Michelle Really Needs This Surgery

Thanks to the prohibition of cruel and unusual punishment in our Constitution, we have some simple and basic legal rules when it comes to prison health care. Prisons must provide the people in their custody adequate health care. Prisons can’t ignore people’s serious health needs. Decisions about what treatments people need must be made by health care professionals with the necessary expertise, not prison bureaucrats. Prisons can’t have blanket policies that say no one can ever get a certain form of health care, even if doctors say they really, really need it.Yesterday a federal court invoked these very uncontroversial legal principles to rule that California prison officials must provide Michelle-Lael Norsworthy, a transgender woman incarcerated at a men’s prison, with gender confirming surgery her doctors and medical experts say she desperately needs.

By Melissa Goodman

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Can You Be Fired for Taking Family Leave?

California created the nation's first paid family leave (PFL) program for workers more than a decade ago. The groundbreaking legislation has since helped many people meet their family caregiving obligations and bond with their children. But the system is flawed and needs a tune-up.California's system is unique because it allows workers to get paid time off to bond with a newborn or adopted child or care for sick family members (a child, spouse, parent, parent-in-law, sibling, grandparent or grandchild). Only two other states have PFL programs. In the rest of the nation parental and family leaves don't come with pay -– thanks in part to our country's sad distinction as the only developed nation without a national pai

By Melissa Goodman

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Are San Bernardino sheriff's deputies Tasering people to death?

San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department officers shoot members of the public with Tasers hundreds of times each year, with nearly half of those electric shocks resulting in injuries. And on four separate occasions since 2008, individuals have died after sheriff’s deputies tased them multiple times – even though federal guidelines on Taser use warn that “repeated or multiple applications may increase risk of death.”

By Adrienna Wong

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Supreme Court delivers fairness to pregnant workers in UPS case

By Lenora M. Lapidus, @LenoraLapidus

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Get a warrant! Senate Committee approves e-privacy bill

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ICE freezes out more immigrants from humanitarian release

By Zara Lockshin

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We need to move beyond the frame of the “bad apple cop”

By Jay Stanley

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Shut out of City Hall

By Jonathan Paik

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Big government v. traumatized defenseless children = justice?

By Joanne Lin, @JoanneLinDC

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