Call 855-808-4530 or email [email protected] to receive your discount on a new subscription.
The significant attention garnered by the United States Supreme Court decisions at the end of its most recent term, relating to such issues as the Affordable Care Act and same-sex marriage, overshadowed a significant decision relating to freedom of speech. This decision has potentially significant ramifications for municipal regulations throughout the country. In Reed v. Town of Gilbert, 135 S.Ct. 2218 (2015), the Court found that the town's regulation of directional signs was not content-neutral and violated the free speech rights of a local church.
Background
The Town Code requires that permits be obtained for signs, but exempts 23 categories of signs from that requirement. The Court focused on three of those categories, noting the manner in which the local law treated each of these categories differently. The first category, “Ideological Signs,” are those that are defined as communicating noncommercial ideas and are not otherwise within the law's definition of political signs. Ideological Signs are permitted in any zoning district for any length of time and may be up to 20 square feet in size. Next are “Political Signs,” which are defined as a “temporary sign designed to influence the outcome of an election called by a public body ' .” The Court noted that these signs may be up to 16 square feet on residential property and 32 square feet on nonresidential property, vacant municipal property and rights of way. Political Signs may be erected up to 32 days before a primary election and must come down within 15 days after a general election. Id. at 2227.
ENJOY UNLIMITED ACCESS TO THE SINGLE SOURCE OF OBJECTIVE LEGAL ANALYSIS, PRACTICAL INSIGHTS, AND NEWS IN ENTERTAINMENT LAW.
Already a have an account? Sign In Now Log In Now
For enterprise-wide or corporate acess, please contact Customer Service at [email protected] or 877-256-2473
Defining commercial real estate asset class is essentially a property explaining how it identifies — not necessarily what its original intention was or what others think it ought to be. This article discusses, from a general issue-spot and contextual analysis perspective, how lawyers ought to think about specialized leasing formats and the regulatory backdrops that may inform what the documentation needs to contain for compliance purposes.
As courts and discovery experts debate whether hyperlinked content should be treated the same as traditional attachments, legal practitioners are grappling with the technical and legal complexities of collecting, analyzing and reviewing these documents in real-world cases.
How to Convey Your Merits In a Way That Earns Trust, Clients and Distinctions Just as no two individuals have the exact same face, no two lawyers practice in their respective fields or serve clients in the exact same way. Think of this as a "Unique Value Proposition." Internal consideration about what you uniquely bring to your clients, colleagues, firm and industry can provide untold benefits for your law practice.
The ever-evolving digital marketing landscape, coupled with the industry-wide adoption of programmatic advertising, poses a significant threat to the effectiveness and integrity of digital advertising campaigns. This article explores various risks to digital advertising from pixel stuffing and ad stacking to domain spoofing and bots. It will also explore what should be done to ensure ad fraud protection and improve effectiveness.
This article offers practical insights and best practices to navigate the path from roadmap to rainmaking, ensuring your business development efforts are not just sporadic bursts of activity, but an integrated part of your daily success.