PRACTITIONER BLOG

Read our analyses of developments in Impact Litigation and stay current on class action law

SNAP Lawsuit Dismissed - Mission Accomplished: Increased Food Security For 40M! 
Class Actions, SNAP, Food Security Teddy Basham-Witherington Class Actions, SNAP, Food Security Teddy Basham-Witherington

SNAP Lawsuit Dismissed - Mission Accomplished: Increased Food Security For 40M! 

Shortly after Plaintiffs initiated the lawsuit, the USDA implemented a key accounting policy change that was requested in the class action complaint. The new policy provides protection for SNAP recipients by ensuring that benefits continue for one month after a lapse in federal appropriations. However, while this ensured SNAP benefits were not suddenly interrupted, because Congress continued to pass only short-term budget resolutions, class members faced ongoing uncertainty whether their benefits would be allocated on a longer-term basis. Plaintiffs reported trying to conserve their SNAP benefits by rationing funds, distracting themselves from hunger with water and sleep, and choosing between food and other basic necessities such as gas, hotel rooms for homeless plaintiffs and vital medications.

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 Migrant Youth Class Action Holds Government Accountable, Sparking Landmark Reforms
Class Actions, Migrant Youth Teddy Basham-Witherington Class Actions, Migrant Youth Teddy Basham-Witherington

Migrant Youth Class Action Holds Government Accountable, Sparking Landmark Reforms

In January 2024, the district court granted preliminary approval of three groundbreaking settlements to resolve the remainder of the Lucas R. case. These settlement agreements will provide new resources and protections by expanding the rights of three classes of youth in immigration custody: (1) youth with disabilities, (2) youth prescribed psychotropic medication, and (3) youth who seek assistance for legal counsel. The settlements not only represent much-needed reform, they also highlight the power youth hold when they share their stories and use their experiences to hold accountable those in power.

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Female High School Athletes Go the Distance in Title IX Settlement with Hawaii Department of Education
Title IX, Class Actions Teddy Basham-Witherington Title IX, Class Actions Teddy Basham-Witherington

Female High School Athletes Go the Distance in Title IX Settlement with Hawaii Department of Education

Female athletes at Campbell alleged widespread and systemic sex discrimination. Female athletes frequently had to use bathrooms in a nearby Burger King or hide underneath bleachers to change for practice. The girl’s water polo team would often have to practice in the ocean, facing winds and waves. Meanwhile, male athletes had access to their own locker room and appropriate athletic facilities. Moreover, when Campell’s female athletes reported disparate treatment to the school, they faced retaliation and threats to cancel the girls water polo season. Plaintiffs sought injunctive relief under Title IX. They alleged the Hawaii Department of Education and the Oahu Interscholastic Association failed to provide female athletes with equal athletic participation opportunities and equal athletic treatment and benefits. Plaintiffs also alleged the Department of Education retaliated against the class when student athletes reported gender discrimination.

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Celebrating 7 Years of the Legal Network for Gender Equity at the National Women’s Law Center
Employment Discrimination, Sexual Harassment Teddy Basham-Witherington Employment Discrimination, Sexual Harassment Teddy Basham-Witherington

Celebrating 7 Years of the Legal Network for Gender Equity at the National Women’s Law Center

In January 2017, the National Women’s Law Center (NWLC) created the Legal Network for Gender Equity to provide support to survivors of sex harassment and discrimination at a time when many people saw on the horizon imminent and unprecedented threats to the rights of women and girls.  Attorneys who join the Legal Network agree to provide free legal consultations to people who NWLC connects to them on matters relating to sex discrimination in employment, education, and healthcare settings. So, if you are not already a member, I invite you to join the Legal Network for Gender Equity – which turns 7 in January! -  and to invite your colleagues to do the same.

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Forced Labor Suit Leads To Detained Worker Bill of Rights
Immigrant Rights, Worker's Rights Teddy Basham-Witherington Immigrant Rights, Worker's Rights Teddy Basham-Witherington

Forced Labor Suit Leads To Detained Worker Bill of Rights

With no real choice, Mr. Hill Barrientos worked in the kitchen in SDC’s so-called “Voluntary Work Program,” cooking meals for up to 2,000 people daily. He regularly worked eight- to nine-hour shifts, and usually received $4 to $5 per day (or 50 cents per hour). Since SDC did not have outside kitchen staff other than a handful of supervisors, officers usually required Barrientos to work seven days a week, even when he was sick. After filing a grievance for being forced to work while sick, he was put in solitary for over a month.

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Impact Fund joins NAACP LDF Amicus Brief defending standing in ADA discrimination case
Civil Rights, Class Action Standing Teddy Basham-Witherington Civil Rights, Class Action Standing Teddy Basham-Witherington

Impact Fund joins NAACP LDF Amicus Brief defending standing in ADA discrimination case

The brief calls out Acheson’s attempts to argue the merits of Ms. Laufer’s case as a distraction to the straightforward standing inquiry at hand. Standing is a threshold issue that requires plaintiff’s allegations be taken as true. This low bar is cleared by the mere allegation of a concrete injury. Arguments about the merit of Ms. Laufer’s case including whether she experienced the “right type of discrimination” that warrants ADA protection and the degree of emotional harm she suffered are inappropriate to the threshold matter of standing and subject to review in future motions. In summary, Ms. Laufer alleges that she personally experienced discrimination, a harm in itself sufficient for standing, so Ms. Laufer has standing.

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Impact Fund Amicus Brief Challenges "One-Size-Fits-All" Approach to Disparate Impact Discrimination
Disparate Impact, California Civil Rights Teddy Basham-Witherington Disparate Impact, California Civil Rights Teddy Basham-Witherington

Impact Fund Amicus Brief Challenges "One-Size-Fits-All" Approach to Disparate Impact Discrimination

California Department of Health Care Services’ steady decline in reimbursement rates to doctors for standard physician services through the state Medi-Cal program has driven doctors away from the program, denying low-income Californians meaningful access to necessary healthcare. The key to a disparate impact claim is the discriminatory impact resulting from a seemingly neutral policy. Our brief argues that the superior court adopted a dangerously narrow view of disparate impact.

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Impact Fund and Allies File Class Action Amicus Brief in Ninth Circuit On Behalf of Seniors and People With Disabilities
Class Action Commonality, Disability Rights, Amicus Brief Teddy Basham-Witherington Class Action Commonality, Disability Rights, Amicus Brief Teddy Basham-Witherington

Impact Fund and Allies File Class Action Amicus Brief in Ninth Circuit On Behalf of Seniors and People With Disabilities

The amicus brief authored by the Impact Fund, Disability Rights Advocates, and the Disability Rights Education and Defense Fund argues that the district court’s decision ran afoul of existing case law and will undermine enforcement of ADA access laws in the precise cases where systemwide enforcement is most needed.

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Impact Fund and Allies file Amicus Brief to rebuff defamation claims in Class Action litigation
Class Actions, Litigation Privilege Teddy Basham-Witherington Class Actions, Litigation Privilege Teddy Basham-Witherington

Impact Fund and Allies file Amicus Brief to rebuff defamation claims in Class Action litigation

The Impact Fund and amici focused on the panel’s misunderstanding of “ascertainability,” a term of art particular to class actions. Ascertainability is the implied prerequisite that a class be defined by clear and definite terms so that a court can determine who is bound by a judgment and who is entitled to relief. Critical to the issue at hand, ascertainability is a forward-looking inquiry, asking whether a court will be able to ascertain class membership at some future point in the litigation. It has never meant that plaintiffs know who is in the proposed class at the time of filing.

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District Court Finds Amenities Fees To Be Illegal Excess Rent for Section 8 Tenants
Class Actions, Section 8 Housing Teddy Basham-Witherington Class Actions, Section 8 Housing Teddy Basham-Witherington

District Court Finds Amenities Fees To Be Illegal Excess Rent for Section 8 Tenants

The Eastern District of California recently decided in Terry v. Wasatch Advantage Group, No. 2:15-cv-00799 (E.D. Cal., November 23, 2022), that certain amenities fees are illegal excess rent and violate contract terms for the Section 8 Housing Choice Voucher Program.  The Court ordered the defendants, who are private property owners and managers, to repay the fees to their tenants. 

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Tesla Trounced! Court Shreds Forced Arbitration Agreement & Reaffirms Workers’ Right to Fight for the Public Good Under FEHA in Racial Discrimination Case
Class Actions, FEHA, Racial Discrimination Teddy Basham-Witherington Class Actions, FEHA, Racial Discrimination Teddy Basham-Witherington

Tesla Trounced! Court Shreds Forced Arbitration Agreement & Reaffirms Workers’ Right to Fight for the Public Good Under FEHA in Racial Discrimination Case

For the first time, a California appellate court recently held that the state’s Fair Employment and Housing Act (FEHA) authorizes plaintiffs to seek public injunctions, and any agreement purporting to waive that agreement is invalid. This decision expressly reaffirms that workers can fight for the public good under FEHA because the public suffers when employer discrimination and harassment go unchecked. California law ensures that workers can seek to protect the public from discrimination and harassment through injunctive relief, even if other types of claims are subject to mandatory individual arbitration.

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Talking Turkey: Impact Fund Files Amicus Brief To Protect Catalyst Fees For Plaintiffs
Catalyst Attorneys Fees, Public Interest Law Teddy Basham-Witherington Catalyst Attorneys Fees, Public Interest Law Teddy Basham-Witherington

Talking Turkey: Impact Fund Files Amicus Brief To Protect Catalyst Fees For Plaintiffs

In Direct Action Everywhere v. Diestel Turkey Ranch, the plaintiff filed a false advertising lawsuit alleging that Diestel was deceiving customers about the condition in which it kept animals on its properties. Several days into the trial, Diestel voluntarily removed the allegedly false statements from its website as part of a “website refresh.” The trial court denied Direct Action’s motion for catalyst fees for multiple reasons, two of which stood out to the Impact Fund and its allies. First, the court scorned the plaintiff’s reason for bringing the lawsuit and, second, it criticized the plaintiff’s activities outside the courtroom.

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Latinx Workers Reach Groundbreaking Class Action Settlement in Immigration Raid Case
Class Actions, Immigrant Rights Teddy Basham-Witherington Class Actions, Immigrant Rights Teddy Basham-Witherington

Latinx Workers Reach Groundbreaking Class Action Settlement in Immigration Raid Case

In April 2018, an immigration raid at the Southeastern Provision meatpacking plant in the small town of Bean Station, Tennessee upended a community. Federal agents from Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), Customs and Border Protection (CBP), and the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) descended on the plant alongside Tennessee Highway Patrol troopers and local police officers. Armed with long guns and raid gear, agents detained around 100 Latinx workers, transported them to a National Guard armory, and placed most in deportation proceedings.

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Summary Judgment Ruling is Major Victory Against Money Bail
Money Bail, Criminal Justice Reform Teddy Basham-Witherington Money Bail, Criminal Justice Reform Teddy Basham-Witherington

Summary Judgment Ruling is Major Victory Against Money Bail

Money bail sets a price tag on freedom by forcing arrestees to pay an arbitrary amount of money to secure release before trial. It is a common practice in criminal courts throughout the country and is a major contributor to creating one system of justice for the rich and another for the poor. In a major victory, Judge Troy L. Nunley of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of California just granted summary judgment agreeing that Sacramento County’s bail system violates substantive due process because inability to afford bail results in a deprivation of liberty prior to trial.

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Female athletes from James Campbell High School score class certification after Ninth Circuit Appeal
Class Actions, Title IX Ashley LaFranchi Class Actions, Title IX Ashley LaFranchi

Female athletes from James Campbell High School score class certification after Ninth Circuit Appeal

When several students and parents from the girl’s water polo team flagged concerns of gender discrimination, the DOE retaliated against the class. The administration threatened to cancel the water polo season, increased scrutiny of the team, and mysteriously lost required team paperwork. This retaliatory conduct and the stark inequality between male and female athletes at Campbell are out of bounds under Title IX. In an upset, the District Court denied class certification in 2019 finding that the class failed to meet numerosity standards and, for the class-wide retaliation claims, that plaintiffs failed to show typicality and commonality.

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Ninth Circuit Panel Decertifies Class of Janitorial & Maintenance Workers:  Impact Fund & Amici Urge Rehearing
Class Actions, Amicus Brief, Class Action Cert Ashley LaFranchi Class Actions, Amicus Brief, Class Action Cert Ashley LaFranchi

Ninth Circuit Panel Decertifies Class of Janitorial & Maintenance Workers: Impact Fund & Amici Urge Rehearing

A certified class of janitorial and maintenance workers survived two motions for decertification, successfully proved employer wrongdoing at summary judgment, and received significant damages in a jury bellwether trial before seeing their efforts undone by the Ninth Circuit. The recent panel opinion in Bowerman v. Field Asset Services, Inc., 39 F.4th 652, 661-63 (9th Cir. 2022), reversed certification after over seven years of litigation as a certified class. In doing so, the panel blatantly ignored the district judge’s repeated conclusion that the case was best managed as a class action.

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Settlements bring key technology, other accommodations for Deaf, hard of hearing, and blind incarcerated people in Colorado
Disability Rights, Prisoners' Rights Ashley LaFranchi Disability Rights, Prisoners' Rights Ashley LaFranchi

Settlements bring key technology, other accommodations for Deaf, hard of hearing, and blind incarcerated people in Colorado

When Brian Mackes wants to submit a grievance challenging prison conditions, contact the infirmary with his medical concerns, or write a letter to his lawyer, he has to dictate his words to a fellow prisoner* who writes them down and – he hopes – writes them legibly, spells them correctly, and keeps them in confidence. Zach Radford did not understand the teachers in his required therapeutic class and was eventually removed from the class for nonparticipation; he remained on the waiting list for other required classes while others were admitted. Mr. Mackes is blind; Mr. Radford is Deaf;** both are prisoners in the custody of the Colorado Department of Corrections (CDOC).

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West Virginia Can No Longer Discriminate Against Transgender Medicaid Participants
Class Actions, Transgender Healthcare Ashley LaFranchi Class Actions, Transgender Healthcare Ashley LaFranchi

West Virginia Can No Longer Discriminate Against Transgender Medicaid Participants

On August 2, 2022, federal District Court Judge Robert C. Chambers granted affirmative summary judgment for Plaintiffs in Fain et al. v. Crouch et. al, and ruled that West Virginia could no longer discriminate against transgender Medicaid participants by excluding coverage for gender-confirming surgical care. In their complaint, Plaintiffs alleged that West Virginia state health insurance plans deprive transgender people of essential, and sometimes life-saving, health care.

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