ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE [AI] IS NOT USED, IN WHOLE OR IN PART, IN PREPARING NYPPL SUMMARIES OF JUDICIAL AND QUASI-JUDICIAL DECISIONS

Aug 15, 2011

State Comptroller concludes that "cyber security investments are cost effective" for governmental agencies


State Comptroller concludes that "cyber security investments are cost effective" for governmental agencies
Source: Office of the State Comptroller

State Comptroller Thomas P. DiNapoli Monday reminded local governments and school districts that they can save money and trouble by investing in cyber security. DiNapoli released a report on Information Technology security that detailed local government security breaches and identified preventive measures.

Concerning payments for travel from other than the employer


Concerning payments for travel from other than the employer

New York City’s Conflicts of Interest Board adopted OATH Administrative Law Judge Kevin F. Casey’s finding that the Brooklyn Borough President violated the City’s Conflicts law when he accepted payments from two foreign governments and a not-for-profit organization to cover travel costs for his wife when she accompanied him on two trips to Turkey and one trip to the Netherlands.

The Board did not dispute that the Borough President conducted official business on the trips and could accept free airfare and lodging for himself.

In contrast, because the Borough President’s wife did not have an official role in the Borough President’s office, he would have to pay for her travel expenses.

The Board adopted Judge Casey’s recommended penalty of a $20,000 fine. 



Employee required to provide adequate notice of in loco parentis status of an individual if seeking FMLA leave


Employee required to provide adequate notice of in loco parentis status of an individual if seeking FMLA leave
Copyright © 2011. All rights reserved by Carl C. Bosland, Esq. Reproduced with permission. Mr. Bosland is the author of A Federal Sector Guide to the Family and Medical Leave Act & Related Litigation.

The FMLA allows an eligible employee of a covered employer to take FMLA leave to care for a covered family member, including a parent.  A "parent" includes a biological, adoptive step or foster mother or father, or any other individual who stood in loco parentis to the employee when the employee was a son or daughter (e.g., under 18 years of age, or over 18 years of age an incapable of self-care due to a disability).  29 CFR 825. 122(b).  In loco parentis means that the individual had day-to-day responsibility to care for or financially support the employee when the employee was a son or daughter.  29 CFR 825.122(c)(3). 

To invoke the protections of the FMLA, the employee must notify his or her employer of the need for FMLA-qualifying leave.  The FMLA's notice requirements are not onerous.  Basically, the employee must provide adequate information to apprise the employer that the leave may be in need of FMLA leave. An employee need not invoke the "FMLA" by name.  If the employer needs more information to determine whether the leave is covered by the FMLA, they are required to inquire further.  

In Ruble v. American River Transportation Co., No. 2:10 CV 24 DDN (E.D. Mo. June 29, 2011), Jack Ruble notified his supervisor (the boat captain) that his 90-year-old grandmother was ill and that he may need to leave the boat during the voyage.  It was uncontested that Ruble's grandmother took exclusive care of Ruble when he was a child for several years. 

During the voyage, Ruble was notified by his family that his grandmother had been diagnosed with terminal cancer and was not expected to live more than a week.  That day, he told the boat captain that his grandmother had terminal cancer, that she was not expected to live more than a week, and that he wanted to leave the boat.  Ruble and the crew lived on the boat during the voyage.  Under Company policy, leaving the boat during a voyage without approval was grounds for removal.  The boat captain referred Ruble to the Company Personnel Manager, whom Ruble called and explained the situation. 

Ruble told the Personnel Manager that his grandmother was ill and he needed to go see her before she died because she had taken care of him.  He delayed leaving the vessel for a few days while the Company tried to secure a replacement.  The Company asked Ruble to wait one more day for the replacement before leaving the boat.  Ruble declined, and flew home.  He did not, however, see his grandmother at the hospital until the following day. 

Ruble's grandmother was discharged from the hospital a few days after he arrived.  She stayed with her daughter, who was primarily responsible for her care.  Ruble's grandmother did not live with him at his home near or before her death.  Ruble stayed by his grandmother's side throughout her hospital stay, providing psychological comfort, and care.  He also spent almost every day with his grandmother while at Shipley's house.  Ruble's grandmother died on May 18.  

Ruble was terminated from employment for leaving the boat without authorization during the voyage.  He sued, alleging that his termination violated the FMLA.  The Company moved for summary judgment to dismiss the case, arguing that Ruble failed to provide adequate notice that the leave may be FMLA-qualifying. The Company argued that Ruble failed to adequately notify it that his grandmother was his in loco parentis parent while Ruble was a child.  Absent an in loco parentis relationship, the FMLA does not entitle an employee to take leave to care for a grandparent.

The Court opined:

When an employee seeks to invoke FMLA benefits based on an in loco parentis relationship, the employee must provide his employer with sufficient facts indicating that such a relationship may exist. See Sherrod v. Philadelphia Gas Works, 57 Fed. Appx. 68, 72-73 (3d Cir. 2003)("Since [the employee] did not initially tell her employer that her grandmother had raised her, she failed to sufficiently explain her reasons for the needed FMLA."); Abousaidi v. Mattress Discounters Corp., No. 1:05CV1142 (JCC), 2005 WL 3797366, at *2 (E.D. Va. Dec. 8, 2005).  Otherwise, the employer could not know that the employee's leave may be secured by the FMLA. See Wierman,638 F.3d at 1000 (the employer's duties do not arise until the employee gives sufficient information to who that he may be in need of FMLA leave).

The Court found that Ruble's assertion that he told the Personnel Manager that his grandmother "took care of him," coupled with his more effusive affidavit on the subject, created a genuine issue of material fact regarding the adequacy of Ruble's notice sufficient to defeat the Company's motion for summary judgment. 

Mr. Bosland comments:  To secure the benefits and protections of the FMLA, an employee requesting FMLA leave to care for an in loco parentis parent must articulate some facts to put the employer on reasonable inquiry notice that the leave might be FMLA qualifying.  An in loco parentis parent does not have to involve a legal or biological relationship.  All that is required is that the individual had responsibility to care for and/or financially support the employee when the employee was a son or daughter within the meaning of the FMLA.  Absent a biological or legal relationship, it may not be obvious to an employer that a grandparent, older sibling, uncle, aunt, or someone else cared for the employee when the employee was a child.  While an employee need not affirmatively assert an in loco parentis relationship (although they certainly could do so), the do need to articulate some facts suggesting an in loco parentis relationship.  If the employer needs additional information to confirm an in loco parentis relationship, the burden is on the employer to inquire further.

As demonstrated in Ruble, the notice bar on this issue is relatively low (e.g., my grandma took care of me).  It is not, however, non-existent.  Employers, in turn, must be alert to in loco parentis relationships as a qualifying basis for FMLA leave.  When in doubt, ask the employee to clarify the nature of what might be an in loco parentis relationship.    
  
 

Employee dismissed for alleged sexual harassment disqualified for unemployment insurance benefits Matter of Ferro, 283 AD2d 828


Employee dismissed for alleged sexual harassment disqualified for unemployment insurance benefits
Matter of Ferro, 283 AD2d 828


The Ferro decision demonstrates that engaging in sexual harassment will disqualify an employee for unemployment insurance benefits if he or she is terminated as a result of such misconduct.

Albert J. Ferro was dismissed from his position for allegedly violating his employer's policy prohibiting sexual harassment. According to the decision, a witness testified that he had observed Ferro, a management trainee, grab a female employee from behind and then acted in a sexual manner. This resulted in Ferro being fired from his position.

Ferro's application for unemployment insurance benefits was rejected. The Unemployment Insurance Appeals Board ruled that Ferro was ineligible for unemployment insurance benefits because his employment was terminated due to his misconduct. The Appellate Division, Third Department, sustained the Board's determination. The court pointed out that “offensive behavior in the workplace can constitute disqualifying misconduct ... as can conduct that is detrimental to the employer's interest.”

The rationale underlying the ruling: employers may be held “vicariously liable” as the result of the sexual harassment of subordinates by its management employees. Accordingly, such misconduct “is detrimental to the employer's interests.”

The date on which a statute of limitations commences "running" depends on the nature of the challenge to an administrative action


The date on which a statute of limitations commences "running" depends on the nature of the challenge to an administrative action
Roenke v SUNY, 284 AD2d 781

Whether or not an Article 78 action appealing a particular administrative decision is timely depends on the nature of the action being challenged, as the Roenke case demonstrates.

In December 1997, SUNY advised Henry M. Roenke, that effective January 1, 1998, it would no longer would permit him to make contributions to his tax deferred custodial account although it would allow him to make contributions to various tax sheltered annuities. Roenke objected, but his August 1998 petition seeking a court order compelling SUNY to designate a company or companies from which he could purchase shares in a tax deferred custodial account was dismissed as untimely. He appealed, contending that his petition was, in fact, timely filed because it was submitted within four months of SUNY's rejection of his demand that SUNY reinstate purchasing such shares.

According to the Appellate Division, if Roenke's action was in the nature of mandamus to compel SUNY to perform a statutory duty, the Statute of Limitations does not begin to run until an appropriate demand is made and refused. If, on the other hand, Roenke’s petition involves a challenge to a discretionary act by SUNY rather than its complying with a statutory duty, the Statute of Limitations begins to run from the date that the determination became final and binding upon on him.

Roenke's basic argument: Section 399 of the Education Law mandates that SUNY promulgate a list of companies from which shares in a custodial account may be purchased. The Appellate Division disagreed, holding that because there was nothing in Section 399 compelling SUNY to establish custodial account programs in the first instance, establishing such a program was clearly a discretionary action on the part of SUNY.

The opinion notes that the fact “[t]hat SUNY is permitted but not required to establish such programs is made even clearer by the language contained in Education Law Section 399(2), which begins, “[w]here the employer has established a special annuity and/or custodial account program authorized by this article”.

Accordingly, said the court, the four-month Statute of Limitations for challenging SUNY's administrative decision to discontinue making contributions to Roenke's custodian account effective January 1, 1998 began to run when Roenke was told of this change in December 1997. Thus, said the court, Roenke's filing his complaint in August 1998 “was plainly is time barred.” 

Determining if a disability was “job related”


Determining if a disability was “job related”
Roach v McCall, 284 AD2d 746

V. Robert Roach, Town of Webb Union Free School District head bus driver, applied for accidental disability retirement benefits based on injuries to his right shoulder he claimed resulted from employment-related accidents in 1985, 1995 and 1996. These accidents, he contended, incapacitated him from performing his head bus driver duties. The Comptroller rejected Roach's application after concluding that his condition did not result from employment-related accidents.

John Cambareri, a board-certified orthopedic surgeon, testifying on behalf of the State and Local Employees' Retirement System, said that, in his opinion, Roach's disability was the result of traumatic arthritis in his right shoulder stemming from a shoulder dislocation suffered by Roach as a teenager. Understandably, Roach's expert medical witnesses testified to the contrary.

The Appellate Division sustained the Comptroller's rejection of Roach's application, holding that where there is substantial evidence to support his decision, “it lies within the exclusive authority of the Comptroller to evaluate divergent medical opinions in the process of determining whether a claimant is entitled to accidental disability retirement benefits.”

Aug 13, 2011

Decisions of interest involving Government and Administrative Law


Decisions of interest involving Government and Administrative Law
Source: Justia August 12, 2011

Decisions of interest involving Government and Administrative Law


Decisions of interest involving Government and Administrative Law
Source: Justia August 12, 2011

Out of title work assignment


Out of title work assignment
Murphy v Herik, NYS Supreme Court [Not selected for publications in the Official Reports]

Out-of-title work usually refers to an employer assigning an individual to perform the work typically part of the duties of the incumbent of a higher-level position. Section 61.2 of the Civil Service Law provides that:

Prohibition  against out-of-title  work. No person shall be appointed, promoted or employed under any title not appropriate to the duties to be performed and, except upon assignment by proper authority during the continuance of a temporary emergency situation, no person shall be assigned to perform the duties of any position unless he has been duly appointed, promoted, transferred or reinstated to such position in accordance with the provisions of this chapter and the rules prescribed thereunder. No credit shall be granted in a promotion examination for out-of-title work.

Many collective bargaining agreements require that if the employer assigns an individual to perform "out-of-title" work for more than a designated period of time, he or she is to be compensated at the appropriate pay level of the higher position.

Detailing is used to describe a form of assigning an individual to perform "out-of-title" frequently encountered in law enforcement organizations. Its most common manifestation: assigning a police patrol officer to perform the duties of a detective or investigator. Officers detailed to perform the duties of a detective or an investigator typically are not permanently appointed to the position. Section 58.4.c(ii) of the Civil Service Law was enacted to address this practice and provides that:

In any jurisdiction, other than a city with a population of one million or more, which does not administer examinations for designation to detective or investigator, any person who has received permanent appointment to the position of police officer or deputy sheriff and is temporarily assigned to perform the duties of detective or investigator shall, whenever such assignment to the duties of a detective or investigator exceeds eighteen months, be permanently designated as a detective or investigator and receive the compensation ordinarily paid to persons in such designation [emphasis supplied].

By its terms, Section 58.4.c(11) does not cover New York City police officers. However, Section 14-103(b)(2) of the City's Administrative Code tracks Section 58.4.c[ii] and provides that a "permanent police officer who temporarily perform the functions of what is otherwise considered to be detective work for periods of 18 months or more are to be appointed as detectives and be compensated as such."

Michael Murphy, a New York City police officer, was assigned to the Harbor Unit, Vessel Theft Team, in January, 1997. His duties included the investigation of stolen marine equipment; returning stolen property to its rightful owner and maintaining a working relationship with insurance companies for the purpose of identifying insurance fraud. After he had been performing these duties for over three years, Murphy's commanding officer, John Cassidy, recommended that Murphy be appointed to third-grade detective. Cassidy's justification for his recommendation: Murphy's primary responsibilities were those of a detective.

The Department rejected Cassidy's recommendation and Murphy filed a grievance challenging its decision. The Department denied Murphy's grievance and he commenced an Article 78 proceeding in March of 2001 seeking a court order directing his appointment as a detective.

The Department asked the court to dismiss Murphy's petition. It contended that its rejecting Murphy's appointment as a detective was justified because the Harbor Unit was specifically excluded from the career-path for detective by a lawful Department policy. Accordingly, the Department argued, Murphy can not be deemed to have been performing detective work as part of the Harbor Unit and therefore he was not eligible for appointment as a detective pursuant to Section 14-103(b)(2) of the Code.

The Department also argued that Murphy was aware of the fact that the Harbor Unit was not on the career path for detective when he accepted the assignment.

Murphy, on the other hand, contended that he was eligible for appointment as a detective pursuant to the Code, citing Ryff v Safir, 264 AD2d 349, as authority for this claim. In Ryff, the Appellate Division ruled that the fact that the Harbor Unit was not included in the Department's career-path for detective did not exempt it from the provisions of Administrative Code Section 14-103(b)(2).


Supreme Court Justice Madden rejected the Department's argument that appointment as a detective does not depend on the actual work performed but rather on whether or not the position is on the career path for detective. Justice Madden said that the legislative intent in both Section 58.4 of the Civil Service Law and Section 14-103(b)(2) of the City's Administrative Code "was to prevent the department, for budgetary reasons, from using non-detective track officers in detective track positions, while denying the officers the benefit of those positions."

In effect, the court decided that the Department's justification for its action placed form over substance. As Murphy's duties were substantially similar to that of detective, Justice Madden ruled that Murphy was entitled to appointment as a detective pursuant to Section 14-103(b)(2). Justice Madden pointed out that there was no dispute concerning Murphy's performing criminal investigative duties, noting that Murphy was awarded "Investigator of the Year" from the International Association of Marine Investigators.

Deciding that Department's ruling that Murphy was precluded from being appointed as detective simply because his position was not included in its designated "career path" for detectives was arbitrary and capricious, Justice Madden granted Murphy's petition and, in addition, ruled that Murphy was entitled to compensation as a detective beginning 18 months subsequent to his original appointment to the Harbor Unit.

The lesson of the Murphy decision is that employees may not required to perform out-of-title duties except in cases involving a temporary emergency. If they are assigned, or permitted, to perform out-of-title duties when there is no temporary emergency, the employer may be held liable to pay any resulting salary differential.

One of the administrative procedures available to an individual who believes that he or she is being to required to perform higher level "out-of-title" work is to request that his or her position be reclassified to the higher level title -- i.e., a position allocated to a higher salary grade.

This is usually accomplished by filing a request for reclassification of the position with the responsible civil service commission or department.

The employer, also, may initiate a request for reclassification of a position. In some cases, the employer and the employee may file a "joint" application to have the position reclassified. Concerning a related point, classification and reclassification of a position focuses on the duties of a position while allocation or reallocation of a position is concerned with placing the position in the proper pay grade or setting its appropriate salary rate.

However, approval of an "out-of-title" reclassification application does not mean the individual has the right to be continued in the reclassified title. If a position in the competitive class is reclassified, the individual will have to qualify for permanent appointment to the new title by examination, despite the fact that he or she had been "performing the duties of the higher level position" and was instrumental in having it reclassified. The same applies with respect to qualifying for appointment to a higher-level position in the noncompetitive class following reclassification of the lower level position.

In some instances this could result in the individual's being "reclassified out of his or her job." Some modest protections, however, may be available to the individual whose position has been reclassified to avoid this result, at least temporarily. For example, insofar as "employees of the State" are concerned, the State Civil Service Commission's Rules, [4 NYCRR 4.1(d) provide that:

A promotion eligible list shall not be certified for filling a permanent vacancy created by upward reclassification of a permanently encumbered position where promotion from such list would require the layoff of a permanent employee or the reassignment of a permanent employee to a different geographical location; but this provision shall not apply if the incumbent whose position was reclassified has, following such reclassification, twice failed to qualify for promotion to the reclassified position].

4 NYCRR 4.1(e) provides similar protections with respect to the certification and use of an open competitive eligible list.

Many municipal civil service commissions have adopted similar rules.

N.B. The Rules of the State Civil Service Commission specifically provide that "[e]xcept as otherwise specified in any particular rule, these rules shall apply to positions and employments in the classified service of the State and public authorities, public benefit corporations and other agencies for which the Civil Service Law is administered by the State Department of Civil Service."

In another New York City Police Department [NYPD] "service as a detective" case, Finelli v Bratton, App. Div., First Department, the issue was whether it was arbitrary and capricious for NYPD to determine that service by former Transit Authority [TAPD] police officer Nicholas G. Finelli did not qualify as "detective track" service.

According to the decision, such credit was properly denied since it was not established that Finelli performed investigative duties comparable to those performed in units given a detective track status after the TAPD's merger with the NYPD. In addition, the court said that detective track credit was properly refused for periods during which police officers were suspended from duty or on restricted, limited or modified duty.

PERB determinations


PERB determinations
Ruling by the Public Employment Relations Board

Community of interest: Individual, although paid at a supervisory pay level and substituted for the supervisor when the supervisor was absent, was determined to share  a community of interest with unit employees and thus could not be excluded from the negotiating unit without evidence that the individual performed supervisory duties such as assigning work and overtime to employees, evaluating employees, approving leave requests, disciplining workers, or other supervisory duties. Local 282 and Regional Transit Service, Inc., 35 PERB 3022

Duty of fair representation: Unit member's dissatisfaction with his or her representation by the union in a grievance that resulted in a negotiated settlement rather than proceeding to arbitration, did not, without more, establish a prima facie case that the union breached its duty of fair representation as a member's "disagreement with the tactics utilized or his or her dissatisfaction with the quality and extent of representation" does not constitute a breach of the union's duty of fair  representation. Bruns and Council 82, 35 PERB 2023

Lack of jurisdiction: PERB declined to assume jurisdiction to consider an individual's improper practice charge alleging the employer violated Sections 209-a.1(a) and 209-a.1(c) of the Civil Service Law because the individual was not a public employee within the meaning of the Taylor Law, observing that the individual was not on a state payroll and had neither paid union dues nor paid an agency fee to the collective bargaining unit's representative. Nagy and SUNY at Buffalo, 35 PERB 3025.

Similarly, in Arce and NYC Board of Education, 35 PERB 4576, a PERB Administrative Law Judge determined that SEIU Local 74 did not violate its duty of fair representation by failing to process a grievance filed by an individual independently hired by, and who worked directly for, a public school custodian because the individual was not a public employee as defined by the Taylor Law and thus he was not in the negotiating unit.

Negotiating a new practice: PERB rejected the union's argument that its burden of proof that the employer failed to negotiate an alleged change in a personnel practice is satisfied if it shows that the personnel practice is, itself, a mandatory subject of collective negotiations, ruling that the charging party must demonstrate 8-the existence of an "old practice" by showing that it was unequivocal, had been in existence for a significant period of time and that unit employees could reasonably expect the practice to continue. PBA-NYS Troopers and Division of State Police, 35 PERB 3024

Personal interests not protected by Taylor Law: An employee making complaints unrelated to any specific provision in the collective bargaining agreement and that essentially concern matters of private, personal interest, has not established any basis for prosecuting a claim that he or she was subjected to adverse personnel action because of his or her engaging in a protected activity within the meaning of the Taylor Law. Westhampton Beach Police PBA and Village of Westhampton Beach, 35 PERB 3026

Union animus: PERB rejected its Administrative Law Judge's conclusion that the Town of North Hempstead was guilty of union animus based on a finding that "but for" the union's president using "union business" release time, he would not have been involuntarily transferred to another unit because the Town's explanation for the transfer -- the need to reorganize a department -- was "largely unrebutted by the Union" and thus there was no basis to hold that the transfer was the result of improper motivation on the part of the Town. CSEA Local 1000 and Town of North Hempstead, 35 PERB 3027.

Aug 12, 2011

School administrators did not violate a student’s Constitutional right to “free speech” when it disciplined her for harassing a fellow student via after-school posting on the Internet


School administrators did not violate a student’s Constitutional right to “free speech” when it disciplined her for harassing a fellow student via after-school posting on the Internet
Kowalski v. Berkeley County Schools, United States Court of Appeals, Fourth Circuit, Docket #10-1098

A student sued West Virginia’s Berkeley County School District contending that it had violated her Constitutional right to free speech when it suspended her for creating a MySpace page ridiculing a fellow student. A federal District Court judge granted the school district’s motion for summary judgment, which ruling was affirmed by the Fourth Circuit U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.

In this 42 USC 1983 action the court found that the student’s after-school “conduct was sufficiently connected to the school environment so as to implicate the [district’s] recognized authority to discipline speech which materially and substantially interferes with the requirements of appropriate discipline in the operation of the school and collides with the rights of others.”

The full text of the decision is posted on the Internet at:

Retiree's "double dipping" for retirement benefits prohibited


Retiree's "double dipping" for retirement benefits prohibited
Williams v McCall, 283 AD2d 808

John Williams, Jr. initially joined the New York State and Local Employees' Retirement System [ERS] in 1962 while employed by Creedmoor State Hospital. In 1969, he became a member of the New York City Police Department and became a member of the New York City Police Pension Fund [Fund]. In 1997 Williams began working full time for both the Police Department and Creedmoor simultaneously. This continued until he retired from the Police Department in 1990.

In 1990 Williams began to receive retirement benefits from the Fund while continuing to work full time at Creedmoor. He retired from Creedmoor in 1995 and began receiving benefits from ERS as well.*

Ultimately, ERS ruled that for purposes of calculating William's ERS retirement benefits, his employment at Creedmoor after July 3, 1990 could not be counted as service credit because he was receiving pension benefits from the Fund at that time. Williams appealed this ruling.

The Appellate Division affirmed the Retirement System's decision. The court said that it is well settled that “[a]s a general rule, an individual who is retired from service with the State, a municipal corporation or a political subdivision of the State may not engage in the practice known as 'double dipping', where [such the individual] simultaneously receives pension benefits and compensation for post-retirement public employment or service,” citing Incorporated Village of Nissequogue v New York State Civil Service Commission, 220 AD2d 53.

The Appellate Division ruled that because Williams began receiving pension benefits from the Fund in 1990 and continued to receive them during his employment at Creedmoor, the Comptroller had a rational basis for denying him service credit for this time period in calculating his ERS retirement benefits. The decision also points out that even if Williams “was specifically authorized to continue his post-retirement public service (which he was not on this record),” Retirement and Social Security Law Section 213(b) specifically prohibits the grant of service credit for such post-retirement employment.

The Appellate Division said that the fact that Williams worked for Creedmoor before and during his employment with the Police Department “does not compel a contrary conclusion.”

* Williams answered “no” in response to the question: are you a member of “any other Public Retirement System in the State” when he filed his application for ERS benefits in 1995.

NYPPL Publisher Harvey Randall served as Principal Attorney, New York State Department of Civil Service; Director of Personnel, SUNY Central Administration; Director of Research, Governor’s Office of Employee Relations; and Staff Judge Advocate General, New York Guard. Consistent with the Declaration of Principles jointly adopted by a Committee of the American Bar Association and a Committee of Publishers and Associations, the material posted to this blog is presented with the understanding that neither the publisher nor NYPPL and, or, its staff and contributors are providing legal advice to the reader and in the event legal or other expert assistance is needed, the reader is urged to seek such advice from a knowledgeable professional.

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