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- December 6, 2018
National Health Law Program Template for Public Charge Comments on DHS Proposed Rule Change
Read moreThe Department of Homeland Security's proposed effort to radically remake a longstanding immigration law and turn it into a regulation that lead to barring immigrants and their communities from accessing Medicaid and other public benefit programs they are lawfully eligible. The public comment period on the Trump administration's severe…
- November 29, 2018
National Health Law Program Analysis of California’s Conditional Merger of Catholic Hospitals
Read moreSenior Attorney Amy Chen provides analysis of the California Department of Justice's recent conditioned approval of Catholic health care providers in the state. Chen describes the conditions surrounding this merger, and how it will impact women, the LGBTQ community, and low-income individuals in the states who rely on these…
- September 27, 2018
Health and Civil Rights Groups’ Comments on Calif. Proposed Merger of Catholic Health Systems
Read moreThe National Health Law Program along with more than 20 health, civil and human rights groups, filed comments with the California Department of Justice urging it to accompany a merger of two large Catholic health care systems in the state with "robust and enforceable conditions that protect community interests.…
- July 27, 2018
Civil, Human Rights Groups’ Amicus Brief in 2020 Census Case, San Jose v. U.S.
Read moreA broad array of civil and human rights groups filed an amicus brief in San Jose and Black Alliance For Just Immigration v. Ross, in support of the litigation challenging the U.S. Department of Commerce's decision to add a "citizenship" question to the 2020 census. The brief led by the…
- July 27, 2018
Civil and Human Rights Groups’ Amicus Brief in 2020 Census Case (CA v. U.S. )
Read moreAn array of advocacy groups filed an amicus brief in California v. Ross, siding with Calif. Attorney General Xavier Becrra's lawsuit challenging the U.S. Department of Commerce's decision to add a "citizenship" question to the 2020 census. The brief led by the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights,…
- June 19, 2018
Explainer: Texas v. United States – What Did the DOJ Do?
Read moreThe Department of Justice earlier this month lodged a legal action in federal court trying to explain why it would no longer defend the Affordable Care Act in ongoing litigation to wipe out the law. National Health Law Program Staff Attorney Joe McLean explains that the DOJ's legal action is…