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SPLC announces lawsuit against Duval Schools on behalf of Amy Donofrio

Records show the premise of the lawsuit is for retaliation and right to free speech. Along with the school district, Donofrio is also suing Scott Schneider who currently serves as Duval Schools High School Region Superintendent for relentless retaliation and violation of her rights to free speech and expression.   Before Schneider became a district-level administrator, he served as the principal at Robert E. Lee High School where Donofrio worked. Donofrio co-founded the EVAC Movement, and taught a class for the program at the school. The class was shut down under Schneider s leadership in 2017.  The Times-Union reached out to Schneider and the school district for comment. The district declined to comment citing pending litigation.

Multi-Stage Transaction Fiduciary Duties May Extend Post-Closing

Friday, April 16, 2021 A recent decision by the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York highlights directors’ fiduciary duty to evaluate all aspects of multi-stage transactions, including those portions to be effectuated post-closing by successor directors. In  In re Nine West LBO Securities Litigation, the district court denied a motion to dismiss breach of fiduciary duty and aiding and abetting breach of fiduciary duty claims asserted against former directors of Jones Group, Inc. (“Jones Group”) by the bankruptcy litigation trustee of Nine West Holdings, Inc. (“Nine West”), the successor of Jones Group.  The trustee’s claims were based on a 2014 multi-stage leveraged buyout of Jones Group by Sycamore Management, L.P. (“Sycamore”), which contemplated: (1) the merger of Jones Group with a Sycamore affiliate to form Nine West; (2) Sycamore’s contribution of $395 million to Nine West; (3) an increase in Nine West’s debt from

Odors/Automobile Assembly Plant: Federal District Court Addresses Dismissal Motion for Nuisance/Negligence Claims | Mitchell, Williams, Selig, Gates & Woodyard, P L L C

Thornburgh v. Ford Motor Co., 2021 WL 1230271. Plaintiff Otto E. Thornburgh (“Thornburgh”) alleged upon behalf of himself and others similarly situated that the Plant releases odors that: . . . invade Plaintiff s property, causing property damage through negligence, gross negligence, and nuisance. The putative class had been defined as: . . . including [a]ll owner/occupants and renters of residential property residing within two (2) miles of the Plant s property boundary. Ford filed a Motion to Dismiss both counts pursuant to Federal Rule 12(b)(6). The Court notes that Ford in pursuing its Motion to Dismiss does not contest the facts at this stage of the proceedings. The company argues there is no cause of action for nuisance or negligence as a matter of law.

Human Services Secretary: Emergency SNAP Allotments Beginning for Households Receiving Monthly Maximum Benefit

Human Services Secretary: Emergency SNAP Allotments Beginning for Households Receiving Monthly Maximum Benefit 04/16/2021 Harrisburg, PA - The Department of Human Services (DHS) today began to issue emergency allotments for the month of April for households that currently receive the maximum monthly Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) benefit. These funds come following a settlement between Community Legal Services (CLS) and the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) and will be the first part of a $712 million distribution of federally-funded food assistance for approximately 700,000 households that either received less than half their monthly SNAP payment in additional assistance or have not received extra SNAP assistance since the COVID-19 pandemic began.

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