CCSD looks to settle lawsuit alleging physical harm of mute student

Today’s post was shared by The Workers’ Injury Law & Advocacy Group and comes from www.reviewjournal.com

CCSD looks to settle lawsuit alleging physical harm of mute student

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COURTESY While autistic 13-year-old Dennis Moore was in a wheelchair and mute while attending Las Vegas’ Variety School, he has since moved to Boston with his family, where he’s learned to run, unicycle and communicate with an iPad, said his mother, Elizabeth Moore, who’s settling a lawsuit with Clark County School District for numerous abuse allegations at Variety spanning years. Dennis Moore runs in a 2k race in Boston in June

By TREVON MILLIARD
LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL

For years, Elizabeth Moore couldn’t get a straight answer from Variety School staff about the bruises on her son’s body and the cuts to his face.

“We didn’t know what to do. He was getting off the bus like this,” said the mother and gynecologist whose son, Dennis Moore, is mute and autistic.

Her frustration with the lack of answers led her to file a lawsuit against the Clark County School District in 2012.

As her lawyers built the case, an eyewitness testified that when Dennis was 9 years old, he was kicked in the chest by his special education teacher, which sent him head-first into a concrete wall.

Now 13, Dennis still bears a scar on the back of his head from hitting an electrical outlet on that concrete wall. A brain scan showed evidence of permanent brain trauma.

And that was just the worst of the abuse Dennis suffered in his three years at Variety, a school for special education students, Moore said. She relied…

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Vegan mayonnaise maker sued by food giant Unilever

Today’s post was shared by The Workers’ Injury Law & Advocacy Group and comes from www.latimes.com

Big Tobacco, Big Oil, now Big Mayo?

That’s what Josh Tetrick, founder and chief executive of Hampton Creek in San Francisco, feels like he’s facing in a lawsuit filed against his vegan start-up by multinational food giant Unilever.

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FOR THE RECORD
Nov. 10, 1:15 p.m.: An earlier version of this post misspelled Hampton Creek CEO Josh Tetrick’s last name as Petrick.
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Asian citrus psyllid proposal worries organic farmers
Asian citrus psyllid proposal worries organic farmers

The $67.4-billion company says Tetrick’s firm is engaging in false advertising by describing its Just Mayo sandwich spread as mayonnaise, even though it contains no eggs.

“Big Mayo strikes,” said Tetrick, who believes his company is absolved of false advertising claims because his spread uses the colloquialism “mayo” and not “mayonnaise.” U.S. Food and Drug Administration guidelines for mayonnaise contain egg yolk.

Tetrick said Hampton Creek plans to file a countersuit in the coming weeks that would likely focus on Unilever’s sustainability practices.

Unilever is seeking compensation for lost profits and damages and demanding that Hampton Creek refrain from declaring Just Mayo superior in taste to Unilever’s Best Foods and Hellman’s brands of mayonnaise.

“We brought this lawsuit because use of the Just Mayo name blatantly misleads consumers,” a Unilever spokesperson said in an e-mailed statement.  “In fact, the product is Just NOT Mayo as it does…

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Sex harass at Lenox Hill ER: lawsuit

Today’s post was shared by The Workers’ Injury Law & Advocacy Group and comes from www.nydailynews.com

Shawn Inglima The suit names North Shore-Long Island Jewish Health System, which includes Lenox Hill, as a defendant.

Two staffers say there was a sexual harassment emergency — in the Lenox Hill Hospital emergency room.

Eliana Misas and Rhonda McIntosh charge in papers filed in Manhattan Federal Court that a boss made gross comments to them on the job and made their lives hell after they blew the whistle.

The harassment began in July 2012 when the registrars’ boss, Julio Cardoza, allegedly showed the pair pornographic images on a separate supervisor’s computer.

Once the staffers filed a complaint about the porn leading to the supervisor’s termination, Cardoza began his own campaign of harassment, court documents charge.

Cardoza sent McIntosh, 45, lewd messages about her needing a “spanking” according to documents.

Once, when McIntosh wrote Cardoza that she was under the weather and wouldn’t be able to come into work, he replied “You need a Spanish/Italian sausage all the way,” court papers charge.

“What they did is disgraceful,” said Richard Roth, referring to both bosses.

“And what’s more upsetting…is that they prolonged it. They continued to retaliate against these women.”

Both staffers were subjected to unfair reviews, denied extra hours and assigned…

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Congratulations Tom

Abes Baumann congratulates Tom Baumann on his election as a Fellow of the College of Workers Compensation Lawyers. The College is described as being established to honor those attorneys who have distinguished themselves in their practice in the field of workers’ compensation. Members have been nominated for the outstanding traits they have developed in their practice of twenty years, or longer, representing plaintiffs, defendants, serving as judges, or acting for the benefit of all in education, overseeing agencies and developing legislation.  These individuals have convinced their peers, the bar, bench and public that they possess the highest professional qualifications and ethical standards, character, integrity, professional expertise and leadership.  They have a commitment to fostering and furthering the objectives of the College and have shown significant evidence of scholarship, teaching, lecturing, and/or distinguished published writings on Workers’ Compensation or related fields of law.

Congratulations Tom on this prestigious honor.

Aqua Lung Expands Recall of Buoyancy Compensators Due to Drowning Hazard

Today’s post was shared by The Workers’ Injury Law & Advocacy Group and comes from www.prnewswire.com

The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission is an independent federal agency created by Congress in 1973 and charged with protecting the American public from unreasonable risks of serious injury or death from more than 15,000 types of consumer products under the agency's jurisdiction. To report a dangerous product or a product-related injury, call the CPSC hotline at 1-800-638-2772, or visit http//:www.cpsc.gov/talk.html. Further recall information is available at http://www.cpsc.gov.
The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission is an independent federal agency created by Congress in 1973 and charged with protecting the American public from unreasonable risks of serious injury or death from more than 15,000 types of consumer products under the agency’s jurisdiction. To report a dangerous product or a product-related injury, call the CPSC hotline at 1-800-638-2772, or visit http//:www.cpsc.gov/talk.html. Further recall information is available at http://www.cpsc.gov.

Name of Product: Aqua Lung buoyancy compensators with SureLock II weight pocket handles

Hazard: The rubber handles can detach as divers are trying to remove the weight pockets to rise to the surface in an emergency. This poses a drowning hazard.

Remedy: Replace

Consumer Contact: Aqua Lung toll-free at (855) 355-7170 from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. PT Monday through Friday or www.aqualung.com and click on Recall Notice for more information.

Photos available at http://www.cpsc.gov/en/Recalls/2015/Aqua-Lung-Expands-Recall-of-Buoyancy-Compensators/

Recall Details

Units: About 30,000 in the United States and 11,300 in Canada (an additional 110,000 were previously recalled in the U.S. in March 2013)

Description: This recall involves all Aqua Lung buoyancy compensator vests with SureLock II rubber handles attached to the weight pockets, including those with SureLock II handles that were replaced in the previous recall. The handles are gray rubber, measure about 2 inches tall by 4 inches wide and extend from the…

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Military Burn Pit Exposure

Many Iraq/Afghanistan veterans were exposed to toxic chemicals from burn pits. Burn pits were used to dispose of many items that gave off harmful chemicals when burned. These chemicals include some of the same chemicals found in Agent Orange. Veterans returning from Iraq/Afghanistan may find that they have lung problems or other health problems that they did not have prior to deployment. The VA has not linked any illnesses to burn pit exposure. However, if you were exposed to smoke from a burn pit and now have lung problems, skin problems, or other health issues you did not have prior to deployment, you may qualify for VA compensation.

The government has also recently admitted that a number of Iraq veterans were exposed to chemicals from chemical weapons, left over from the Saddam’s army, that either were leaking or were disposed of improperly. This includes such chemicals such as mustard gas and other very toxic substances. If you think you were exposed to these chemical weapons and now have lung, skin or other health problems, you may be entitled to compensation.

As the VA does not presume that exposure to chemicals causes any illnesses, you need medical proof to connect your illness to exposure to burn pits or chemical weapons. The VA will most likely deny the claim at the first stage. However, you can appeal, and this is where a lawyer can help you with the case by putting together evidence to convince the VA that you were exposed to chemicals and that they caused your illness. 

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