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Corporate Counsel

Feds Propose Rule to Stabilize Marketplaces During ACA Repeal

Federal health officials released a proposed rule on Wednesday that would significantly shorten the amount of time individuals would have to enroll in health insurance plans in 2018. It is an attempt to incentivize insurers to stay in the marketplace while the Trump administration dismantles the Affordable Care Act.
12 minute read

Daily Business Review

Administrative Judge Sides With Bakery Over Anti-Gay Message

A mother-and-daughter bakery did not discriminate against a potential customer when the owners refused to make a cake with an anti-gay slogan, an administrative law judge decided.
9 minute read

New York Law Journal

Maine v. Colvin

By | February 14, 2017
ALJ Must Develop Record, Reassess Severity Of Migraine Headaches, Reevaluate RFC
3 minute read

New York Law Journal

Gilmartin v. Colvin

By | February 14, 2017
Record, Medical Evidence Support Little Weight ALJ Gave to Treating Physician's Opinion
3 minute read

New York Law Journal

Collateral v. NYC

By | February 14, 2017
Pawnbroker Reporting Scheme Does Not Violate Constitution's Ban on Unreasonable Searches
3 minute read

The Recorder

Mercury Casualty Company v. Jones

By | February 13, 2017
4 minute read

The Legal Intelligencer

St. Clair Hosp. v. Unemployment Comp. Bd. of Review, PICS Case No. 17-0161 (Pa. Commw. Feb. 2, 2017) Jubelirer, J. (14 pages).

By | February 10, 2017
An employee was ineligible for unemployment compensation benefits after she voluntarily terminated her employment without taking all reasonable and necessary steps to preserve her employment in the face of a limiting medical condition. Order of the UCBR reversed.
6 minute read

The Legal Intelligencer

Zona v. Commonwealth, PICS Case No. 17-0128 (C.P. Lawrence Nov. 18, 2016) Cox, J. (10 pages).

By | February 10, 2017
Driver was entitled to have suspension set aside when he did not receive notice of suspension until 11 years after the violation occurred and his circumstances had changed significantly in reliance on the belief that no suspension would occur given the lapse of time.
7 minute read

The Legal Intelligencer

Cary v. Bureau of Prof'l Occupational Affairs, PICS Case No. 17-0160 (Pa. Commw. Jan. 31, 2017) McCullough, J. (24 pages).

By | February 10, 2017
Bureau of professional and occupational affairs acted arbitrarily and capriciously when it denied petitioner's application for licensing as a behavior specialist on the grounds that she did not meet the educational requirements because the board did not promulgate any regulation or provide any legitimate rational for choosing CHEA and USDE as the only accrediting bodies for universities. Reversed and remanded for license issuance.
5 minute read

Daily Report Online

CDC Quarantine Rule Imposes New Duties on Airlines

U.S. regulators are moving ahead with a new rule that imposes new burdens on airlines and their staffs to identify and report to federal authorities passengers who are ill and subject to quarantine, a response to the Ebola outbreak in 2014.
16 minute read

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