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August 31, 2009 |

Have Contract, Can't Furlough

A pair of recent court rulings is giving unions new and potentially potent ammunition against furloughs of public employees. On Aug. 18, a federal judge struck down a furlough plan in Maryland, holding that the plan violated the U.S. Constitution by unilaterally cutting wages guaranteed through collective bargaining. On July 29, a state judge in Hawaii issued a similar ruling, saying a furlough violated the state constitution, and criticizing officials for making the move without union negotiations.
6 minute read
September 25, 2008 |

2008 License-Revoked List

Notice to the bar.
37 minute read
May 28, 2013 |

The Legal's Lifetime Achievement Awards

As part of its 170th anniversary, The Legal for the first time awarded some of Pennsylvania's most influential attorneys with Lifetime Achievement Awards. Each honoree was asked to provide a brief quote or anecdote about what the law has meant to them.
33 minute read
April 03, 2013 |

The Score: Dewey's Football Bills, March Madness, and Opening Day

In our latest look at sports and the law, The Am Law Daily does some spring cleaning by tracking down the legal fees accrued by the National Football League Players Association in its collective bargaining battle with owners in 2011; catching up with one of the NCAA's top outside litigators from Schiff Hardin; and looking at the lawyers staying busy for Major League Baseball and the New York Yankees.
15 minute read
October 22, 2004 |

Pa. High Court Clarifies Challenges to Suspension Notices

The recent Pennsylvania Supreme Court decision in US Airways v. WCAB (Rumbaugh) is an important victory for injured workers, says Michael Dryden. The decision, which clarifies the issues presented when an employee challenges a suspension notification, limits an employer's ability to unilaterally suspend payment of indemnity benefits. This decision will make it much easier for claimants' practitioners to counsel clients who return to work.
4 minute read
May 12, 2003 |

Bowen et al v. The Parking Authority of the City of Camden et al,

Fed. R. Civ. P. 35(a) requires more than a claim for emotional distress as an element of an underlying cause of action to compel a psychiatric examination of a plaintiff; here, since plaintiff has alleged no more than a claim for emotional distress, defendant's motion to compel such an examination is denied.
7 minute read
May 15, 2013 |

Early Lessons From the NLRB On Social Media

Lydia Cruz-Moore didn't like the way her co-workers did their jobs, and she wasn't afraid to say so.
7 minute read

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