FOIA Letter Generator, by Law Librarian, The Rutgers Camden Law Library Blog
http://camdenlaw.wordpress.com/2014/01/28/foia-letter-generator/
A tool for generating Freedom of Information letters. -CCE
02 Wednesday Apr 2014
Posted in Freedom of Information Act, Government
≈ Comments Off on Freedom of Information Letter-Writing Tool.
FOIA Letter Generator, by Law Librarian, The Rutgers Camden Law Library Blog
http://camdenlaw.wordpress.com/2014/01/28/foia-letter-generator/
A tool for generating Freedom of Information letters. -CCE
30 Sunday Mar 2014
Posted in Consumer Law, Government
≈ Comments Off on Senate Report on Target’s 2013 Data Breach.
Tags
beSpacific Blog., Chairman John D. (Jay) Rockefeller IV, Consumer Information, Credit Cards, Cyber Attacks, Data Breach, Data Security, Debit Cards, Sabrina I. Pacifici, Target
Senate Staff Report Details Target’s Missed Opportunities to Stop Massive Data Breach, by Sabrina I. Pacifici, beSpacific Blog
‘Chairman John D. (Jay) Rockefeller IV released a staff report titled, “A ‘Kill Chain’ Analysis of the 2013 Target Data Breach.’ The report details how Target possibly failed to take advantage of several opportunities to prevent the massive data breach in 2013 when cyber criminals stole the financial and personal information of as many as 110 million consumers. Rockefeller will formally introduce the report tomorrow when he chairs his third full Committee hearing on data security. The hearing, titled, ‘Protecting Personal Consumer Information from Cyber Attacks and Data Breaches’, explored the dangers to consumers posed by recent data breaches. The Chairman highlight[ed] legislation he recently introduced, the Data Security and Breach Notification Act, that would – for the first time – establish strong, federal consumer data security and breach notification standards.’
16 Sunday Mar 2014
Posted in Aerial Photographs, Aviation Law, Drones, Federal Aviation Administration, Government, National Transportation and Safety Board, Privacy
≈ Comments Off on FAA Appeals Commercial Use of Drones for Aerial Photographs.
Tags
Aerial Photographs, Aviation, Commercial Drones, Drones, FAA Modernization and Reform Act, Federal Aviation Administration, Model Aircraft, National Transportation and Safety Board, Privacy, Raphael Pirker
The Federal Aviation Administration Appeals Most Recent Drone Ruling, by Charles D. Tobin, Holland & Knight LLP
The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) has appealed this month’s ruling by an administrative law judge striking down a fine against a paid photographer who had strapped cameras to a model airplane and photographed the University of Virginia.
The case, now pending before the National Transportation and Safety Board (NTSB), could alter the flight path of the current development of regulations and laws that will affect newsrooms’ abilities to use drones to gather news. . . .
06 Thursday Mar 2014
Posted in Federal Reserve System, Finance and Banking Law, Government
≈ Comments Off on Federal Reserve and Banking Regulations.
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
http://www.federalreserve.gov/default.htm
This site is about the Federal Reserve and banking regulations. The topics are divided as:
Recent Developments, About the Fed, News and Events, Monetary Policy, Banking Information and Regulation, Payment Systems, Economic Research & Data, Consumer Information, Community Development, Reporting Forms, and Publications. -CCE
03 Monday Mar 2014
Posted in Health Law, Skilled Nursing Facilities, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
≈ Comments Off on Medicare Study of Injuries and Fatalities in Skilled Nursing Facilities.
Tags
Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, Dr. Marty Makary, Inpatient, Inspector General, John Hopkins Hospital, Marshall Allen, Medicare, Medication Error, Nursing Homes, ProPublica, Sen. Bill Nelson, Skilled Nursing Facilities, U.S. Dept. of Health and Human Services, U.S. Senate Special Committee on Aging
One Third of Skilled Nursing Patients Harmed in Treatment, by Marshall Allen, ProPublica
A study by Medicare’s inspector general of skilled nursing facilities says nearly 22,000 patients were injured and more than 1,500 died in a single month — a higher rate of medical errors than hospitals. . . .
27 Thursday Feb 2014
Posted in Final Omnibus Rule, Government, Health Law, HIPAA, Law Office Management, Legal Malpractice, Office Procedures
≈ Comments Off on HIPAA’s Omnibus Final Rule – Revise Your Procedures!
Tags
Business Associate, Civil Fines, HIPAA, HIPAA privacy policies, HIPPA Final Omnibus Rule, HITECH Act, Individually-Identifiable Health Information, Legal Malpractice, PHI, State Bar Discipline, The San Diego County Bar Association
Ethics in Brief – HIPAA Omnibus Final Rule: One Year Anniversary and Impact on Attorneys as Business Associates, by Linda Hunt Mullany, Ofer Barley, and Charles Berwanger, of Gordon & Rees LLP, for Ihe San Diego County Bar Association
https://www.sdcba.org/index.cfm?pg=Ethics-in-Brief-2-3-2014
January 25, 2014 marks the one year anniversary of the publication of the long-awaited omnibus final rule (“Final Rule”) by the Office of Civil Rights of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (“OCR”). The Final Rule implemented many proposed regulations, and addressed other provisions of the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 (“HIPAA”) in accordance with the Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health Act (“HITECH Act”). This article addresses the most pertinent changes affecting attorneys as business associates who receive protected health information (“PHI”) from a covered entity. Please note that additional requirements by state-specific privacy laws may apply.
* * *
What This Means to Attorneys as Business Associates Going Forward
The extension of the covered entity’s responsibilities to business associates now brings possible civil and criminal liability to the forefront. HIPAA civil fines for noncompliance can be up to $50,000 per violation (or a maximum of $1.5 million for repeated violations) depending on the degree of culpability, and criminal penalties may result in up to ten years in prison. When combined with state penalties, these numbers may be even higher, and land an unwary attorney with front-page publicity of the wrong kind. Anyone can file a complaint with the OCR if he or she believes that a violation occurred since the complainant need not be an actual victim. The federal government will then decide whether to investigate and impose a fine or penalty. Separately, noncompliance may also involve state bar discipline for attorney misconduct or causes for legal malpractice and, in California, individual patients can bring private lawsuits when their PHI has been negligently released in violation of state law.Attorneys as business associates must immediately comply with the HIPAA Security and Privacy Rules. That means that they will need to conduct a security risk assessment and draft a security policy for handling client electronic files that contain PHI. Further, attorneys will need to implement HIPAA privacy policies regarding the use, disclosure, maintenance and destruction of PHI in any form. Finally, if attorneys have not done so already, they are advised to audit their existing BAAs and come into compliance with the updated provisions, especially if they use subcontractors.
26 Wednesday Feb 2014
Tags
Anti-Gay Bill, Arizona, Center for Arizona Policy, Discrimination, Gender Discrimination, Governor Jan Brewer, Jeff Flake, John McCain, Mitt Romney, Religious Liberty, Secretary of State John Kerry, Senate Bill 1062, Super Bowl
Arizona Governor Vetoes Anti-Gay Bill, by Dan Nowicki, Yvonne Wingett Sanchez, and Alia Beard Rau, The Arizona Republic, USA Today
http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2014/02/26/arizona-governor-vetoes-anti-gay-bill/5849187/
It will be interesting to see how Arizona Governor Jan Brewer’s veto will affect similar legislation in other states, such as Oklahoma, Idaho, and Kansas, and if the pressure from businesses and the public have not already done so. -CCE
Facing intense pressure from political and business interests and a growing public outcry, Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer announced Wednesday that she had vetoed a bill that would have allowed businesses to refuse service to gays and others based on religious beliefs.
Brewer said the bill was unnecessary legislation that threatened the state’s recovering economy by driving away high-profile events such as next year’s Super Bowl and corporations looking to relocate to Arizona.
“Religious liberty is a core American and Arizona value — so is non-discrimination,” Brewer said at a news conference announcing the veto. She said the proposed law, known as Senate Bill 1062, was too broadly worded and could have resulted in “unintended and negative consequences.” . . .
22 Saturday Feb 2014
Posted in Government, Library of Congress, References, Regulations, Research, U.S. Government
≈ Comments Off on There’s More To Government Research Than FirstGov.gov.
15 Saturday Feb 2014
Posted in Constitution, First Amendment, Municipal Code, Municipal Law, Panhandling
≈ Comments Off on Federal Court Rejects Portland’s Panhandling Ordinance.
Tags
Anti-Camping, First Amendment, Homeless, Mayor Charlie Hales, Muncipality, Oregon, Panhandlers, Portland, U.S. Constitution, U.S. District Judge George Z. Singal
Our View: Rejection Of Median-Strip Panhandling Ban Right Call For Portland, Portland Press Herald
It is estimated that 4,000 homeless people sleep on Portland’s streets. Portland’s Mayor Charlie Hales has been taking various measures since last summer to address with Portland’s homeless situation. Mayor Hales has said he wants to crack down on homeless camps by increasing homeless shelters, but has not set any specific amount for pay for shelters.
The Mayor’s anti-camping law allows police to “sweep” homeless on sidewalks. In a “sweep,” the police discard the homeless’ few possessions, including warm clothing and blankets, in spite of the number of homeless who have frozen to death.
Mayor Hales says this law is not about homelessness but about lawlessness. Unfortunately for Mayor Hales, his actions have galvanized grass roots protesters to head this week towards City Hall with – literally – pitchforks and torches.
To the Portland Police Department’s credit, it responded to the recent extremely cold conditions by moving people to shelter. The Fire Department also did its part to help. Normally around 1,000 shelter beds are available for the homeless, but various agencies, such as the Red Cross, provided 350 more shelter beds.
This will, I hope, give you an idea of the scope of the homeless situation in Portland, the struggle to address it, and set the stage for the case discussed in this post from the Portland Press Herald. An ordinance forbidding panhandling purportedly to address “public safety” has been struck down by a federal judge in support of the First Amendment. -CCE
There is something disturbing about seeing men and women standing near the roadway holding signs and asking for help. It’s hard to ignore a median-strip panhandler when you are sitting in a car stopped at a red light. It makes some people feel angry, others threatened.
Moving panhandlers off the median strips did not fix any of the real problems of poverty in Portland, but neither does knocking down the ordinance that banned them. City leaders should keep working to address the real problems of homelessness and extreme poverty.
But that’s not enough to override the First Amendment to the Constitution, according to U.S. District Judge George Z. Singal. In his ruling Wednesday, Singal struck down a Portland ordinance that banned standing in median strips by pedestrians as ‘content-based restriction on free speech.’
Judge Singal saw right through the city’s claim that the goal of the ordinance was to protect public safety, correctly pointing out that the ordinance did not prohibit people from posting campaign signs on the medians, which is at least as dangerous as standing still. . . .
13 Thursday Feb 2014
Posted in Campaign Contributions, Election Laws, Freedom of Information Act, Government
≈ Comments Off on Follow The Money – Campaign Contributions for State and Federal Politics.
Tags
Campaign Contributions, Districts, Follow The Money, Government, Legislators, Political Donations, Politics
Follow The Money, National Institute on Money
http://www.followthemoney.org/index.phtml
Online resource for campaign contributions for state and federal politics. -CCE
13 Thursday Feb 2014
Posted in Damages, Employment Law, Evidence, Government, Litigation, Negligence, OSHA, Settlement, Wrongful Death
≈ Comments Off on $17 Million – Likely Largest Ever Wrongful Workplace Death Settlement.
Tags
Adam Nowak Sr., Crane Accident, EHS Today, Electrician, Grays Ferry, Josh Cable, Litigation, Negligence, OSHA, Pennsylvania County, Robert Mongeluzzi, Safety, Settlement, Steam Plant, Unforeseeable Act, Veolia Energy, Workplace Safety, Wrongful Death
Philadelphia Electrician’s Widow to Receive Record $17 Million in Wrongful-Death Settlement, by Josh Cable, EHS Today
The widow of an electrician who died in a crane accident at Veolia Energy’s Schuylkill steam plant in Grays Ferry, Pa., will receive $17 million, in what is believed to be the largest wrongful-workplace-death settlement in Philadelphia County history. . . .
13 Thursday Feb 2014
Posted in Finance and Banking Law, Government, Internal Revenue Service
≈ Comments Off on Tax Audit Triggers and How To Avoid Them.
Tags
Accounting, Contractors, Deadlines, E-Filing, Finances, Gross Revenue, IRS, Net Income, Quicken Docstoc, Receipts, Red Flags, Self-Employment, Social Media Profile, Sole Proprietor, Tax Audit, Tax Deductions, Vacations
10 Red Flags That Can Cause a Tax Audit, by Docstoc Articles, Quicken Docstoc
There are plenty of common audit triggers that business owners know to avoid. Never mix your business and personal finances. Don’t deduct things without receipts. Most of these preventative measures come down to common sense.
However, every year countless businesses get hit with an audit they never saw coming, and it ends up wasting their precious time and money. Where did they go wrong? Here are 10 little-known audit triggers that every business should know (and some suggestions on how to avoid them) . . . .
27 Monday Jan 2014
Posted in Freedom of Information Act, Government, Health Law, U.S. Department of Food and Drug Administration
≈ Comments Off on FDA Documents Reveal Its Inadequate Response to High Risk Antibiotics in Livestock.
Tags
Andrew Martin, Antibiotic Resistance, Antibiotics, Bloomberg Businessweek, Farm Animals, FDA, Freedom of Information Act, Livestock, Natural Resources Defense Council, U.S. Food and Drug Administration
The FDA Allows Sale of ‘High Risk’ Antibiotics for Livestock, Report Says, by Andrew Martin, Bloomberg Businessweek
There are hyperlinks throughout the article to additional blog posts that shed more light on the world-wide scope of this situation. -CCE
A U.S. Food and Drug Administration review of 30 antibiotics used in livestock found that more than half posed a significant risk of exposing humans to antibiotic-resistant bacteria.
Despite the review, which occurred from 2001 to 2010, the federal agency allowed the drugs—used as additives in animal feed and water—to remain on the market, according to a report released on Monday by the Natural Resources Defense Council, an environmental group that based its findings on internal documents obtained under the Freedom of Information Act.
20 Monday Jan 2014
Posted in Affirmative Action, Disabilities, Employment Law, Federal Contract Compliance Program, Veterans
≈ Comments Off on March 2014 Deadline for Federal Contract Compliance Program’s Revised Rules.
Tags
Affirmative Action, Disabilities, federal contractors, Husch Blackwell LLP, Lexology, Mary Elizabeth “Molly” Kurt, Office of Federal Contract Compliance Program, Veterans
2014 Model Documents For New OFCCP Regulations, by Mary Elizabeth “Molly” Kurt, Husch Blackwell LLP, Lexology
Ms. Kurt has attached forms in Word to her post. -CCE
The Office of Federal Contract Compliance Program’s revised rules for veterans and individuals with disabilities take effect March 24, 2014. In addition to goal-setting/benchmarking and increased attention to good faith efforts, the rules will require federal contractors to deploy a number of new or revised forms. The forms include applicant and new hire invitations to self-identify, mandatory elements of job posting communications with the state job service, and new elements of the EEO job advertisement tagline. Certain of these documents will be required beginning on March 24, 2014, and use of others can be delayed until the first date of your next affirmative action plan year.
20 Monday Jan 2014
Posted in Fraud, Government, Identity Theft, Internal Revenue Service
≈ Comments Off on IRS Service Is Going From Bad To Worse.
Tags
Allison Linn, CNBC, Fraud Alert, Identity Theft, Identity theft fraud alert, Internal Revenue Service, IRS, National Taxpayer Advocate Nina E. Olson, Taxpayer
Why IRS Customer Service Is Bad (And May Get Worse), by Allison Linn, CNBC
http://www.cnbc.com/id/101339980
[G]iven its limited resources, the IRS said that in 2014 it will stop preparing tax returns for people who need help, such as those who are elderly or disabled. The agency also plans to answer only “basic” tax law questions, and only during the normal filing season through April 15. Instead, it will direct people to the website and other automated sources of information. . . .
15 Wednesday Jan 2014
Tags
American Water Works, Bloomberg Businesweek, Charlston, Chemical Contamination, Elk River, Freedom Industries, Hill Peterson Carper Bee & Deitzler, James Peterson, Paul M. Barrett, West Virginia, West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection
Lawyers Aim Bigger Than Freedom Industries in West Virginia Chemical Spill, by Paul M. Barrett, Bloomberg Businessweek
In a neo-Tuscan villa in an office park near the Charleston, W. Va., airport, seven West Virginia plaintiffs’ lawyers gathered on Jan. 13 for a council of war. Chemical contamination that four days earlier had cut off tap water to 300,000 West Virginians was making its way west into Ohio. Local authorities were saying that Freedom Industries, the source of the 7,500 gallons of rogue coal-processing chemical, may not have acted swiftly to warn about the seepage. And the federal prosecutor in town sounded dead serious about a criminal investigation.
No surprise, then, that the atmosphere in the elegant conference room of Hill, Peterson, Carper, Bee & Deitzler, while businesslike, had an undertone of bellicose joy. ‘We’re looking at punitive damages, ‘piercing the corporate veil’ at Freedom Industries, and holding the water company and the chemical manufacturer liable, too,’ said James Peterson, the strategy session’s host. Dressed in a black sweatsuit and tan baseball cap, he acknowledged that he hadn’t showered in five days. Then he smiled and said: ‘Neither have a lot of other people around here, and they’re pissed.’
14 Tuesday Jan 2014
Posted in Appellate Law, District of Columbia Circuit Court of Appeals, FCC, Government, Internet
≈ Comments Off on D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals Rules That FCC Regulations Are Outside the Agency’s Authority.
Tags
Brian Focht, Common Carrier, D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals, FCC, Net Neutrality, The Cyber Advocate
Not Hyperbole: The Internet Won’t Be The Same Without Net Neutrality, by Brian Focht, The Cyber Advocate
Today, the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that key provisions of regulations promulgated by the FCC, referred to as the ‘Open Internet Rules’ (or ‘Net Neutrality’ to most), were outside the agency’s authority. Specifically, the court held that rules requiring broadband internet service providers to treat all internet traffic equally were beyond the FCC’s powers, because broadband providers are not considered ‘common carriers.’
11 Saturday Jan 2014
Posted in Appellate Law, Campaign Contributions, Judges, Massachusetts Supreme Court, State Appellate Courts
≈ Comments Off on Judges and Political Campaign Contributions in Pennsylvania.
Tags
Campaign Contributions, Daniel Cummins, Drug and Device Law, James M. Beck, Judges, Judicial Campaigns, Massachusetts Supreme Court, Recusal, Reed Smith, TORT TALK
Campaign Contributions and Judicial Recusal in Pennsylvania, by James M. Beck, Drug and Device Law (with hat tip to Daniel Cummins, TORT TALK)
Have you ever been hammered in court, and then learn that the judge has received large – maybe Texas-sized – political campaign contributions from opposing counsel? We have, and it’s not a good feeling.
08 Wednesday Jan 2014
Posted in Criminal Law, Government, Justice Reform, Open Records Act
≈ Comments Off on Oklahoma Governor and Politicians Squash Latest Attempt For Justice Reform.
Tags
Big Brothers Big Sisters, Clifton Adcock, Incarceration, Justice Reform, Justice Reinvestment Initiative, Mary Fallin, Oklahoma, Oklahoma Ethics Commission, Oklahoma Watch, Open Records Act, Prison, Private Prison Companies
Oklahoma’s incarceration rate is one of the highest in the nation. Oklahoma incarcerates the most women in the United States and is the third highest state in incarceration of men. According to Oklahoma’s Big Brothers Big Sisters, which recently lost its federal funding to its Mentoring Children of Prisoner’s Program, 27,000 children in Oklahoma have one or both parents in prison today. The concern over Oklahoma’s increasing prison population and ripple effect on its citizens makes this latest lost opportunity even more discouraging. -CCE
Note: Oklahoma Watch is offering this detailed, 4,500-word story on events that led up to changes in the state’s most significant justice-reform effort in recent history. With Oklahoma having some of the nation’s highest incarceration rates, hopes soared in 2012 among leaders and residents when the Justice Reinvestment Initiative was signed into law. Others viewed it skeptically. Newly released records reveal what happened in state government that led to a weakening of the original plan for implementing the reforms.
Behind-the-scenes moves by Gov. Mary Fallin’s senior staff members helped lead to a severe weakening of a program designed to cut the state’s high incarceration rates and save taxpayers more than $200 million over a decade, according to interviews and records obtained by Oklahoma Watch.
The efforts by the governor’s staff, assisted by legislative leaders, to take control of the Justice Reinvestment Initiative took place during periods when staff members met with representatives of private prison companies, which stood to gain or lose depending on how the initiative was implemented, emails and logs of visitors to Fallin’s offices show.
27 Friday Dec 2013
Posted in Android Phones, Apps, Cell Phones, Federal Trade Commission, Legal Technology, Privacy
≈ Comments Off on Android Flashlight App Violated Users’ Privacy By Secretly Sharing Information.
This flashlight app seemed like a good idea at the time. Unfortunately, it secretly shared its users’ information with advertisers and other third parties without the users’ knowledge. -CCE
The creator of one of the most popular apps for Android mobile devices has agreed to settle Federal Trade Commission charges that the free app, which allows a device to be used as a flashlight, deceived consumers about how their geolocation information would be shared with advertising networks and other third parties.
Goldenshores Technologies, LLC, managed by Erik M. Geidl, is the company behind the ‘Brightest Flashlight Free’ app, which has been downloaded tens of millions of times by users of the Android operating system. The FTC’s complaint alleges that the company’s privacy policy deceptively failed to disclose that the app transmitted users’ precise location and unique device identifier to third parties, including advertising networks. In addition, the complaint alleges that the company deceived consumers by presenting them with an option to not share their information, even though it was shared automatically rendering the option meaningless.
10 Tuesday Dec 2013
Posted in Library of Congress, Municipal Code, Municipal Law, Research
≈ Comments Off on Beginner’s Guide to Municipal Codes.
28 Thursday Nov 2013
Posted in Election Laws, Municipal Law
≈ Comments Off on City Officials Forget A Second Time To Hold An Election.
Utah town forgets to hold election — again, by Robert Gehrke, The Salt Lake Tribune (with hat tip to Lowering The Bar Blog!)
Wallsburg, Utah, is a small town of about 275 people is 40 miles from Salt Lake. It has a mayor and four city council members. It has no staff. If you call City Hall, no one will answer.
Wallsburg forgot to hold an election for the city officials – again. What to do? The state election officials said it was too late to do anything but wait until 2015.
What caused the Town of Wallsburg to forget – again – to hold an election for its city officials? No one reports any suggestion that the city officials deliberately neglected to hold an election. The general opinion is that the eleection was simply overlooked – twice.
It is anticipated that an election will be held in 2015 without fail. – CCE
25 Friday Oct 2013
Posted in Municipal Code, Municipal Law
≈ Comments Off on Municipal Code Websites
Municode
http://www.municode.com/
Municode – MuniCode Pro Subscriptions ($)
http://www.municode.com/Online-Services/Munipro-Subscriptions
Municode.com |Online Library (Florida Only)
http://bit.ly/17O7BmL
General Code (all 50 states) – Online eCode 360 Library
http://www.generalcode.com/codification/ecode/library
Code Publishing – Municipal Codes
http://www.codepublishing.com/elibrary.html
(Note: Covers only 24 states.)
American Legion Publishing Company
http://www.amlegal.com/library/
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Code Publishing – Municipal Codes
http://www.codepublishing.com/elibrary.html
21 Monday Oct 2013
Posted in Excessive Force, Governmental Tort Claim Act, Municipal Law
≈ Comments Off on Cleveland Police Chief suspends 63 of 104 officers involved high-speed car chase and fatal shooting of driver and passenger.
Cleveland police to suspend 63 officers after fatal car chase, by Kim Palmer, Reuters
http://reut.rs/1fALXdr
18 Friday Oct 2013
Posted in FCC
≈ Comments Off on Telemarketers Take a Game-Changer Hit from Telephone Consumer Protection Act
New FCC Telemarketing Rules and the $1,500 Phone Call, by Rebekah Mintze, CorporateCounsel
http://bit.ly/18tyFuR
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