Tag: law

  • The Supreme Court’s destruction of the Voting Rights Act reminds us of Kentucky’s ‘Great Dissenter’

    The Supreme Court’s destruction of the Voting Rights Act reminds us of Kentucky’s ‘Great Dissenter’

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    The Supreme Court’s destruction of the Voting Rights Act reminds us of Kentucky’s ‘Great Dissenter’

    This commentary was originally published in The Kentucky Lantern.

    “There are obvious echoes between Louisiana v. Callais, in which Justice Samuel Alito’s majority opinion finished off the [1965 Voting Rights Act]…and the notorious Plessy v. Ferguson decision, in which the court blessed Jim Crow,” Pema Levy wrote in Mother Jones magazine on May 7.

    “The Roberts court is in many respects a neoconfederate court, and it repeatedly applies the tactics and ideas of the 1880s and 1890s court, whose members likewise could not abide a robust vision of equality.”

    May 18 was the 130th anniversary of the Plessy case, whose sole dissenter was Kentucky native John Marshall Harlan. “Our constitution is colorblind, and neither knows nor tolerates classes among citizens,” he argued, adding that racial segregation “cannot be justified upon any legal grounds.”

    His “dissent in the Plessy case is memorable, first, for the courage he displayed,” said James Klotter, author and Kentucky state historian. “Alone of the justices, he spoke for the future, for ‘the better angels of our nature,’ and for the rights of mankind.”

    Harlan seemed an unlikely champion of Black rights. He was born into a wealthy slaveholding family in southern Mercer County – now Boyle County – in 1833. He grew up to own slaves and had been an outspoken defender of the South’s peculiar institution.

    Historians agree

    Murray State University historians Brian Clardy and William Mulligan also see alarming parallels between Callais and Plessy.

    “Both decisions represent conservatism that privileges hate and white supremacy, Plessy after Reconstruction, Callais after landmark civil rights legislation in the 1960s that was called a second Reconstruction,” said Clardy, a professor of history.

    “The Callais decision continues a troubling trend – reversing decisions that have expanded the definition of who receives full rights and equal treatment,” said Mulligan, a history professor emeritus. He proposed that the court’s six-member conservative majority might heed Justice Louis D. “Brandeis’ argument that what matters most is the result of a law or a decision.” (The University of Louisville Law School is named for Brandeis, a Louisville native.)

    Added Levy: “Harlan’s canonical dissent in Plessy could, in many parts, apply to Callais too. In his view, a law doesn’t fulfill the Constitution’s obligations to equality if its effects are discriminatory.”

    She wrote that the majority used Harlan’s claim that the constitution is “color-blind” to justify its ruling. “Harlan, of course, was not arguing for a context-blind, effects-blind reading of the Constitution…. Look around, Harlan urged. But the majority, then and today, refuse to.”

    An unlikely dissenter

    Named for John Marshall, the renowned early 19th century chief justice, Harlan chose a career in law. He was pro-slavery and pro-Union, like most Kentuckians. The state’s pro-Confederate minority said only secession could save slavery.

    Harlan fought as a Union army colonel in the early part of the Civil War. After his father died in 1863, Harlan resigned his commission and came home. Soon afterwards, he was elected attorney general on the conservative Union Democratic ticket.

    He and his party vigorously opposed the Emancipation Proclamation, though it did not apply to Kentucky. In the 1864 presidential contest, Harlan voted for Union Gen. George McClellan over President Abraham Lincoln, whom he had also rejected in the 1860 election.

    After the war ended in 1865, Kentucky became intensely pro-Southern, and Harlan was defeated for reelection in 1867. White supremacist Democrats, many of them former Confederate soldiers and sympathizers, dominated the General Assembly, which refused to ratify the 13th, 14th and 15th Amendments.

    After initially opposing the Republican-championed amendments, Harlan, also a former Whig and “Know-Nothing,” stunned fellow conservative Kentuckians by embracing them and joining the GOP he had hated for years. President Rutherford B. Hayes named him to the Supreme Court in 1877.

    The Republicans mostly controlled national politics, so Harlan’s critics, Democrats and some Republicans, accused him of political opportunism. Klotter said the charge was false. “But he may have taken his stand, perhaps for personal reasons, for he had a Black half-brother named Robert Harlan.”

    Harlan’s brother changed his views

    Robert Harlan prospered in business and “became a respected and successful citizen,” Klotter said. “John Marshall Harlan recognized that Robert’s life refuted the notion of Black inferiority…he knew that his half-brother was the equal of all men when it came to business acumen, political leadership, and much more. He could not, in good faith, support a segregated world that denied basic black rights and so he dissented once more in Plessy.”

    Harlan was the lone naysayer in other civil rights cases, including an 1883 ruling that overturned the Civil Rights Act of 1875. The measure banned racial discrimination in “accommodations, theatres, public schools, churches, and cemeteries.” The law also prohibited “the barring of any person from jury service on account of race and provided that all lawsuits brought under the new law would be tried in federal, not state, courts.”

    In dissenting, Harlan wrote, “Deprived of their enjoyment in common with others, a freeman is not only branded as one inferior and infected, but, in the competitions of life, is robbed of some of the most essential means of existence, and all this solely because they belong to a particular race which the nation has liberated.”

    In a letter to Harlan, civil rights leader Frederick Douglass wrote, “I am glad sir, that in this day of compromise and concession where it is so much easier to drift with the current, to sacrifice conviction for the sake of peace, that you have been able to adhere to your convictions and thus save your soul. When self respect is lost the soul is lost.”

    Harlan died in 1911 and is buried in Rock Creek Cemetery in Washington, D.C.

    Harlan “accurately predicted problems ahead for America if [Plessy]…became the law of the land, for it could not represent the future,” Klotter said. “His courageous words echoed through the years; his lone stance makes his dissent perhaps the most forceful and far-reaching in American history. The ‘Great Dissenter’ fully earned his moniker with the greatest dissent in the history of the court.”

    Kentucky Lantern is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Kentucky Lantern maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Linda Blackford for questions: info@kentuckylantern.com.

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    Source: ohiocapitaljournal.com
    Author: Berry Craig

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  • Are safe haven laws doing enough to protect infants in Ohio?

    Are safe haven laws doing enough to protect infants in Ohio?

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    Are safe haven laws doing enough to protect infants in Ohio?

    Ohio’s Safe Haven law allows parents in crisis to legally and anonymously surrender a newborn under 30 days old at hospitals, fire stations, or law enforcement agencies without fear of prosecution. The state has also expanded Safe Haven Baby Boxes in select communities, offering a fully anonymous option for immediate infant surrender.

    On its surface, this system is a carefully constructed safety net. It ensures that when a parent believes there are no remaining options, a lawful and safe alternative still exists.

    The difficulty is that the existence of an exit is not the same as preventing the conditions that make it necessary.

    Ohio’s Safe Haven framework reflects a broader policy approach that intervenes at the moment of crisis rather than addressing the conditions that produce it. The assumption is that harm can be avoided if a safe option is available at the point of collapse. In practice, this places the weight of the system at the very end of a much longer sequence of unmet needs.

    Research on Safe Haven laws nationally suggests they have not significantly reduced unsafe infant abandonment on their own. Instead, they function primarily as a last resort mechanism activated only after earlier systems have already failed.

    Those failures rarely begin at the moment of birth. In Ohio, the circumstances that can lead to unsafe infant abandonment are often shaped by overlapping structural pressures including poverty, limited access to prenatal care, untreated mental health conditions, substance use disorders, and lack of stable support for new parents. These conditions accumulate long before crisis becomes visible.

    Ohio’s law itself is straightforward. It permits anonymous surrender at designated locations, requires no identifying information, and imposes no criminal penalty. Safe Haven Baby Boxes extend this model by allowing immediate and fully anonymous surrender in select fire stations and hospitals, triggering an alert for infant retrieval.

    These measures reflect a serious commitment to preventing immediate harm. In moments of acute crisis, they can and do save lives.

    But they are fundamentally reactive.

    It is far easier to create a legal pathway for surrender than it is to address why a parent reaches that point in the first place. Prevention requires sustained investment in maternal healthcare access, perinatal mental health services, addiction treatment, and economic stability for families with newborns. These are complex and long term policy commitments rather than discrete legal interventions.

    Safe Haven laws are often presented as a complete solution to unsafe infant abandonment. In reality, they are a narrow but essential intervention that operates only after multiple systems have already failed.

    Ohio is not unique in this structure. States like Kentucky maintain nearly identical Safe Haven frameworks, relying on crisis response infrastructure rather than upstream prevention. The consistency across states highlights a broader national pattern in which Safe Haven laws are widely implemented but rarely evaluated in terms of whether they reduce the conditions that lead to crisis.

    There is also a subtler policy effect that deserves attention. The presence of Safe Haven laws can create a sense of resolution, as though the problem has been addressed because a safe exit exists. That perception can obscure the continued presence of the underlying conditions that make such exits necessary in the first place.

    That distinction matters.

    Safe Haven laws in Ohio do serve an important purpose. In moments where stability, safety, and support have collapsed, they provide a legal option that can prevent irreversible harm. Their value in those moments is real.

    However, emergency response is not prevention.

    The more difficult question is not whether Ohio has a Safe Haven law, but whether Ohio is doing enough to reduce the likelihood that a parent would ever need to use it. Until policy begins to address both crisis response and the upstream conditions that generate crisis, Safe Haven laws will remain what they are today, an essential but incomplete safeguard activated only after crisis has already arrived.

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    Maddie Beans
    ohiocapitaljournal.com

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  • 13,000 more Ohioans to lose food stamps for not meeting requirements under Trump law

    13,000 more Ohioans to lose food stamps for not meeting requirements under Trump law

    13,000 more Ohioans to lose food stamps for not meeting requirements under Trump law

    Two children help their mother pick up food from the Sugartree Ministry food bank in Wilmington, Ohio. (Photo by Joe Raedle/Getty Images)

    Two children help their mother pick up food from the Sugartree Ministry food bank in Wilmington, Ohio. (Photo by Joe Raedle/Getty Images)

    The Ohio Department of Job and Family Services on April 30 notified 12,988 people that their federal nutrition assistance will end because they hadn’t complied with new requirements under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act. The law was passed last summer by congressional Republicans and signed by President Donald Trump.

    The terminations come after 80,000 Ohioans lost benefits between the July passage of the law and January of this year. An advocacy group said it’s likely that older Ohioans are likely the hardest hit by the latest cuts.

    The new requirements were imposed as part of a Trump law that cut federal nutrition and healthcare benefits by more than $1 trillion over 10 years while cutting taxes on the richest 1% of Americans by a similar amount. It also added more than $4 trillion to the federal deficit.

    A large portion of the cuts to programs for the poor are being done through new work requirements.

    While similar requirements for Medicaid don’t take effect until after the November midterm elections, the requirements to get benefits under the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP, took effect on Feb. 1.

    Under the new law, adults ages 55 to 64 and parents with children 14-18, as well as veterans, homeless individuals, and individuals aging out of the foster system are no longer exempted from work requirements,” Tom Betti, a spokesman for the Ohio Department of Job and Family Services, said in an email.

    “These generally require working at least 80 hours per month or pursuing certain educational or training opportunities.”

    About 1.4 million Ohioans receive benefits under SNAP, which is available to households with incomes below 130% of the federal poverty level. 

    In Ohio, that’s less than $36,000. Benefits are just $6.28 per person, per day.

    Even before the cuts, the benefits weren’t reaching many eligible residents.

    In Ohio in 2023, SNAP benefits were going to 95.5% of people at 100% of the federal poverty level — even though everybody making 130% or less was eligible. 

    But penetration of the benefit is declining further under the new requirements — which ostensibly address a problem of questionable existence. 

    An analysis of census data by the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities shows that in 2015, more than half of able-bodied adult SNAP recipients worked in the month they received benefits. And in 89% of households with children and a non-disabled adult, someone had worked in the previous two years

    That’s not bad among people who tend to work low-wage jobs that often lack health benefits, sick days and paid leave, the analysis said.

    Critics have said the work requirements weren’t imposed to put lazy people to work, but to achieve savings by hassling otherwise-eligible people off the system. Real-world experience seems to support that.

    When Arkansas in 2018 experimented with Medicaid work requirements, it didn’t produce the outcome proponents said they wanted. The mandate created confusion, 18,000 residents lost coverage, and the state’s employment level was unchanged, the Urban Institute reported last year.

    In Ohio, the new losses of food benefits are expected to land heaviest on people between 55 and 64, who previously were exempt from work requirements.

    Policy Matters Ohio last week reported that half of the 1,350 people in Cuyahoga County losing benefits are over 55. That’s the only county it had data for, but Executive Director Hannah Halbert cited some reasons why older recipients are especially vulnerable.

    “These federal changes include requiring Ohioans over the age of 54 to work, or qualify for poorly reasoned, narrow exemptions with criteria that may be difficult to prove,” she said in a written statement.

    That includes seniors ages 60-64, unless they are pregnant, living with another person under the age of 14 who is qualified for assistance, or an ‘Indian, Urban Indian, or California Indian.’

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  • Ohio’s new intoxicating hemp ban is bad for businesses, plaintiffs argued in lawsuit hearing

    Ohio’s new intoxicating hemp ban is bad for businesses, plaintiffs argued in lawsuit hearing

    Ohio’s new intoxicating hemp ban is bad for businesses, plaintiffs argued in a lawsuit hearing

    A new law banning low-level THC hemp products and changing the state’s marijuana laws hurts Ohio businesses, plaintiffs argued during a preliminary injunction hearing Monday. 

    Happy Harvest and Get Wright Lounge filed a lawsuit in Franklin County Court of Common Pleas after Ohio Senate Bill 56 took effect March 20 after Ohioans for Cannabis Choice failed to get enough signatures to get a referendum on the November ballot for voters to block the law.

    Franklin County Court of Common Pleas Magistrate Jhay Spottswood-Harrison heard the preliminary injunction hearing. 

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    “This bill completely put my clients out of business,” said Scott Pullins, the attorney for the plaintiffs. 

    “There were no ways to get rid of the inventory except to destroy it, and the court attempted and succeeded in fashioning a fair and equity remedy to solve that problem. Now, would we like to see it extended statewide to any other retailers in a similar situation.” 

    Franklin County Court of Common Pleas Judge Jeffrey M. Brown issued a 14-day TRO on April 22 allowing Happy Harvest locations and Get Wright Lounge to sell their existing products, but the 10th District Court of Appeals stayed the TRO last week. 

    Happy Harvest has locations in Delaware, Marion, and Wood counties. Get Wright Lounge has one location in Columbus. 

    “The TRO restores the status quo that existed for years before March 20, 2026, and in fact, the TRO strengthens what the law was back then by expressly putting in more stringent age restrictions, more restrictions against marketing children, more restrictions as to products that look like hemp,” Pullins said. 

    The state argued Ohio’s law now aligns with new federal restrictions on hemp products that are set to take effect Nov. 12.  

    Congress voted in November to ban products that contain 0.4 milligrams of total THC per container when they voted to reopen the government. 

    The only way to sell marijuana in Ohio starting Nov. 12 is by getting a license from the Ohio Division of Cannabis Control, said Ann Yackshaw, assistant section chief in the Ohio Attorney General’s office. 

    “The only way for plaintiffs or anyone else to get that license is to let Senate Bill 56 continue in effect so that the Division (of Cannabis Control) can continue to regulate and continue to build out the regulatory framework to bring these people into cannabis regulation in the state of Ohio,” Yackshaw said. 

    “Putting Senate Bill 56 on hold would put that rule-making process on hold, and then no one would be able to get into the cannabis program in the state of Ohio.”

    Previously, the 2018 Farm Bill said hemp can be grown legally if it contains less than 0.3% THC. 

    But the 2018 Farm Bill created challenges from a definition standpoint and a series of loopholes, said Andrew Makoski, chief legal counsel for the Ohio Division of Cannabis Control. 

    “Hemp products exploded, not just in Ohio, but all across the country, where people were using the hemp definition to sell these intoxicating products that had the technical definition of hemp,” he said. 

    “With any kind of unregulated marketplace, you don’t know what you’re actually getting. What you found was a large spike in accidental ingestions.” 

    Stopping S.B. 56 would take Ohio back to an unregulated market where “any child or anybody could walk into a store buy whatever they want,” Makoski said. 

    Ohio Senate Bill 56 

    The bill had to go to conference committee in the Ohio legislature after it passed the Ohio House, but the Ohio Senate voted not to concur with changes made to the bill at the end of October. 

    “The General Assembly enacted a sweeping criminal statute through a midnight conference report that neither chamber ever read three times in its final form and that consolidated four separate bills … into a single omnibus vehicle,” Pullins said. 

    Under the new law, THC levels in adult-use marijuana extracts will be reduced from a maximum of 90% down to a maximum of 70%, cap THC levels in adult-use flower to 35%, and prohibit smoking in most public places.

    The new law prohibits possessing marijuana in anything outside of its original packaging, criminalizes bringing legal marijuana from another state back to Ohio, and requires drivers to store marijuana in the trunk of their car while driving.

    “Customers who wish to get lower prices and go to Michigan and other states have now been declared to be felons if they buy the product and bring it back here,” Pullins said. 

    The new law funnels unregulated THC through the Ohio Division Cannabis Control, Yackshaw said. 

    “That is the regulation that plaintiffs say that they were looking for, but they don’t want it because they don’t want to have to go through the stringent procedures that the Division of Cannabis Control lays out,” she said. 

    Mark Fashian was the president of hemp product wholesaler Midwest Analytical Solutions in Delaware, Ohio, but he is now out of business because of the new law. 

    “After March 20, my sales have died,”  Fashian said. “(Senate Bill 56) basically made everything that I do illegal. … I have five employees, and right now they’re finding other jobs.”

    Happy Harvest was one of his best customers and they have more than $200,000 of stranded inventory, Fashian said.

    “Every day (Ohio Senate Bill 56) is enforced, it destroys lawful Ohio businesses, businesses operating a good faith reliance on the 2018 federal farm bill,” Pullins said. 

    A Sandusky County judge last month issued TRO on the hemp portion of the new law which allows the sale of intoxicating hemp products to continue in Fremont. 

    Follow Ohio Capital Journal Reporter Megan Henry on X or on Bluesky.

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