Clinical Professor of Law Doron Kalir presented on Friday, June 6, at the AALS Workshop on Sexual Orientation and Gender Issues, part of the 2014 Midyear Meeting in Washington, D.C. Professor Kalir presented his work-in-progress article, “Same-Sex Marriage & Jewish Law: Time for a New Paradigm?” Audience members included colleague Professor Matthew Green, as well as professors from Columbia, NYU, and Indiana Law Schools.
Category Archives: Faculty in the Media
Professor Ray Presents at Law and Society Annual Meeting
Professor Lewis Publishes New Article
Aside
Sterio Speaks on Syria at Law and Society Annual Meeting
Professor Milena Sterio spoke on the legality of unilateral humanitarian intervention in the context of Syria, at the Law and Society Annual Meeting in Minneapolis, Minnesota, on May 29. The title of Professor Sterio’s remarks was: “The (Il)legality of Unilateral Humanitarian Intervention in Syria.” Professor Sterio’s argument was that unilateral humanitarian intervention in internal conflicts, such as the one in Syria, should be “legalized” under a carefully developed normative framework. Professor Sterio will be publishing a version of this paper with the Brooklyn Journal of International Law later this year.
Weinstein Presents on Content-Neutrality in Sign Regulation at Planning Conference
C|M|LAW and Levin College of Urban Affairs Professor Alan Weinstein organized and served as a participant on a panel entitled “The Content-Neutrality Issue in Sign Regulation” at the 2014 American Planning Association (APA) national conference in Atlanta, Georgia, on April 30, 2014. Other panelists included Brian Connolly, a planner/attorney in Denver, Colorado, and Randall Morrison, an attorney in San Diego, California. The session focused on the conflicting views of content-neutrality among the U.S. Circuit Courts of Appeals, with the speakers favoring the more liberal approach taken in the Third, Fourth, Sixth and Ninth Circuits as opposed to the stricter approach in the Eighth and Eleventh Circuits.
Plecnik Quoted in Tax Notes Today on Reducing the Error Rate for the Earned Income Tax Credit
C|M|LAW Professor John Plecnik was quoted in Tax Notes Today, this morning, on reducing the error rate for the earned income tax credit.
The following quote appeared in EITC ERROR RATE GROWS; IMPROPER PAYMENTS TOP $ 13 BILLION, 2014 TNT 93-3:
“John T. Plecnik of Cleveland State University’s Cleveland-Marshall College of Law told Tax Analysts that increasing the IRS’s budget is one way to address EITC errors. Every increase in the IRS budget results in more tax revenues collected or fewer dollars inappropriately granted as credits, he said.
“I think solution number one is the IRS is underfunded, and they frankly need to have a larger enforcement budget if we expect them to have a more accurate administration of the earned income tax credit or any other program,” Plecnik said.
Another solution is for the IRS to wait to confirm the information on a return before issuing a refund, Plecnik said. “We shouldn’t be pushing the IRS to issue refunds preemptively,” he said. “Maybe that means people don’t get their refund until April or May as opposed to February, but I think that’s a small price to pay to avoid putting out billions of dollars in inappropriate credits.”
Majette and Robertson Participate in CMBA Medical-Legal Summit
C|M|LAW Professor Gwen Majette and Associate Dean and Professor Heidi Gorovitz Robertson participated in the Cleveland Metropolitan Bar Association’s Medical-Legal Summit at Cleveland’s Global Center for Health Innovation on April 12, 2014. Professor Majette served as a panelist addressing the bio-ethical issues of physician interactions with drug and device companies in the context of the Physician Payment Sunshine Act. Associate Dean Robertson introduced a showing of a film,”Bringing Henrietta to Life,” which was a creative commentary on the award-winning book by Rebecca Skloot, The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks. The film was intended to highlight the ethical and legal issues presented in Skloot’s book and to serve as a catalyst for discussion. The film was a joint project of students and faculty from CSU’s College of Liberal Arts and Social Sciences, in particular,the Departments of English, Drama, Communications, and Dance. Joining Dean Robertson as panelists were C|M|LAW Health Law students Linda Herman and Blair Barnhart-Hinkle.
Majette Begins 2-year Term on AALS Law, Medicine and Health Care Team
C|M|LAW Professor Gwen Majette has begun a two-year term as an at-large member of the AALS’ Law, Medicine,and Health Care executive team. As a member of this group, she will help set the agenda for the section, including helping plan the section’s events at the AALS Annual Meeting.
Weinstein Speaks to Law Directors on Regulation of Signage
On May 8, C|M|LAW and Levin College of Urban Affairs Professor Alan Weinstein provided a 1-hour CLE session titled, “Legal and Practical Issues in Regulating Signs & Billboards,” to the Northeast Ohio Law Directors Association. The Association members serve as law directors for cities, villages and townships. Professor Weinstein’s presentation focused on how a city’s sign regulations can balance first amendment concerns, principally content-neutrality, with achieving land-use regulatory goals of traffic safety, effective way-finding and aesthetics. He noted that one effective technique is to key regulation to events rather than to sign-content. Thus, for example, instead of the code defining the content of a “construction” sign and regulating when/where such a sign may be displayed, the code defines the event of “construction” and then regulates when/where a sign may be displayed on that site regardless of content.
Majette Serves on ACA Panel at Washington Bar Association Symposium
On Tuesday, March 18, 2014, C|M|LAW Professor Gwen Majette served as a panelist for a program entitled, “The ACA, the Truth, the Whole Truth, and Nothing But the Truth” at the 14th Annual Symposium of the Washington Bar Association’s Judicial Council. The symposium is organized by members of the judiciary and targets the judiciary, attorneys, and the public. The other panelist included the Executive Director of the DC Exchange, the Director of Federal and Family Advocacy for AARP, the Director of State Issues for the American Hospital Association, and the Director or Clinical Transformation and Delivery at the Center for Health Care Reform at Brookings who previously worked in the White House on health care reform matters.

