Remove Administrative Law Remove Laws Remove Louisiana Remove Statute
article thumbnail

Can fishermen be required to pay for federal monitors? And by the way – should Chevron be overruled?

SCOTUSBlog

The National Marine Fisheries Service construed the governing statute to allow it to require industry to pay the salaries of those monitors. Circuit held that the statute was reasonably read to allow the agency to require industry to pay the cost of federal monitors. A divided panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. 17 and Mar.

Statute 109
article thumbnail

Revenge of the rescheduled cases: Congressional proxy voting, the ministerial exception, and more

SCOTUSBlog

Morrissey-Berru , under which employees deemed “ministers” of religious institutions are not covered by various employment and discrimination laws. In 1981, Congress passed a statute requiring that reimbursement rates paid to organizations for managing state Medicaid plans must be “actuarially sound.” Next up is Texas v.

Court 100
Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Trending Sources

article thumbnail

Justices delve into a trio of thorny issues in states’ challenge to federal immigration policy

SCOTUSBlog

Texas and Louisiana went to federal court in Texas to challenge the policy. District Judge Drew Tipton agreed with the states that the policy violates federal law and vacated it nationwide. Congress enacted the federal immigration laws at the center of this case, he told Prelogar, because the existing laws were not being enforced.

article thumbnail

July 2021 Updates to the Climate Case Charts

ClimateChange-ClimateLaw

Each month, Arnold & Porter and the Sabin Center for Climate Change Law collect and summarize developments in climate-related litigation, which we also add to our U.S. Louisiana Federal Court Blocked Biden Administration “Pause” on New Oil and Gas Leases. Louisiana v. and non-U.S. climate litigation charts.

Court 45