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Stories by Scott Holland on Northern California Record

NORTHERN CALIFORNIA RECORD

Thursday, November 21, 2024

Scott Holland News


California Supreme Court says drug abuse alone not enough to justify removing kids from parents

By Scott Holland |
Unanimous ruling sends father's lawsuit back to appellate court for reconsideration under new framing of legal standard that did away with the so-called tender years presumption.

Ninth Circuit says California State Bar is arm of the state, and is shielded from discrimination lawsuit

By Scott Holland |
Mountain View disability attorney alleged the California State Bar had violated disability law by declining to provide him with test-taking accommodations.

Appeals panel agrees with ending lawsuit accusing Shopify of wrongly sharing customer data

By Scott Holland |
U.S. Ninth Circuit opinion says California customer can't sue Canadian payment processor under state law just because the company was involved in processing payments from online transactions.

CA Supreme Court says PG&E customers can't sue utility over forced blackouts during wildfire season

By Scott Holland |
Attorneys for the plaintiffs say the decision marks a "sad day" in California, as they predict it will remove the risk of harmful lawsuits and allow PG&E and other California utilities to shut off power to California communities more often and for longer periods

CA appeals court says Bakersfield newspaper must turn over reporter's notes from jailhouse interview with accused murderer

By Scott Holland |
The appeals panel says journalists' First Amendment press freedom rights are superseded by accused criminals' right to a fair trial when the two rights conflict.

SF ordinance requiring disclosure of political donors remains, after Ninth Circuit denies rehearing request

By Scott Holland |
Dissenters say the decision will uphold an ordinance that violates campaign donors' free speech rights

Federal judge says California's 'large-capacity magazine' ban can't square with Second Amendment

By Scott Holland |
A federal judge has ruled the California state law, backed by Gov. Gavin Newsom, is "clearly unconstitutional" when weighed using the tests required by the U.S. Supreme Court

Appeals panel says hotel allowed to collect legal fees after beating an ADA accessibility class action over website

By Scott Holland |
The panel of the U.S. Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals agreed a 2013 Supreme Court ruling overturned a 2001 federal appeals decision, which found the opposite

Meta must continue to defend against privacy class actions over tracking pixels on hospital websites

By Scott Holland |
Federal judge rejected Meta's motion to end the class action brought by a collection of anonymous Facebook users who claimed the social media giant improperly accessed patient data through a tracking pixel used by hospitals in their patient portals

Appeals panel: San Francisco can't use airport contracts to shield improper local regulations on airlines

By Scott Holland |
A split federal appeals panel said a San Francisco ordinance attempting to force airlines that use SFO to provide certain health benefits is an illegal attempt to regulate airlines, clashing with federal law

Appeals panel agrees AirBnb properties aren't hotel-like 'developments' needing special coastal permits

By Scott Holland |
Coastal Protection Alliance argued short-term rental properties needed to secure coastal development permits, like hotels or resorts. Judges said the rental homes are still being used as homes, no matter who is staying in them

Judge unplugs antitrust class action accusing Google, Apple of secret search engine deal

By Scott Holland |
Complaint alleges Apple agreed to stay out of search engine game in exchange for huge payments, allegedly harming consumers

CAL Supreme Court: Contractors, like those hired for pre-employment screening, can be sued for discrimination under state law

By Scott Holland |
U.S. Healthworks Medical Group, which conducted pre-employment medical screenings, argued only direct employers should face discrimination lawsuits under California law, but the court said agents who professionally should know better can't just say they were following directions

Alameda judge won't end lawsuit accusing CAL state schools officials of discrimination during Covid remote learning

By Scott Holland |
Oakland, Los Angeles students say they were denied equal education when the state closed schools during the Covid-19 pandemic, and did not provide them with the computers and other technology they needed to academically function during the shutdown

Appeals panel agrees citizen-led ballot measures can pass with only simple majority

By Scott Holland |
On remand, state court to consider whether pillow tax referendum had municipal backing

Appeals panel says San Francisco allowed to let noncitizens vote in school board elections

By Scott Holland |
Ruling overturns dismissal of Proposition N ordinances as unconstitutional

Appeals panel rules Alameda schools' special tax doesn't violate state law

By Scott Holland |
The court tossed out a lower court's ruling that the special tax illegally allowed owners of larger properties to pay a lower effective tax rate

Home Depot paying $72.5M to end years-old class action over underpayment allegations

By Scott Holland |
Workers who claim they weren't paid for waiting in closed stores for supervisor release will receive up to $77 each, while lawyers could get $24M

CAL Supreme Court: USC didn't violate football player's rights by expelling him over assault without chance to face witnesses

By Scott Holland |
Private schools aren't required to conduct in-person hearings with cross examination, even with expulsion on the line, when dealing accusations of sexual misconduct or intimate partner violence, the state high court said

Disneyland workers entitled to 'living wage' under Anaheim ordinance, because Disney gets tax rebate from city

By Scott Holland |
Appeals panel said Walt Disney Company receives rebates of its own taxes under a redevelopment agreement with the city of Anaheim, and that qualifies as a city "subsidy," which in turn requires Disney to pay its workers in accordance with Anaheim's so-called 'Living Wage Ordinance.'