The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Maria Fracassa Dwyer | March 31, 2020
As the coronavirus (COVID-19) spreads throughout the United States, the impact on student instruction, including big budget unknowns for public and private educational institutions, is daunting.
By Jane Wester | March 23, 2020
Jim Walden of Walden Macht & Haran said in the parents' complaint that a group of trustees improperly forced out a longtime headmaster. But Thomas Rafferty of Cravath, Swaine & Moore, which is representing the executive committee, argued that Johnson's departure did not give the families standing to file a lawsuit.
By Jim Saunders | March 19, 2020
The Florida Education Association alleged in a lawsuit that the use of the SAT and ACT scores in the long-controversial "Best and Brightest" teacher-bonus program had a "disparate impact" on black, Hispanic and older teachers.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Heather J. Hulit | March 18, 2020
Compensatory education is by far the most common remedy for children who are denied FAPE. But the way compensatory education is distributed is often rife with delays and unexpected denials so that the compensatory education fund can become merely "monopoly money."
Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Jason Grant | March 13, 2020
In a broad-ranging action filed in Connecticut federal court Thursday, the female physicians allege that Yale, as an institution, has used a "pattern of deliberate indifference" for many years to effectively silence and blunt the claims of various women who have accused Yale men in power of abuse or harassment.
By Angela Morris | March 11, 2020
Three former student-athletes have sued prominent track-and-field coach John Rembao, the NCAA and its board of governors. The lawsuit proposes a class of NCAA student-athletes, male and female, spanning back to 1992.
By Jim Turner | March 10, 2020
The Senate voted 37-2 to support SB 646, which outlines the rights of students and schools related to how college athletes could make money off their "name, image, likeness or persona."
By Suzette Parmley | March 9, 2020
The measure was approved by the Assembly Higher Education Committee by a 4-2 vote and now goes before the full Assembly. If it passes the lower chamber, it heads to Gov. Phil Murphy's desk for signature.
By David Gialanella | March 3, 2020
"The advantages of being a specialized practice at a midsize firm are twofold," partners Susan Stone and Kristina Supler say.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By John F.X. Peloso and Thomas J. Donlon | February 28, 2020
The decision overturned the district court's finding that two Village zoning laws were enacted in 2001 and 2004 with the intent to discriminate against the Orthodox/Hasidic community, leaving those laws in effect.
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