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EDITORIAL: CDC’s eviction moratorium on shaky legal ground

December 1, 2020
Three months ago, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention issued a national order that banned certain residential evictions until the end of this year. The move was intended to keep renters in their homes during the coronavirus pandemic. Americans have accepted various government orders intended to limit the spread of the virus or mitigate…
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NCLA's Mike DeGrandis addresses SCOTUS Covid-19 Ruling Blocking NY Exec. Order Limiting Worship

December 1, 2020
NCLA’s Senior Litigation Counsel, Michael P. DeGrandis joins The Wilkow Report on Sirius XM to discuss how the SCOTUS decision in the case of Roman Catholic Diocese of Brooklyn v. Cuomo could impact pending cases like NCLA’s case against Governor Charlie Baker’s Civil Defense State of Emergency.   TweetShareShare0 Shares
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U.S. Supreme Court ruling on houses of worship cited in suit against Charlie Baker

November 30, 2020
A group suing over Gov. Charlie Baker’s pandemic executive orders is citing last week’s U.S. Supreme Court order to stop capping religious gatherings in coronavirus hot zones in New York. In that case, the court ruled 5-4 that New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo could not limit the size of gatherings at churches and synagogues in…
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Governor’s office: Mass. pandemic restrictions on churches ‘consistent’ with US Supreme Court ruling

November 27, 2020
Pandemic restrictions on places of worship in Massachusetts won’t run afoul of a US Supreme Court ruling this week that barred certain capacity limits on religious gatherings in areas of New York where coronavirus infections were rising, according to legal scholars and Governor Charlie Baker’s office. Read the full article TweetShareShare0 Shares
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‘It’s A Matter Of Principle’: Conservative Publisher Downplays NLRB Ruling That Said His Tweet Violated Labor Law

November 25, 2020
The publisher of conservative media organization The Federalist responded to a government ruling that stated he violated labor law when he tweeted workers who wanted to unionize would be sent “back to the salt mine.” Read the full article TweetShareShare0 Shares
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The Federalist Publisher’s Tweet Violated Labor Law, NLRB Rules

November 25, 2020
The publisher of conservative online magazine The Federalist unlawfully threatened workers when he said via Twitter that he’d send them “back to the salt mine” if they attempted to form a union, the National Labor Relations Board held. Read the full article TweetShareShare0 Shares
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