New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Kathryn Krase and Daniel Pollack | July 10, 2020
In their Family Law column, Kathryn Krase and Daniel Pollack discuss the impact of school closures due to COVID-19 on families with school-aged children who have special needs.
By Jason Grant | July 9, 2020
"The effect—and perhaps even the goal—is to create as much chaos for universities and international students as possible," Harvard and MIT allege.
By Jason Grant | June 25, 2020
"Betsy DeVos's unjustified and illegal repeal of the Gainful Employment rule is yet another example of the Trump Administration's continued efforts to dismantle critical safeguards protecting students and taxpayers," AG James said Wednesday.
By Jason Grant | June 8, 2020
The Trump administration's new regulations "gut[] decades of firmly established policy on schools' obligations to respond to sexual harassment and ... invent[] new rights for individuals accused of sexual harassment," state Attorney General Letitia James and six of her colleagues say in their 78-page complaint.
By Jane Wester | May 19, 2020
The amended complaint adds new allegations about the executive committee's actions, including alleged securities violations and the misuse of funds donated to the elite Upper East Side boys' school.
By Ryan Tarinelli | May 5, 2020
But now, the university has shifted to remote learning and has refused to refund or adjust tuition paid by students for the spring 2020 semester, the lawsuit claims.
By Ryan Tarinelli | April 14, 2020
Experts say executive orders issued by the third-term governor give him wide legal latitude over public school schedules.
By Jane Wester | March 23, 2020
Jim Walden of Walden Macht & Haran said in the parents' complaint that a group of trustees improperly forced out a longtime headmaster. But Thomas Rafferty of Cravath, Swaine & Moore, which is representing the executive committee, argued that Johnson's departure did not give the families standing to file a lawsuit.
Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Jason Grant | March 13, 2020
In a broad-ranging action filed in Connecticut federal court Thursday, the female physicians allege that Yale, as an institution, has used a "pattern of deliberate indifference" for many years to effectively silence and blunt the claims of various women who have accused Yale men in power of abuse or harassment.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By John F.X. Peloso and Thomas J. Donlon | February 28, 2020
The decision overturned the district court's finding that two Village zoning laws were enacted in 2001 and 2004 with the intent to discriminate against the Orthodox/Hasidic community, leaving those laws in effect.
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