment lawyer Barry Hersh to schedule a consultation, understand your employment law rights and obligations, or to begin the process of recovering unpaid overtime pay and other compensation owed to you.
If you’re an employee or employer interested in obtaining a consultation with Dallas employment attorney Barry Hersh or retaining his law firm's services, we encourage you to submit your information to the law firm through the Contact Us page on this website. Generally, submitting information through the website is quicker than submitting information by telephone. This is especially true when Barry is in court, mediation, depositions, or client meetings.
The law firm requires online submission of information--at least initially--to determine whether the law firm can assist a potential client. This means that, if you called the law firm and only left a voicemail, you should submit your information online through the law firm's Contact Us page.
When you submit your information online, please be sure to provide us with enough information to determine whether or not Barry can assist you as well as whether the law firm is conflicted from providing you representation.
If you’re an employee with a wrongful termination, non-compete agreement, overtime pay, unpaid commission, employment discrimination (e.g. pregnancy discrimination, age discrimination, disability discrimination, race discrimination, etc.), retaliation, workplace harassment, severance agreement, independent contractor misclassification, or other employment law issue, this means that you should include your full name, e-mail address, telephone number, the name of your employer or about whom your case concerns, your dates of employment, and your annual compensation or rate of pay, as well as a sentence or two explaining your situation. This information is very important. The law firm generally does not reply to inquiries that merely contain an individual’s name and no other information, or that state little more than “Please call me” or something similar. Be sure to include a working e-mail address where the law firm can reply to you.
If you’re an employer or small business with employees or independent contractors in Texas and you’re interested in obtaining Barry's employment law help, be sure to provide your name, telephone number, the name of your company or organization, and general description of your situation. It is also helpful if you expressly state that you are an employer. Dallas employment lawyer Barry Hersh drafts and reviews executive severance release agreements, employment contracts, and Texas non-compete agreements; creates and revises employment handbooks; performs wage and hour audits and overtime pay and independent contractor classification audits; investigates workplace discrimination and workplace harassment claims; performs on-site employment law training; provides day-to-day human resources and personnel law counseling, and represents businesses involved in Texas employment litigation before the Texas Workforce Commission, Texas Labor Board, U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC), U.S. Department of Labor (DOL), state and federal courts, and before arbitrators and mediators.
If our Dallas employment lawyer or the Hersh employment law firm is unable to represent you, we will make every effort to refer you to another Dallas employment law firm that handles employment litigation, civil rights, or workplace law.
Information that potential clients provide to the Hersh Law Firm in response to our e-mailed intake questionnaires will be treated as confidential to the extent permitted under the law. If you’re an employee, you should never submit information to the law firm from or while using any computer, printer, scanner, fax machine, e-mail, cell phone, tablet, or other network device, hardware, or software belonging to or monitored by your employer. This may destroy the confidential nature of your information. Also, please note that a consultation, telephone call, or e-mail to Dallas attorney Barry Hersh will not create an attorney-client relationship. No attorney-client relationship exists with the Hersh Law Firm or Dallas employment lawyer Barry Hersh and you unless and until a written representation agreement is executed.
Barry Hersh is certified in Labor and Employment Law by the Texas Board of Legal Specialization. According to the State Bar of Texas, less than one percent of Texas' 87,000 licensed attorneys are certified in Labor and Employment Law. Barry is licensed to practice law by the Texas Supreme Court in all state courts in Texas, the federal U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas, Eastern District of Texas, Southern District of Texas, and Western District of Texas, and the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals.
Dallas employment lawyers like Barry Hersh handle the following types of employment law matters: pregnancy discrimination, religious discrimination, religious harassment, race discrimination, color discrimination, sex discrimination, age discrimination, disability discrimination, sexual harassment in the workplace, gender harassment, racial harassment, gender discrimination, national origin discrimination, employment retaliation, workers' compensation retaliation, unpaid overtime and related overtime pay disputes, whistleblower claims, wrongful termination in violation of public policy/Sabine Pilot, breach of employment agreement, breach of employment contract, unpaid commissions, unpaid bonuses, claims for other unpaid or denied compensation or benefits, and employee stock option claims.
Employment law firms in Dallas, like the Hersh Law Firm PC, handle claims arising under numerous employment law-related statutes, including claims for violations of the Pregnancy Discrimination Act (discrimination against women because they are pregnant), Age Discrimination in Employment Act (ADEA)(age discrimination), Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 (Title VII) (race discrimination, gender discrimination, pregnancy discrimination, sexual harassment, racial harassment, national origin discrimination, religious discrimination, retaliation, and failure to provide a religious accommodation), Civil Rights Act of 1866 (race discrimination, national origin discrimination, retaliation), Equal Pay Act (EPA), Texas Labor Code, Texas Pay Day Act, Texas Commission on Human Rights Act (TCHRA) (race discrimination, sex discrimination, sexual harassment, pregnancy discrimination, racial harassment, national origin discrimination, religious discrimination, age discrimination, retaliation, and failure to provide a religious accommodation), Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA)(child labor laws, unpaid overtime, wage and hour claims), Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA)(retaliation for taking pregnancy leave, paternity leave, maternity leave, medical leave, or leave to care for a sick relative), Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notice Act (WARN)(mass layoffs, plant closings), Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA)(denial of benefits and retaliation), USERRA (employment discrimination against employees in the military), the retaliation provisions of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, and other federal, state and local employment laws.
Employment lawyer Barry Hersh and the Hersh employment law firm also can assist you with the review and negotiation of a severance agreement, termination agreement, separation agreement, release agreement, and other post employment agreements. These agreements generally are offered in exchange for a release of claims against a former employer. The terms of these separation agreements, termination agreements, severance agreements, release agreements, and other post employment agreements may dramatically affect your employee rights, including whether you may bring or maintain a lawsuit against a former employer.
Barry represents employees and employers before the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC), Texas Workforce Commission (TWC) (formerly known as the Texas Commission on Human Rights (TCHR) (also known as the Texas Labor Board)), and the U.S. Department of Labor.