Kathleen Campbell

Kathleen Campbell

May 27, 2021 | The Legal Intelligencer

The Next Wave of PFAS Defendants: Smaller Industrial Users

Amid the flood of PFAS news this year, a new class action in Maine has gotten comparatively less attention from the national media. Yet it is unique, as its principal target is not an industrial giant but a local paper mill.

By Kathleen Campbell and Brandon Matsnev

7 minute read

September 20, 2019 | Texas Lawyer

Doubling Down on Public Charge to Deny Immigration Applications

The concept of a public charge ground of inadmissibility has been a part of immigration law for more than a century, but on October 15, 2019, the law may change.

By Kathleen Campbell Walker

7 minute read

October 23, 2015 | Texas Lawyer

New Visa Streamlining Process Marks Historic Change

The major change evidenced in the October Visa Bulletin is the publication of filing date and final action date charts for employment- and family- based immigrant visa allocation. In the past, only FAD charts were published.

By Kathleen Campbell Walker

5 minute read

October 17, 2011 | Texas Lawyer

Footing the Bill for H-1Bs

The H-1B is a nonimmigrant visa category employers typically use to hire foreign professionals to work on a temporary basis in the United States. Employers just starting to use the H-1B category often try to avoid the complex issues raised by these visas; they may tell employees that the immigration part of their employment is the employees' problem, says Kathleen Campbell Walker.

By Kathleen Campbell Walker

8 minute read

October 29, 2012 | Texas Lawyer

Commentary: Why Foreign Physicians May Just Say No to Texas

New licensing requirement for foreign physicians should raise red flags for immigration lawyers, as well as other attorneys interested in equal protection and access to quality medical care.

By Kathleen Campbell Walker

5 minute read

April 16, 2009 | The Legal Intelligencer

3rd Circuit's Standard for Class Certification Alters Legal Landscape

Class action practice is a high-stakes game, with the court's class certification order often a "lethal force" that, regardless of the merits of the lawsuit, "bestows extraordinary leverage" upon plaintiffs and places substantial pressure on defendants to settle.

By Lynn R. Rauch And Kathleen Campbell

8 minute read

May 25, 2009 | National Law Journal

U.S. policy squeezes immigrants, not immigration

The lesson that may be learned from the past 10 years of enforcement-related actions under the banner of border security is that enforcement for enforcement's sake alone does not and cannot achieve a lasting cure to the problems of illegal immigration or legal immigration to this country.

By Kathleen Campbell Walker

9 minute read

January 25, 2010 | Texas Lawyer

Commentary: Legal Actions and Immigration Tools to Help Haitians

The response by the United States and its citizens and other nations to the devastation wreaked by the Jan. 12 earthquake in Haiti and its many aftershocks provides clear evidence of the compassion of our globally connected community, says Kathleen Campbell Walker of El Paso. In addition to the tangible forms of aid en route to Haiti, many less publicized legal actions of the United States will have far-reaching benefits to Haitian nationals.

By Kathleen Campbell Walker

5 minute read

February 26, 2007 | The Recorder

Natural Law in the Highest Court

This spring, the Roberts Supreme Court takes up environmental law cases covering endangered species, global warming and more.

By Nicole R. Moshang and Kathleen Campbell

10 minute read