By Anthony S. Guardino | July 25, 2017
In his Zoning and Land Use Planning column, Anthony S. Guardino discusses how a decision by the New York Court of Appeals blocking construction of a project in Queens may reverberate across the state.
By Michael Booth | July 24, 2017
The New Jersey State Bar Association is leading a coalition urging lawmakers to shorten the filing period for malpractice claims from six to two years, but the state's principal plaintiffs bar group and others stand opposed.
By njlawjournal | New Jersey Law Journal | July 24, 2017
A report on recent action in Trenton of interest to NJSBA members
By THE EDITORIAL BOARD | July 21, 2017
Substitute House Bill 6880 is the product of raw politics and communities that are willing to lobby heavily to keep out people of even modest means and instead allow only expensive homes that pay more in taxes.
By Michael Booth | July 21, 2017
Legislation that would greatly expand the state's 8-year-old paid family leave program was met with a conditional veto.
By Michael Booth | July 21, 2017
Gov. Chris Christie on Friday vetoed legislation that would have imposed taxes on the state's burgeoning "home-sharing" industry.
By Tom McParland | July 21, 2017
After state officials earlier this month greeted with praise a new law that streamlines the process for prosecuting misdemeanor cases of driving under the influence, criminal defense attorneys were advocating for more sweeping changes that would consolidate the entire process in the Delaware Court of Common Pleas.
By Josefa Velasquez | July 21, 2017
A meeting between former U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder, now outside counsel for home-sharing service Airbnb, and members of the state Black, Puerto Rican, Hispanic and Asian Legislative Caucus, scheduled for Friday, to discuss the company's anti-discrimination efforts was postponed amid threats of picketing by the state's powerful hotel workers' union.
By Victoria Hudgins | July 20, 2017
The General Assembly approved SB 624, a bill that would prohibit "planned subsidence" in bituminous coal mining from being considered presumptive evidence that the mining has the potential to cause pollution as defined by the state's Clean Streams Law.
By thelegalintelligencer | The Legal Intelligencer | July 20, 2017
Following is a listing of executive and legislative action for July 14 and the week of July 17. Both houses of the General Assembly are in recess, subject to the call of the president of the Senate and speaker of the State House of Representatives. House leaders issued a call to reconvene beginning July 22.
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