Feb. 12—Las Vegas City Schools have been roiled by controversy for the past several weeks after the school board declined to extend Superintendent Larryssa Archuleta’s contract in late January — despite a vote a month earlier that would have extended her tenure with the northeast New Mexico school district by two years. The board had […]
Tag: Administrative
Administrative error threw five Burns High seniors off graduation track
Feb. 6—CHEYENNE — “The school messed up.” That was the text message Misty Jackson received last Thursday from her daughter, CharleMarie, who is a senior at Burns Junior/Senior High School. Her daughter is one of five seniors who were told last week they were no longer on track to graduate in May because of a […]
Ashland’s police chief has been placed on paid administrative leave, town manager says
ASHLAND — Police Chief Cara Rossi is on paid administrative leave, according to Town Manager Michael Herbert. Herbert would not say why Rossi is on leave, nor would he say when it started. However, HopNews reported that last Friday morning, Ashland town employees received an email from Herbert indicating that as of 9 a.m. that […]
Art Acevedo withdraws from $271K Austin City Hall administrative position after backlash
Art Acevedo has withdrawn his acceptance of a $271,000-a-year administrative job offer to oversee policing in Austin. Acevedo announced he was withdrawing in a statement posted to the social media platform X, formerly Twitter. Acevedo, who has served as either a police chief or interim police chief in Austin; Houston; Miami; and Aurora, Colo.; was […]
Explainer-How is the ‘war on the administrative state’ faring at the Supreme Court?
By John Kruzel WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Three cases before the U.S. Supreme Court will help determine the advance of the conservative push called the “war on the administrative state” that aims to weaken federal agencies that regulate key aspects of American life and business. The court, with a 6-3 conservative majority, is weighing cases challenging […]
A New Legal Challenge to the Administrative State, Explained
The U.S. Supreme Court is hearing oral arguments Wednesday in Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo and Relentless Inc. v. Department of Commerce, which could significantly affect how administrative agencies make and enforce federal law. The cases concern a decades-old legal precedent—commonly referred to as Chevron deference—through which federal courts grant federal agencies discretion over interpretations […]