By Anthony S. Guardino | March 26, 2024
Ironically, impact and administrative review fees have hidden costs that could stunt the growth in the areas municipalities are trying to revitalize.
By Jodi Stein, Eva C. Schneider and Sam Zarkower | March 13, 2024
The authors discuss New York's "City of Yes" zoning amendments pertaining to carbon neutrality.
By ALM Staff | February 15, 2024
This ruling was selected and summarized by the New York Law Journal's decision editors.
By Jimmy Hoover | November 29, 2023
The issue before the justices concerns whether the Seventh Amendment right to a jury trial applies to agency courts when a civil fine is sought.
New York Law Journal | Expert Opinion
By Carol Rosenthal and Nick Williams | October 26, 2023
Mayor Adams recently announced a group of proposals to eliminate certain zoning barriers in NYC in order to help increase housing, including affordable housing, in NYC. This article outlines and discusses these proposals along with the potential impact and challenges and also the next steps in the process.
New York Law Journal | Expert Opinion
By Anthony Michael Sabino | June 1, 2023
In Axon Enterprise v. F.T.C., the U.S. Supreme Court very recently decreed that constitutional challenges to regulatory power need not be relegated to agency administrative law judges, but rather are cognizable in the district courts. In the first installment of his two-part series, Anthony Sabino discussed the foundation for this newest edict. Now he turns to Axon itself.
New York Law Journal | Expert Opinion
By Anthony Michael Sabino | May 25, 2023
Part one of a two-part article regarding the new Supreme Court decision in 'Axon Enterprise v. F.T.C.' This first article discusses the precedent leading up to 'Axon.'
By John C. Coffee Jr. | May 17, 2023
In his Corporate Securities column, Professor John Coffee discusses the impact of Axon Enter. v. FTC, which he writes "masks a lack of consensus and shows the court to be straddling—at least for the time—a deep division over whether administrative agencies can utilize administrative law judges."
By ALM Staff | March 27, 2023
This ruling was selected and summarized by the New York Law Journal's decision editors.
New York Law Journal | Commentary
By Dennis Boshnack | March 15, 2023
VTL 238 requires a parking violation to be dismissed upon application of the person charged with the violation if the parking summons charging the violation omits, misdescribes, or illegibly states certain information, including the vehicle's body type.
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