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Oklahoma and Kentucky are also taking steps to clarify their abortion bans, though in both states the attorneys general, not physicians, are the ones dictating the terms. Since the U.S. Supreme Court overturned the constitutional right to abortion in 2022, states have been free to enact their own restrictions. “It’s not going to deal with hard calls,” said Greer Donley, an associate professor at the University of Pittsburgh School of Law who is an expert on abortion law. As some states mull how to clarify — without weakening — their abortion bans, abortion rights advocates in several states continue to challenge the bans with lawsuits. Frustrated with the board's inaction, Amy and Steven Bresnen, a couple who are lawyers and lobbyists, filed a petition in January asking it to clarify what circumstances qualify as medical exceptions to the state's abortion ban.
Persons: , Kristi Noem, , Kelsey Pritchard, wasn't, Taylor Rehfeldt, anesthetist, It's, “ It’s, Greer Donley, , Sen, Erin Tobin, ” Tobin, women's, Jonathan Skrmetti, Donley, “ That’s, Katie Cox's, Greg Abbott, Amy, Steven Bresnen Organizations: , Republican, Dakota Legislature, Republican Gov, SBA Pro, U.S, Supreme, State Republican Rep, GOP, University of Pittsburgh School of Law, ” South, ” South Dakota Republican, Texas, Tennessee, Lone Star, Texas Medical Board, Texas Medical Locations: Tenn, U.S, “ South Dakota, South Dakota, Kelsey Pritchard . Oklahoma, Kentucky, Oklahoma, , ” South Dakota, mull, Tennessee, ” In Texas, Texas
New York CNN —When it comes to food advertising, what you see is rarely what you get. In the ads, burgers look tall, heaped with meat and cheese, topped with golden, rounded buns. “Under this standard, a court asks whether a reasonable consumer would be misled by the product’s marketing or labeling,” he said. Lawsuits claim that burgers from McDonald's, Burger King and Wendy's don't look as they appear in ads. What you see is not what you getFor Patten, a reasonable consumer is an “average consumer.” The legal system, she said, often expect more from a reasonable consumer than she would from an average one.
Persons: James Kelly, Anthony Russo, Taco Bell, Burger, , Tommy Tobin, Perkins Coie, Russo, Kelly, Bonnie Patten, Spencer Sheehan, Sheehan, Katherine Frey, ” Tobin, ” Burger, , Wendy’s, Wendy's, He’s, Patten, Patten’s, they’re, they’ve Organizations: New, New York CNN, Taco, UCLA Law, Washington Post, Getty, Starbucks, Burger King, Russo, Plaintiffs Locations: New York, Burger
DETROIT (AP) — aWith just over 24 hours left before a strike deadline, United Auto Workers President Shawn Fain says offers from the companies aren't enough and the union is getting ready to strike. We are preparing to strike these companies in a way they've never seen before.”The union is threatening to strike after contracts with companies that haven't reached an agreement by 11:59 p.m. on Thursday. On Wednesday, Fain said the companies upped their wage offers, but he still called them inadequate. In a 2019 agreement the union got 6% pay raises over four years with lump sums in some years as well as profit sharing checks. All three companies’ offers on cost-of-living adjustments were deficient, he said, providing little or no protection against inflation, or annual lump sums that may workers won’t get.
Persons: — aWith, Shawn Fain, Fain, , , haven't, they’ll, It's, ” Fain, Ford, Stellantis, won’t, ” Tobin Williams, Thomas Kochan, “ It’ll, ____ Koenig Organizations: DETROIT, United Auto Workers, Motors, Ford, UAW, GM, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Locations: North America, Dallas
Biodiversity credits could be key to funding the conservation of the Earth’s ecosystems, but setting up a functioning market to buy and sell these payment tokens won’t be easy. The World Economic Forum is working on bringing together stakeholders, but admits that a scaled-up market is still some way in the future. It follows the lead of so-called voluntary carbon credits that allow firms to buy credits to offset their own emissions. Those global carbon credit markets are now worth some $2 billion, up from $200 million five years ago, according to environmental-finance data provider Ecosystem Marketplace. “I feel a bit of ‘carbon envy’ when I look at the carbon markets,” Cornell’s Tobin said, noting that biodiversity markets lack a universal metric that can apply to every project, unlike carbon markets where each credit represents one metric ton of carbon dioxide.
Persons: John Tobin, de la Puente, Tobin, don’t, Cornell’s Tobin, ” Tobin, JULIAN HABER, Zoe Balmforth, , ’ ”, Balmforth, , ” Nestlé, Nestlé, biocredits, Markus Mueller, ” Mueller, Joshua Kirby, joshua.kirby@wsj.com Organizations: Economic, Paulson Institute, Cornell University, Credit Suisse, Companies, UN, REUTERS, Sustainable Business, Unilever, Deutsche Locations: Australia, Switzerland, biocredits
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