Can your workplace require you to get a COVID-19 vaccine?
Can your job require you to get the COVID-19 vaccine? By Tiffany Thompson | January 20, 2021 at 10:58 PM CST - Updated January 20 at 11:03 PM
HUNTSVILLE, Ala. (WAFF) - Can your job legally require you to have the COVID-19 vaccine? Many people have wondered about this.
On Wednesday, our crews went to Big Spring Park to find out how community members feel.
“I would prefer if they gave us an option,” Jacob Gilbert said.
“I’m pretty neutral on the situation,” Natalie Abbott said. Meanwhile, someone we asked just a few minutes later completely disagreed.
The United States Supreme Court issued two rulings today that saw conservative Justices side with the four liberal members of the Court in separate cases that defend transsexual employees from discrimination and uphold California's "sanctuary state" laws.
ACLU of Northern California Statement on President Biden s Repeal of the Muslim and African Travel Bans
ACLU of Northern California Statement on President Biden s Repeal of the Muslim and African Travel Bans For Immediate Release: Jan 20, 2021
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SAN FRANCISCO Today, we celebrate the Biden Administration s swift action to repeal the Muslim and African Travel Bans the result of the advocacy, drive, and resilience of impacted communities.
Over four years, and after a series of legal challenges by advocates including the ACLU Foundation of Northern California, former-President Trump pushed forward various iterations of the Muslim and African Bans that translated his hate-filled campaign promises into public policy. These policies ultimately upheld by the United States Supreme Court in what will surely go down as one of the most unjust rulings in its 230-year history brought chaos and despair to the lives of everyday people, wh
NEW YORK, Jan. 20, 2021 /PRNewswire/ Juan Monteverde, founder and managing partner at Monteverde & Associates PC, a national securities firm rated Top 50 in the 2018 and 2019
Jessica Shoemaker is Professor of Law at the University of Nebraska College of Law. She has been recognized both nationally and internationally for her work on adaptive change in pluralistic land-tenure systems, as well as property law’s power to shape the contours of human communities and natural environments. Her work focuses specifically on issues of racial justice and agricultural sustainability in the American countryside and on systems of Indigenous land tenure and land governance in the United States and Canada. Her most recent law-review articles, including Fee Simple Failures: Rural Landscapes and Race and Transforming Property: Reclaiming Modern Indigenous Land Tenures, have been placed in top journals, including the Michigan Law Review and the California Law Review. Her work has been reviewed twice in JOTWELL, an online journal that highlights important and notable recent legal scholarship, and she is cited widely by interdisciplinary and international scholars. From 201