Wednesday, December 30, 2020

Racism is the temptation white people have yet to overcome | National Catholic Reporter



Racism is the temptation white people have yet to overcome | National Catholic Reporter
By Sr. Joan Chittister

Thirty cities, they say. Thirty cities. Thirty cities burned from coast to coast. You can hear the tsk-tsking everywhere. You can see the heads shaking with disgust, with frustration, with deep disapproval — with despair. You can see the looks of confusion and horror, of dismay and doubt. Why would something like this happen? Why George Floyd? Why Derek Chauvin? Why here, of all places? Here in the "land of the free" and the "home of the brave"?

There are reasons for all of this, of course, but we claim not to know them. When they finally force us to look our racism in the face, we call them "unfair." "There are better ways to call attention to your plight," we homilize them. But we don't tell them exactly what that is because we've never done it. 

As a result, the people we've kept down so they couldn't rise up, we condemn because they don't rise up. And so they did. 

Now, we're really unhappy about that. We had nothing to do with this racism thing, we say, and we're not going to apologize for something that happened centuries ago. 

But maybe we should think about that a little. After all, it's in our DNA. It's what we do. Generation after generation.

No, this generation didn't buy slaves to pick cotton. Instead, this generation underpaid them so they'd keep doing the servant work we don't want to do. Or we deny them decent places to live, making it all but impossible for them to get nice little brick homes, too. Or we elect a president who calls other races names and insults while the whole world looks on in horror as the mask of gentility drops from the face of a racist nation. Or we allow him to put their children in cages to show the world that we don't want "those kind of people" around us. 

KEEP READING

No doubt about it. We've done our share of racism while we blame it on the racist generations that went before us. Maybe just apologizing for our own sins against a people would be a start.

As Mayor Sam Liccardo of San Jose, California, said on CNN May 30, " How are we going to step up around questions of racial equity from plaguing us really for centuries?" Indeed. It erupts and we put it down. And it erupts again. And we put it down ... again and again and again.

Monday, December 28, 2020

Limit on Religious Gatherings During COVID-19 Is Well Founded | New Jersey Law Journal

Limit on Religious Gatherings During COVID-19 Is Well Founded | New Jersey Law Journal
By the Editorial Board

Rev. Kevin Robinson, pastor of St. Anthony of Padua R.C. Church in North Caldwell, and Rabbi Knopfler of a small, 30-member Jewish congregation in Lakewood, sought a temporary restraining order or preliminary injunction against Gov. Philip Murphy’s executive orders limiting religious congregations. The governor seeks to stem the spread of the novel coronavirus sweeping the state, country, and world. Rejected at the district court and the Third Circuit the two clergymen petitioned the United States Supreme Court in an “emergency application for an injunction pending appellate review”.

The pastor and the rabbi complain that “[u]nder the New Jersey governor’s web of COVID-19 pandemic regulations, imposed solely by his will, houses of worship are strictly limited to the lesser of 25% of capacity or 150 people, but, strangely enough, never fewer than 10 people even if greater than 25% of capacity.” The minimum allowance of ten is an accommodation to Jewish tradition that requires ten men to form a minyan.

The clergymen complain that the state has imposed “less restrictive limits on secular activities that evidently pose the same or greater risk of viral transmission, [thus] violat[ing their congregants] rights to the Free Exercise of Religion and Free Speech and Assembly.”

The Constitution, they argue “does not allow a State to pursue such measures against religious practices more aggressively than it does against comparable secular activities.” The issue closely resembles that in Brooklyn Catholic Diocese v. Andrew Cuomo, Governor of New York. A fractured court, in six opinions voted 6-3 to enjoin Cuomo’s order that in “red zones” no more than 10 may congregate in a church or other indoor place of worship. In a “yellow” zone no more than twenty five may gather in worship.

The Supreme Court in a per curiam opinion in the Brooklyn Catholic Diocese case said the New York measures denied churches and synagogues “the minimum requirement of neutrality”. The opinion disparaged Cuomo’s order because enterprises deemed “essential” include “acupuncture facilities, camp grounds, garages, as well as many whose services are not limited to those that can be regarded as essential, such as all plants manufacturing chemicals and microelectronics and all transportation facilities.” Three dissenters on the merits (Justices Breyer, Kagan, and Sotomayor) faulted the five-member majority for interfering with the governor’s informed choices as uninformed intrusions by judges trained as lawyers but unskilled in the arts of epidemiology and public health.

The Supreme Court has vacated the order of the district court denying relief and remanded for reconsideration in light of the Brooklyn Catholic Diocese case. But it appears to us that the New Jersey case can be readily distinguished from the New York order enjoined by the high court. In his brief for Gov. Murphy, Attorney General Gurbir Grewal reports that the New Jersey orders do not single out religious gatherings but rather “prevent crowding at any venue where the public congregates for extended periods”. Grewal goes on to explain that New Jersey “reserves its strictest numerical limits for indoor gatherings, limiting them to just ten people, because they combine the various risk factors that lead to spread of COVID-19—such as group interactions, in indoor spaces, for extended periods of time, and even including loud talking or singing.  And the state maintains robust 25% capacity limits for venues where the public remains for extended periods, reasoning that “the more closely [persons] interact with others and the longer that interaction, the higher the risk of COVID-19 spread.”

Courts exercising their equity powers properly tailor their injunctions to the circumstances presented to afford full relief. But there must be a wrong to warrant a remedy. That a general order on congregant activity may impact different groups differently is not tyranny but good government when it is grounded in scientific opinion formed with the degree of rigor typically employed in a field.

Gov. Murphy’s order is informed by the opinions of epidemiologists and public health experts who explain that: the “dose” of COVID-19 to which someone is exposed makes a difference in how likely that individual is to contract the virus, and how severe their illness will be. And the dose to which someone was exposed depends on the closeness and length of their contacts with an infected person. As the CDC puts it, “the more closely you interact with others and the longer that interaction, the higher the risk of COVID-19 spread.”

In the Brooklyn Catholic Diocese case, Associate Justice Brett Kavanaugh explained his vote saying that “New York has not sufficiently justified treating houses of worship more severely than secular businesses.” But in New Jersey the disparity to which Kavanaugh objected is absent. And perhaps more importantly, Murphy’s order is tailored to the viral dose to which certain categories of conduct may subject others, creating heightened risk to the uninfected.

The epidemic is raging and we hope that the newly approved vaccines will bring COVID-19′s spread to a halt. As new infections exceed 200,000 per day nationally and daily deaths exceed 2,000, now is no time for courts to fine tune the scientifically-grounded measures rationally adopted by our state, which is conventionally understood to have the “police power” to protect the public health and welfare.

Sunday, December 27, 2020

OTHERWISE: The Largest Mass Execution in American History : Heather Cox Richardson - We're History

OTHERWISE: The Largest Mass Execution in American History : Heather Cox Richardson - We're History

Building Immigration Policy Back Better - Anil Kalhan*


Since 2017, President Trump and his allies have hurtled the politics and policy of immigration in xenophobic directions to an extent without modern precedent and with devastating eff ect.1 The Trump presidency has instituted hundreds of restrictionist measures, including high profi le initiatives that have prompted signifi cant public controversy and many less prominent, often technical measures that have erected a sprawling, “invisible wall” and placed millions at heightened risk of deportation.2 With the onset of the novel coronavirus pandemic, the administration has intensifi ed this crackdown further, using the outbreak as a pretext to institute even more sweeping restrictions that it previously had tried but failed to achieve. Because these measures have been implemented almost entirely through executive action, rather than new legislation, the next administration will be well-positioned to roll back many of them—that is, provided that it commits the resources, energy, and political capital required. But even as it seeks to dismantle the Trump immigration legacy, the new administration should also lay the foundation for a more fundamental paradigm shift away from the entrenched regime of comprehensive immigration severity that enabled the Trump presidency’s xenophobic crackdown in the fi rst place.3 In both its executive actions and legislative agenda on immigration, the new administration has an opportunity embrace the more ambitious objective, as it has in other policy domains, to “build back better” in the aftermath of Trump.
 Rolling Back Trumpism  

Saturday, December 26, 2020

COVID-19 Suits, Preemption, and Workers' Compensation

COVID-19 Suits, Preemption, and Workers' Compensation
 

At Law.com, Amanda Bronstad covers suits by employees against Tyson Foods.  The defendants in those cases have argued negligence claims are preempted by the Federal Meat Inspection Act and the Poultry Products Inspection Act.  In the cases filed in Iowa, defendants also cited the workers' compensation bar.  Tyson opted out of workers' compensation in Texas, the only jurisdiction in the United States in which that is possible.  Bronstad then discusses preemption as applicable to other industries.  For instance, nursing homes sued for negligence have attempted to argue preemption based on the Public Readiness and Emergency Preparedness (PREP) Act:

At least four federal judges, in New Jersey, Kansas, Pennsylvania and California, have ruled against the nursing homes, granting remand of the cases to state courts.

“The allegations are ‘you didn’t take enough steps to keep us from getting COVID.’ Courts are looking at that, saying that’s not what the PREP Act had in mind,” Robinette said. “Basically, what the PREP Act is talking about is certain drugs, biological products or devices—for instance, once a vaccine has been developed. But the suits are alleging things like your failures to do certain things have led to us getting COVID.”

Rothstein & Irzyk on Employer Liability for "Take-Home" COVID-19

Rothstein & Irzyk on Employer Liability for "Take-Home" COVID-19 

Mark Rothstein and Julia Irzyk have posted to SSRN Employer Liability for "Take-Home" COVID-19.  The abstract provides:

Workplace exposure to SARS-CoV-2 has been a source of morbidity and mortality from COVID-19, especially for “essential workers,” such as those employed in health care and meatpacking. Many family members of these workers also have become infected and died. If the employee’s exposure was the result of the employer’s negligence, the family member or the family member’s estate might be able to recover from the employer using the “take-home” liability theory first developed in asbestos cases. This article discusses the elements of these cases and how they relate to workers’ compensation, OSHA enforcement, and other aspects of workplace safety and health protections.

Monday, December 21, 2020

Supreme Court dismisses reapportionment case, says it's too soon to rule // ABA Journal



Supreme Court dismisses reapportionment case, says it's too soon to rule//ABA journal

The U.S. Supreme Court on Friday dismissed a case challenging President Donald Trump’s plan to exclude immigrants in the country illegally from numbers used to determine the number of congressional representatives for each state.

The Supreme Court said it was too soon to decide the case because there are so many unknowns, report the Washington Post, the New York Times and SCOTUSblog.

According to the New York Times, excluding the immigrants could shift the allotment of congressional seats “to states that are older, whiter and typically more Republican.”

At issue is a 14th Amendment provision that reads: “Representatives shall be apportioned among the several states according to their respective numbers, counting the whole number of persons in each state.” Data from the census is used to make the calculation.

Trump had sought to exclude immigrants without lawful status from reapportionment “to the extent feasible.” But the U.S. Census Bureau has said it might not be able to supply those figures while Trump is still in office, and it’s unclear how many people would be excluded from the count.

“At present, this case is riddled with contingencies and speculation that impede judicial review,” the Supreme Court said in a per curiam opinion.

Justice Stephen G. Breyer dissented in an opinion joined by Justices Sonia Sotomayor and Elena Kagan.

Breyer argued in his dissent that the plaintiffs challenging the policy have standing, the case is ripe for resolution, and the plaintiffs challenging the policy should prevail on the merits.

“The plain meaning of the governing statutes, decades of historical practice, and uniform interpretations from all three branches of government demonstrate that aliens without lawful status cannot be excluded from the decennial census solely on account of that status,” Breyer said. “The government’s effort to remove them from the apportionment base is unlawful, and I believe this court should say so.”

The case is Trump v. New York.

NJ Supreme Court: Attorney-Client arb agreements OK - BUT advantages and disadvantages must be explained

OTHERWISE: NJ Supreme Court: Attorney-Client arb agreements OK - BUT advantages and disadvantages must be explained: The New Jersey Supreme Court in Delaney v. Sills (A30-019) has OK'd retainer agreements that provide that all disputes between attorney a...

Thursday, December 17, 2020

Eric Segall: Standing Outside the Law: Of Incoherence and How Legal Sausages are Made - Dorf on Law

Professor Eric Segall has a particularly strong bead on the incoherence of the concept of standing.  Iconically ascribed to the phrase "cases and controversies" in the federal constitution it is in reality one of the masks judges wear as they pick their spots.
Most recently the Supreme Court used the sanitized phrase "no judicially cognizable interest" to strike down Texas's plainly partisan lawsuit to disenfranchise millions of voters in Pennsylvania and other swing states so as to keep Donald Trump in the White House.  Instead the court spurned candor and turned to standing. - gwc
Eric Segall: Standing Outside the Law: Of Incoherence and How Legal Sausages are Made - Dorf on Law

Sunday, December 13, 2020

Thursday, December 10, 2020

OTHERWISE: Supreme Court dodges Delaware Courts Challenge

OTHERWISE: Supreme Court dodges Delaware Courts Challenge:   
Supreme Court 8-0 dodges Delaware Courts Challenge on standing grounds. IMO the Court should have remanded for trial, not dismissed.

Monday, December 7, 2020

Pennsylvania Supreme Court, Citing Laches, (Unreasonable Delay) Ends Latest Challenge to Certification of Election Results | Election Law Blog

Pennsylvania Supreme Court, Citing Laches, (Unreasonable Delay) Ends Latest Challenge to Certification of Election Results | Election Law Blog

Perhaps the Dumbest Argument Ever Made in Emergency Petition to the Supreme Court Appears in Pennsylvania Election Case | Election Law Blog

Perhaps the Dumbest Argument Ever Made in Emergency Petition to the Supreme Court Appears in Pennsylvania Election Case | Election Law Blog

Super Interesting: In Rep. Kelly’s Case Seeking to Overturn PA Results for President, Brief from PA Republican Party Does NOT Support Argument Election Should Be Overturned | Election Law Blog

Super Interesting: In Rep. Kelly’s Case Seeking to Overturn PA Results for President, Brief from PA Republican Party Does NOT Support Argument Election Should Be Overturned | Election Law Blog

Damages: A Mass Tort Settlement - DePuy J&J ASR Hip Implant Devices



A Mass Tort Settlement - DePuy J&J ASR Hip Implant Devices   recorded video lecture 48:00 12/3/20

US ASR settlement - Powerpoint SLIDES

 US ASR Hip Settlement - official website

Saturday, December 5, 2020

Damages: the BP Gulf Oil Spill and the Deepwater Horizon Disaster








Damages: the BP Gulf Oil Spill and the Deepwater Horizon Disaster video lecture 12/6/20 1:01

Deepwater Horizon Settlements - official website

The economic losses suffered in the Gulf Coast region as a result of the massive oil spill in April 2010 were not recoverable under prevailing precedent in both maritime and tort law.  They both provided that "pure economic loss was not compensable".  ONLY if one suffered property damage or physical injury could he/she recover money.

Plaintiffs had argued with some success for expansive concepts of proximate cause such as may be recalled from first year torts and the Kinsman cases. There recovery for economic losses due to inability to meet contractual delivery dates were held to be too remote to permit recovery as a foreseeable consequence of the failure to secure vessels in the swift currents of the icy Niagara River which caused the collision with and collapse of a bridge over the river.

Courts had repeatedly found a way to compensate economic losses that were the obvious result of negligence in environmental cases arising from barges that spilled into rivers, oil wells in the ocean off the California coast, and the oil spilled by an Exxon supertanker off the shore in Alaska.  One bold judge - John Minor Wisdom - had argued in the Testabank case that property damage was not a prerequisite.  So long as one was rendered unable to "make use of" the damaged natural resource the loss should be compensable.  But he was a lone dissenter on the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals.

Although to reason by example is often merely to restate the problem, the following illustration may be an aid in explaining our result. To anyone familiar with N. Y. traffic there can be no doubt that a foreseeable result of an accident in the Brooklyn Battery Tunnel during rush hour is that thousands of people will be delayed. A driver who negligently caused such an accident would certainly be held accountable to those physically injured in the crash. But we doubt that damages would be recoverable against the negligent driver in favor of truckers or contract carriers who suffered provable losses because of the delay or to the wage earner who was forced to "clock in" an hour late. And yet it was surely foreseeable that among the many who would be delayed would be truckers and wage earners.

In the final analysis, the circumlocution whether posed in terms of "foreseeability," "duty," "proximate cause," "remoteness," etc. seems unavoidable. As we have previously noted, 338 F.2d at 725, we return to Judge Andrews' frequently quoted statement in Palsgraf v. Long Island R.R., 248 N.Y. 339, 354-355 (dissenting opinion): "It is all a question of expediency * * * of fair judgment, always keeping in mind the fact that we endeavor to make a rule in each case that will be practical and in keeping with the general understanding of mankind." Petitions of Kinsman Transit Co., 388 F.2d 821, 825 (2d Cir. N.Y. 1968)

Fortunately for people on the Gulf Coast the Oil Pollution Act of 1991 promised a broader scope of liability - as long as one suffered a loss that was "due to" or "results from" damage to natural resources a recovery was allowed.   Neither property damage nor personal injury needed to be shown, federal judge Carl Barbier held.

The OPA contained a limitation for $75 million for oil spill compensation.  But the statute excepted damage resulting from gross negligence. BP did not raise that as a statutory defense.  And Judge Barbier ultimately ruled that BP had been grossly negligent - thus allowing escape from the damages cap.

For those most directly affected - fishermen and others in the immediate shoreline area a simple mode of proof of damages was devised:

How to calculate your lost income or profits under the Deepwater Horizon Settlement, using a fisherman as an exemplar

A) What was my share of the catch for either the same period in 

* 2009

OR

* 2008-2009 average

OR

* Average of 2007 - 2009

B) What was my catch of shrimp for any three months in the period April 20 - December 2010

C) A minus B = Loss

D) Depending on Zone or category multiply C x [1.25x....3.0x) RTP

E) Add C+ D = total compensation

[A] ($30,000), plus RTP ($90,000) = $120,000

- GWC

NOAA:  Deepwater Horizon oil spill settlements: Where the money went

U.S. and States Announce Historic Settlement - Department of Justice