Scott Skinner-Thompson: Queering the Gay Agenda (Slate)

June 18, 2019

Associate Professor Scott Skinner-Thompson wrote a review for Slate about two new books that argue for an LGBTQ movement that benefits queer people beyond marriage, money, and family.

Erik Gerding: Regulators Alarmed by Risky Loans, But Don’t Know Who Holds Them (Bloomberg)

June 12, 2019

The steady drumbeat of warnings over the surge in risky corporate borrowing is growing louder and louder. Time and again, regulators in the U.S. and Europe have pointed to the hazards of businesses taking on too much debt. . . Some say regulators aren’t doing nearly enough to fix their blind spots. “I am not confident that regulators have or share among themselves the high-quality information that they need,” Erik F. Gerding, who specializes in financial regulation at University of Colorado Law School, said at a congressional hearing on leveraged loans on June 4. “We cannot wait until it is time to man the lifeboats to fully fund the iceberg patrol.”

Kristen Carpenter and Carla Fredericks: WA's Top Lawyer Took a Rare Step to Affirm Tribal Sovereignty — Here's Why That's a Big Deal (Crosscut)

June 5, 2019

Under the new policy, the attorney general must get written consent from tribes before taking certain actions that affect them. That's something few have put into practice, experts say. . . Yet federal agencies, as well as countries around the world, have been slow to implement policies to obtain tribes’ consent, even after endorsing the broad language of the U.N.’s 2007 declaration, said Carla Fredericks, director of the American Indian Law Clinic at the University of Colorado Law School. In a 2017 paper, Fredericks wrote that free, prior and informed consent is “currently an emerging norm and seen as an aspirational goal, rather than binding international law.” . . . Kristen Carpenter, a University of Colorado law professor who is a member of the United Nations’ Expert Mechanism on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, agreed that the policy announced by Washington’s attorney general last month “is much more specific than anything else I’ve seen around the world.” It may very well be the first time a state attorney general has adopted such a policy.

Mark Squillace: NEPA Looms Over Drought Plan Enthusiasm (E&E News)

June 4, 2019

Colorado River states cheered this month when President Trump signed swiftly passed legislation ratifying a drought plan for the waterway. But they could be in for a legal fight. . . Some question whether the DCP should have qualified for another review under NEPA, or at least a supplemental assessment. "It is almost certainly true that the 2007 EIS is not adequate to flesh out the current impacts and alternatives for addressing the Colorado River drought," said Mark Squillace, of the University of Colorado Law School.

Doug Kenney: Water in the West: How Lawyers and Toilet Water Will Save Cities (CU Boulder Today)

June 4, 2019

Podcast: Water has always been scarce in the West, but climate change and steady population growth require us to come up with more innovative ways to conserve water. In this week’s Brainwaves podcast, we talk to CU Boulder Senior Research Associate Douglas Kenney, who says the hard truth is, “we have to use less water.” We also look at "toilet to tap" initiatives; how the water that enters Vegas stays in Vegas; and what the science says about our water future.

Mark Squillace: Welcome New Changes for Regulating Colorado Oil and Gas Operations (Jurist)

June 4, 2019

Guest commentary: On April 16, 2019, Governor Jared Polis signed into law SB19-181, a bill that reforms oil and gas regulation in Colorado in several important ways. It’s a remarkable achievement for House Speaker KC Becker and other supporters who bent but did not break in the face of strong opposition from the oil and gas industry. And it is notable too because it comes on the heels of the defeat of Proposition 112, which would have required that any new oil and natural gas development be located at least 2,500 feet from any occupied structures or other “vulnerable” areas. This last phrase might well explain the Proposition’s defeat, since vulnerable areas were defined broadly to include such ubiquitous land features as irrigation canals and intermittent streams. The Colorado Oil and Gas Conservation Commission (COGCC or Commission) estimated that 85% of the non-federal land subject to the law would have been off-limits to development if Prop 112 had passed.

Margot Kaminski: The Legislation That Targets the Racist Impacts of Tech (The New York Times)

June 4, 2019

An oped by Margot Kaminski and Andrew D. Selbst: In the wake of recent revelations about biased algorithms, congressional Democrats have proposed a bill that would require large companies to determine whether the algorithms they’re using result in discrimination, and work to correct them if they do. The bill, called the Algorithmic Accountability Act and introduced last month by Senator Ron Wyden, Senator Cory Booker and Representative Yvette D. Clarke, is a good start, but it may not be robust enough to hold tech companies accountable.

Robert Nagel: Alabama Abortion Law Sparks Fears Supreme Court May Overturn Roe v. Wade (The Hill)

June 4, 2019

New strict abortion laws in states like Alabama and Georgia are setting the stage for a legal fight that could make its way to the Supreme Court, sparking fears that the court’s conservative majority could reverse Roe v. Wade. Legal experts have previously cast doubt on the possibility of the Supreme Court revisiting the landmark ruling in Roe v. Wade anytime soon. But Justice Stephen Breyer appeared to raise the possibility this week in an opinion opposing conservative justices’ reversal of an unrelated 1979 ruling . . .“I just have to say that strikes me as very far-fetched,” Robert Nagel, a law professor at the University of Colorado. He said the unrelated 1979 ruling about state sovereignty “does not implicate any of the larger sort of atmospheric or political and institutional considerations that the abortion controversy does,” and therefore doesn’t have the same kind of impact that the reversal of an abortion rights precedent would.

Blake Reid: New Proposal Would Let Companies Further Screw You Over With Terms of Service (VICE)

June 4, 2019

A long line of legal experts say the American Law Institute proposal would make an already huge problem dramatically worse. . . Blake Reid, a professor at the University of Colorado Law School agreed. In an email, he said the updated language would allow companies to force fine-print contracts upon consumers without even giving them a chance to accept or decline them. "This is an effort to further bind people to all the fine print that no one reads, which in turn means that any company you deal with can basically set the terms for your interaction and you may not be able to say anything about it," Reid said.

Brad Bernthal: Strong Ties to CU a 'Win-Win' for School, Startups (BizWest)

June 4, 2019

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