Tweaks to Bill | Vaccine Mandate Update

The major questions doctrine has gone from something the Supreme Court used once every five years to a “Swiss Army knife” for courts to limit agency power, Professor Wendy Parmet, director of Northeastern Law’s Center for Health Policy and Law, tells Bloomberg Law.

Supreme Court Rundown: Will Roe Survive?

Listen back: Brigitte Amiri ’99, deputy director of the ACLU’s Reproductive Freedom Project, joined Ms. magazine's On the Issues podcast to unpack the issues at stake in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization — a pending U.S. Supreme Court case that some believe could overturn Roe v. Wade.

Six Grads Honored as Top Women of the Law

Congratulations to Barbara Buell ’71, Angela Carr ’04, Taramattie Doucette ’88, Ellen Gallagher ’91,
Jacklyn Gurany ’10 and Elizabeth Rodgers ’76 who will be honored as trailblazers and role models by Massachusetts Lawyers Weekly at a virtual event on Wednesday, November 17.

Progressive Group Slams House for Lack of Professionalism, Transparency

“This is not something progressive Democrats together with progressive allies are going to significantly achieve,” Professor Emeritus Peter Enrich, chair of the Progressive Democrats of Massachusetts, tells CommonWealth. “If we’re going to make a difference here, it’s going to require a far broader coalition that reaches out across the political spectrum, to groups engaged with various issues.”

Covid Pill Prescriber Rules Limit Reach of ‘Test to Treat’ Plan

“There are people who simply do not have connection to health services, for many reasons, mainly poverty related, but also some historic mistreatment and distrust,” Professor Brook Baker ’76, senior policy analyst for Health GAP tells Bloomberg Law. “Extra work has to be done to overcome that history of inferior service and inferior service access.”