Juliette Fairley News
California is the 6th highest state spending $1.4 billion on trial lawyer advertisements
Study: California spent $85.3 million on 809,000 tv advertisements from 2017 to 2021
Congressional candidate's lawsuit against Gov. Newsom set for trial
The lawsuit a GOP Congressional candidate filed against Gov. Gavin Newsom over COVID-19 restrictions is proceeding to trial.
San Diego Unified extends student mask mandate despite parent protest
The San Diego Unified School District is allegedly violating students’ rights to an in-person education by requiring them to continue to wear masks until April 4.
NFIB proposes methods to lower gas prices, business costs
NFIB: Suspending the state fuel tax would have been the responsible and right thing to lower the rising cost of gas.
LA judge dismisses Firefighters 4 Freedom COVID-19 vaccine mandate lawsuit
Firefighters should decide en masse not to show up for work in protest of a COVID-19 vaccine mandate, according to a politician
Federal judge set to rule on Trump's lawsuit against YouTube
When Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act of 1996 was enacted, no one could have foreseen the power social media companies would wield 20 years later
Union watchdog: 'Requiring LAUSD to negotiate before lifting mask mandate doesn't make sense'
The LA Unified School District (LAUSD) is allegedly required to negotiate with the teacher's union before dropping a mask mandate that the state and county are making optional next week
Congressional candidate on COVID vaccine lawsuit against Santa Monica Community College
Requiring students be vaccinated against the coronavirus for in-person learning at Santa Monica Community College is about more than just a virus, according to a candidate for Congress
Santa Clara employees sue county officials over COVID vaccine mandate's religious exemptions
A group of Santa Clara County employees has sued government officials over their COVID-19 vaccine mandate.
Caltech sued by City of Pasadena over alleged groundwater contamination
If groundwater contamination allegedly caused by Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) rocket research is ongoing and contaminants exceed permissible levels, it could cause cancer among residents, according to a California State University economics professor.
Prof: Russia-Ukraine war will increase the price of gas, consumer goods statewide
Russia's invasion of Ukraine will trickle down and impact the cost of California’s consumer goods because of energy required in production and transportation, according to an economics professor.
Let Them Breathe sues Oakdale school district, undeterred by March 11 mask mandate end
Although the state of California is lifting its indoor mask mandate for schools and child-care facilities on March 11, a coalition of parents is alleging that the measure is too little, too late
Watchdog sues HHS to obtain Becerra's California ethics waiver, assistant's Pennsylvania waiver
WASHINGTON (Legal Newsline) - Both the U.S. Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary and assistant Secretary received waivers for previous work in their respective states, however the scope of those waivers is being withheld, according to a watchdog group.
LAUSD's new online schools will segregate unvaxxed students; 'Let Them Choose' pushing back
The Los Angeles Unified School District will create six new online schools to accommodate students who they expect will enroll as a result of the COVID-19 vaccine mandate, which is scheduled to become effective in September.
Former Utah governor's brother appeals dismissal of Mormon tithing lawsuit
The brother of wealthy Mormon businessman and former Utah governor, Jon Huntsman Jr., has appealed the summary judgement dismissal of his tithing lawsuit against the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints.
Prof: 'All electric LA building mandate likely to delay affordable housing projects'
A proposed ordinance that would require all new construction buildings in Los Angeles to be zero-carbon will make developing affordable housing very expensive, according to a California State University (CSU) professor
San Diego accused of banning unvaccinated elected officials from accessing government buildings, running for office
A group of concerned citizens has sued the City of San Diego in federal court for mandating the COVID vaccine for city employees, volunteers, members of boards, commissions and elected officials
$13.5 million awarded in attorneys fees from Fannie Mae's $53 million fair housing settlement
The federal lawsuit in which Fannie Mae is accused of failing to maintain and market homes located in communities of color was settled last week
Kroger report finds grocery store worker pay is above average without hero pay
Hero pay for grocery workers is already built into their salaries, according to an analyst
Ninth circuit to decide whether lifeguards were denied their First Amendment rights by a union
A panel of federal appellate judges is set to decide whether a union denied lifeguards their First Amendment rights