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Ruling helps protect homeless people from having cars towed
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Court: Making homeless man pay truck s towing cost excessive
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OLYMPIA, Wash. (Legal Newsline) – Protection from lawsuits for religious institutions in an anti-discrimination law is OK, the Washington Supreme Court recently ruled, but a Seattle group is not free from litigation yet for refusing to hire a gay man for its open lawyer position.
The defendant in attorney Matthew Woods’ lawsuit, which had failed at the trial court level, might not qualify for the exception, a March 4 opinion written by Justice Barbara Madsen that refused to strike down the state legislature’s work on the Washington Law Against Discrimination.
Religious nonprofits are not considered employers for the purposes of the WLAD and are therefore exempt from litigation. The decision in Woods’ case on the constitutionality of the exemption was in line with previous challenges.
Alexis Krell: Supreme Court rules in case of woman whose home was mistakenly raided by Tacoma police
News Tribune, Tacoma, Wash. 1/29/2021 Alexis Krell, The News Tribune (Tacoma, Wash.)
Jan. 28 The Washington State Supreme Court ruled Thursday to reinstate a verdict that awarded $250,000 to a woman whose home was mistakenly raided by Tacoma police a decade ago.
Jurors found police were negligent in failing to verify information from an informant about where a suspected drug dealer they were looking for lived before they raided Kathleen Mancini s Federal Way home in 2011.
The Court Appeals overturned the $250,000 judgment last year. The Supreme Court reinstated the jury s verdict in a 8-1 opinion.
USDA ARS
Washington state apples are ready for shipment. A coalition of farm groups is pushing for a legislative fix after a Supreme Court ruling subjected farms to lawsuits for back overtime pay. A Washington state court ruling has prompted lawyers to file 24 lawsuits for back overtime pay for farmworkers.
Dairy and other farm groups in Washington state are seeking protections from lawmakers after a state Supreme Court ruling in November opened the door to lawsuits against growers for back overtime pay for workers.
In a 5-4 decision that’s expected to apply to all of agriculture, the state’s high court ruled Washington’s dairy workers are entitled to overtime pay if they work more than 40 hours a week.
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