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March 19, 2022

Federal judge temporarily blocks MT vaccine discrimination law - Missoula Current

A nurse prepares the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine during a Confederated Salish and Kootenai tribal vaccination clinic at the KwaTaqNuk Resort in Polson, Montana, on March 30, 2021. (Tailyr Irvine/KHN) (Daily Montanan) A U.S. District Court judge has temporarily voided Montana’s vaccination discrimination law that conflicted with a federal mandate that all healthcare workers at facilities receiving...
March 19, 2022

Sunshine Law rarely enforced in Missouri - St. Louis Public Radio

Missouri Attorney General Eric Schmitt speaking at a candidate forum during Lincoln Days on Feb. 12, 2022. When Missouri’s health department refused to turn over certain documents to ProPublica reporter Pamela Colloff in October 2020, she did what the attorney general’s office directs anyone to do if they believe a government agency is illegally withholding public records. She filed a Sunsh...
March 19, 2022

Theft in Fort Kent Draws Attention of Federal Law Enforcement - WAGM

FORT KENT, Maine (WAGM) - A Fort Kent Business Recently Suffered from a break in, that has brought federal law enforcement into the investigation. NewsSource8′s Brian Bouchard explains. When Jolene Gardner, the owner of Labels Trading Post came into work on the morning of February 26, she was met with an unwelcome surprise. “The first thing I noticed was the phone lines were not working, afte...
March 19, 2022

The Frank Walker Law/PSN Daily Notebook- March 19 - Pittsburgh Sports Now

The PSN Daily Notebook is sponsored by Frank Walker, one of Pittsburgh and West Virginia's most respected criminal defense and injury lawyers. Mr. Walker has offices in Pittsburgh and Morgantown and has been named one of Top 100 National Trial Lawyers and is rated a perfect 10.0 Superb by Avvo for ethics, experience and results. To reach Mr. Walker, you can call 412-532-6805 or go to his webs...
March 19, 2022

Labor Law: Father sues Kroger claiming an abusive work environment caused his son's suicide - Richmond Times-Dispatch

RTD Metro Business law columnist, Karen Michael. Kroger is seeking to dismiss a lawsuit filed in July by the father of a former employee who alleges his son died as a result of “tortuous” conditions he was subjected to by the grocery chain’s employees. Evan Seyfried, 40, was a 19-year veteran of Kroger’s dairy department in Milford, Ohio, until he committed suicide in March 2021. The suit all...
March 19, 2022

Francis native inducted into UT College of Law Alumni Association "Hall of Fame" - Theadanews

Francis native inducted into UT College of Law Alumni Association "Hall of Fame"  Theadanews
March 19, 2022

Why amending CEQA for UC Berkeley won’t lead to big changes - Los Angeles Times

People walk by Wheeler Hall at UC Berkeley in March 2020. The landmark 1970 law for preserving California’s beauty has a long history of backfiring. Although the California Environmental Quality Act, or CEQA, has made it harder to drain wetlands, pave nature preserves and build oil refineries, it has also stymied the construction of bike lanes, affordable housing and public transportation....
March 19, 2022

'The law that swallowed California': Why the much-derided CEQA is so hard to change - Yahoo News

People walk by Wheeler Hall at UC Berkeley in March 2020. The landmark 1970 law for preserving California's beauty has a long history of backfiring. Although the California Environmental Quality Act, or CEQA, has made it harder to drain wetlands, pave nature preserves and build oil refineries, it has also stymied the construction of bike lanes, affordable housing and public transportation. Wh...
March 19, 2022

NM Supreme Court expands education program on the rule of law - Carlsbad Current Argus

New Mexico Supreme Court I am excited to announce the second year of a New Mexico Supreme Court civics education program about the judiciary’s role in our democracy and the development of the rule of law. Last year’s program was a resounding success, reaching over 580 students in schools statewide. Students watched recordings of an oral argument before our Supreme Court and worked with learni...
March 19, 2022

Roy Hoffman novel explores law and Southern xenophobia | DON NOBLE - Tuscaloosa Magazine

The Tuscaloosa News Roy Hoffman of Fairhope, with two volumes of essays and, now, four novels, has become one of Alabama’s best storytellers. In these novels he has carved out for himself a kind of niche, noticing that there is more ethnic diversity in Alabama than just Black and white, and the relationships, however fraught or stressful, between these two groups. In his first novel, “Almost...