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The Fraternal Order of Police is excluded from new police reform plans
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This is a huge step for law enforcement Police unions shift stance on protecting bad officers
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Police unions plan to update guidance on defending officers: report
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Small Roads, Ports Outline Infrastructure Investment, Policy Priorities
Small Roads, Ports Outline Infrastructure Investment, Policy Priorities Written by Marybeth Luczak, Executive Editor
American Short Line and Regional Railroad Association (ASLRRA) President Chuck Baker and American Association of Port Authorities (AAPA) President and CEO Chris Connor offered supply chain investment and policy recommendations during a hearing this week of the U.S. Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, & Transportation, Subcommittee on Surface Transportation, Maritime, Freight, and Ports.
Chuck Baker, ASLRRA
In his testimony, ASLRRA’s Baker highlighted the industry’s contributions to the U.S. supply chain, and made four key legislative policy recommendations that could “create more leverage toward meeting economic and environmental goals as part of a surface transportation or infrastructure bill in the 117th Congress.”
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April 2021 was a meaningful month for two industries that are hardly strangers to lawsuits involving the status of workers as independent contractors. A federal district court in the District of Columbia issued an extremely favorable decision for Lyft, holding that a driver and members of a class action are not covered by the interstate transportation worker exemption from arbitration under the Federal Arbitration Act, even though drivers in a locality such as D.C. often drive in interstate commerce. The court concluded that the arbitration exemption in the FAA must be determined by reference to all drivers providing services to a company’s customers nationally, not locally, and found that crossing state lines is not commonplace among Lyft drivers in most locations where Lyft operates. Meanwhile, in an appellate decision by a three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, two of the three pan