By thelegalintelligencer | The Legal Intelligencer | August 4, 2017
Plaintiff's claim that he was demoted when reassigned from a high school teaching position to a middle school teaching position triggered his right to a hearing under Section 1151 of the Public School Code and, therefore, it was error for the Secretary of Education to render a decision on his claim. The court reversed and remanded for a hearing.
By newyorklawjournal | New York Law Journal | August 3, 2017
Teacher's Termination Not Disproportionate To Sustained Specifications; Vacatur Denied
By therecorder | The Recorder | August 3, 2017
9th Cir.; 13-16259 The court of appeals reversed a district court judgment. The court held that tribal courts had jurisdiction over employment disputes…
By KAREN SLOAN | August 2, 2017
New associate hiring at the nation's largest law firms offered a rare bright spot in an otherwise ho-hum 2016 entry level legal job market.
By Meredith Hobbs | August 2, 2017
The University of Georgia School of Law is getting a new legal clinic to help veterans who've filed claims for disability benefits with the gridlocked U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, thanks to gifts from plaintiffs lawyer James Butler Jr. and four other Columbus lawyers.
By Charles Toutant | July 27, 2017
In a suit over a child's fatal accident, an amusement park operator may not seek indemnification from the charter school that organized the outing, but it can seek a verdict allocating fault to the school, the state Supreme Court has ruled.
By Cogan Schneier | July 24, 2017
President Donald Trump promised to re-create the government and diminish its regulations, but he faces an increasingly organized and determined opposition in Democratic state attorneys general.
By P.J. D'Annunzio | July 21, 2017
A Philadelphia School District teacher should have had a district hearing before his transfer from a high school to middle school science teaching position, the Commonwealth Court has ruled.
By Karen Sloan | July 20, 2017
Call it the LSAT disconnect. Although college grads with majors in science, technology, engineering and math tend to score high on the law school entrance exam, those taking the test and applying most often have majors in the social sciences and "helping" professions that typically score lower, according to recent studies.
By Lynn K. Neuner and William T. Russell Jr. | July 18, 2017
In their New York Court of Appeals Roundup, Lynn K. Neuner and William T. Russell Jr. write that at the end of last month, the Court of Appeals addressed once again the issue of adequate state funding for public education, dismissing plaintiffs' statewide challenges to the system, but permitting certain claims to proceed solely to the extent that they relate to circumstances in Syracuse and New York City.
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