Rod Serling
TRENDING
Carbon border adjustment mechanisms are increasingly the talk of Washington. UCLA Law’s Kimberly Clausing explains some of the options on the table.
Today’s wind and solar resources didn’t come out of nowhere.
The real world effects may be limited. Or they may undercut presidential power, to the surprise of advocates of the unitary executive.
Hundreds of past federal cases relied on Chevron. They remain good law.
A previously obscure 1944 case will now be central to judicial review.
Prop 4 would authorize the issuance of bonds in the amount of $10 billion toward safe drinking water and groundwater, wildfire and forest programs, and to combat sea level rise.
Something similar to Chevron deference may still apply to many (most?) regulations.
How the US Supreme Court’s recent decisions enable greater reliance on “alternative” facts
A post in which I surprise readers — and myself — with strong praise for George W. Bush.
By Molly Bruce, Dave Smith, Michael Kiparsky, Derek Hitchcock, Peter Van De Burgt, Sydney Chamberlin, Megan Cleveland
The Supreme Court’s decision in Loper Bright will not necessarily impact how California courts review our state agency determinations. But we’ll feel it in other ways.
Perplexed? Worried? Here’s a guide to a fraught area of law.
The Supreme Court has already grabbed power from agencies through the major questions doctrine.
We used to have the Chevron test? What test do we have now?
Today’s wind and solar resources didn’t come out of nowhere.
Hundreds of past federal cases relied on Chevron. They remain good law.
A previously obscure 1944 case will now be central to judicial review.
Something similar to Chevron deference may still apply to many (most?) regulations.
How the US Supreme Court’s recent decisions enable greater reliance on “alternative” facts
A post in which I surprise readers — and myself — with strong praise for George W. Bush.
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