Pre-register by September 14 to save $5.00 and reserve CAPES for kids. RACE T-SHIRTS for ages 12 and over for first 100 participants.
For more information, click here.
Pre-register by September 14 to save $5.00 and reserve CAPES for kids. RACE T-SHIRTS for ages 12 and over for first 100 participants.
For more information, click here.
The complete text of the proposed local law can be found here.
New York's top court this month delivered a big victory to state prosecutors who want to remove some of the worst sex offenders from society -- possibly forever.The court allowed the combination of two non-sex-related mental illnesses -- anti-social personality disorder and borderline personality disorder -- to form the basis for locking up sex offenders after their release from prison. The court had ruled previously that anti-social personality disorder (ASPD) could not be used alone to keep a sex offender confined.
The ruling strengthens the legal grounds to remove the worst sex offenders from the streets.
The complete decision can be found here.
What Do Lawyers Do? is an interactive web-based is designed to educate high school and college students about how to become a lawyer.The project focuses on preparation for law school, the law school experience, and different career paths for law school graduates.
Among its many goals, the project seeks to encourage a discussion about the different aspects of a legal education and the seemingly endless options open to those interested in pursuing a legal education.
Students will have a newfound understanding of the important roles that lawyers play in society, and that a legal education and a legal career are well within the reach of anyone willing to put in the time and effort to succeed
More information here.
The cost for this event is $50.00 for members, $75.00 for non-members. Lunch will be served.
Guided by a team of planning professionals from MRB Group and EDR, a town-appointed Steering Committee will meet monthly and follow a timeline which will be outlined at the Board meeting.
Public participation is the most important element. The Town Board wants input and feedback from as many residents as possible.
Scheduled for the beginning of the 7 pm Board meeting, the presentation will also include a look at a new website created to support the planning project.
A list of legal fireworks, and the counties that allow them, can be found here.
It is a crime to provide a sparkler to a person less than 18 years of age, even in the jurisdictions where sparkling devices have been legalized.
For additional information about this law, including information on sales, please visit the New York State Office of Fire Prevention and Control (OFPC) web page.
This Fourth of July, be safe, celebrate America and have fun.
The bill was passed as part of the 2016 Legislative Session and signed into law Thursday (June 23).
The new law imposes a pre-foreclosure duty on the banks to maintain vacant and abandoned properties.
Previously, a bank or mortgagee had the responsibility of maintaining a vacant property once a judgment of foreclosure and sale was obtained, creating zombie properties and blight in communities. Reports indicate that these blighted homes have cost millions of dollars in lost property values.The new legislation places the maintenance obligation on a mortgagee when the mortgagee becomes or should have become aware of the vacancy. Under the law, a bank has a duty to maintain and secure a residential real property where there is a reasonable basis to believe it is vacant and abandoned, and faces civil penalties up to $500 per violation, per property, per day for failing to do so.
The law also requires a foreclosing party to move to auction within 90 days of obtaining a foreclosure judgment. In addition, a foreclosing party would be required to take action to ensure that the property is reoccupied within 180 days of taking title.
Finally, the law will promote communication between local governments and mortgagees responsible for property maintenance.
The legislation takes effect immediately.
For more on the new law click here.
People who deliberately refuse to pay court-ordered child support can go to jail for consecutive six-month sentences for repeat violations, New York's highest court ruled Tuesday...The Court of Appeals, with six judges ruling unanimously, said Family Court can revisit jail sentences for willful violations that were previously suspended and order an offender jailed on all of them. Those sentences can run consecutively, extending the time an offender can be locked up....
Federal data show that unpaid child support has risen over the past 30 years from nearly $3 billion to more than $115 billion nationally
The complete decision can be found here.
The New York State Senate on Thursday passed a bill that requires the state to pay the full cost of providing lawyers to poor defendants accused of crimes, a burden that largely falls to counties now.More here.The counties paid $372 million of the $521 million spent in 2014 to provide attorneys to indigent defendants.
Under Sen. John DeFrancisco's bill, the full cost of providing legal counsel to indigent defendants would gradually shift from the counties to the state over seven years, beginning in 2017. New York only partially reimburses counties for this cost now....The bill would save counties huge amounts of money....
In 1963, the U.S. Supreme Court, in a landmark decision, ruled that states are required under the Fourteenth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution to provide legal counsel in criminal cases for defendants who are unable to afford to pay their own attorneys.
[Until this] New York is one of the few states where the counties shoulder the bulk of complying with the Supreme Court's ruling