Archive for 2012

Institution-closing litigation: who speaks for the disabled?

Institutional-reform litigation, of the sort that since the 1960s has reshaped public school, prison, and foster-care systems, commonly proceeds on the basis of a fiction that the “public-interest” lawyers bringing suit speak for whole classes of students, prisoners, or foster children, even if few in the represented class actually chose to retain them. Even more than in consumer or antitrust class actions over money, the assumption that all the members of the represented class have the same interests or preferences often turns out to be a heroic one. Consider the successful wave of litigation against states in which advocates seek closure of large residential facilities for retarded persons in favor of the alternative now considered most modern, services provided “in the community” in group houses, families or other settings. This litigation has been fueled by a 1999 Supreme Court decision (Olmstead v. L.C.) accepting the idea that providing institutionalized persons with the wrong services, or not enough of them, constitutes a form of unlawful discrimination under the Americans with Disabilities Act. The U.S. Department of Justice has gotten into the act, too, and is arm-twisting states into “Olmstead settlements.”

Trouble is, some families of persons resident in institutions strongly believe that they are doing well at the particular institutions they are at, where they may have access to (for example) loved caretakers and friends or knowledgeable specialists who would become unavailable on transfer to a community setting. Unfortunately for them, when the disabled-movement or legal-services attorneys and the state governments agree to settle the Olmstead lawsuits, among the terms of the agreement is often a commitment to close the existing large residential facilities. The families who value those facilities are typically not present in the negotiating room.

So now we are beginning to see litigation around the country in which families plead for their children’s placements to continue as they are, even though these placements have already been ruled (in litigation to which they were at most a notional party) to violate their children’s ADA “rights.” Naturally, courts are reluctant to reopen issues that the parties to litigation deem settled, nor is it always even clear that the parents have legal standing to challenge the closures. [William Choslovsky, Chicago Tribune; WaPo, WRIC, and Richmond Times-Dispatch on Virginia situation; New Jersey, Bagenstos and more on legal background; Alkon]

What Wyeth v. Levine did

The media and legal academy largely applauded the Supreme Court’s 2009 ruling on preemption, but Michael Greve deems its outcome “irresponsible and not even minimally rational”:

Under the Federal Food Drug and Cosmetics Act (FDCA), drugs sold in the United States require an FDA-approved label—the elaborate, incomprehensible (to laymen) sheets you find inside every package. Every sentence is dictated by FDA requirements, down to the font and letter size. Violations of these requirements, and the sale of drugs without the label or a different label, are subject to very severe penalties. The statutory scheme operates to the explicit exclusion of any state regulatory (administrative) scheme. What Wyeth asks us to believe is that state juries may nonetheless hold drug manufacturers liable, for accidents caused by use in direct contravention of the federal label, on the grounds that the federally required label was inadequate. Meticulous compliance with federal requirements doesn’t preempt “failure to warn” liability under state common law.

June 11 roundup

  • Nortel portfolio now used for offense: “How Apple and Microsoft Armed 4,000 Patent Warheads” [Wired]
  • Via Bill Childs: “This shows up in Google News despite fact that it’s lawyer advertising.” [TheDenverChannel.com] At “public interest watchdog” FairWarning.org, who contributed this article about Canadian asbestos controversies? Byline credits a law firm;
  • Another Bloomberg crackdown in NYC: gender-differential pricing in haircuts and other services [Mark Perry]
  • A “Pro-Business Regulation Push” from Obama White House? Oh, Bloomberg Business Week, sometimes you can be so droll [Future of Capitalism]
  • “Trial Lawyers’ Support of Republican Candidates Yields Less Than Stellar Results” [Morgan Smith, NY Times; Examiner editorial; more from TLRPac on Texas election results]
  • “Community banks to Congress: you’re crushing us” [Kevin Funnell]
  • If an emergency injunction could stop one reality-TV show, why couldn’t it stop them all? [Hollywood Reporter]