Elder Care, Evictions, Domestic Abuse Among COVID-19 Legal Issues Addressed by Arizona Law Faculty
As COVID-19 persists, University of Arizona Law faculty continue to share their expertise on legal issues raised by the pandemic. Recent media coverage includes:
Supreme Court to hear case on pandemic aid for tribes
Arizona Public Media
Jan. 16, 2021
The Supreme Court has announced it will hear a case debating how pandemic relief funds will be distributed to Indigenous tribes, specifically if Alaska Native Corporations qualify. Through the pandemic, different governments, lawsuits and courts have disagreed on who qualifies meets that definition. Arizona Law professor Melissa Tatum is interviewed.
Pima County expands COVID-19 vaccine rollout
Arizona Public Media
Jan. 15, 2021
As counties across Arizona work to inoculate more people, vaccine availability remains a problem. Arizona Law professor of practice Kirin Goff comments on vaccination requirements.
Many States Resist Adapting Worker Safety Rules to Pandemic
Pew Charitable Trusts
Jan. 13, 2021
The lack of strong rules and enforcement has fallen particularly hard on people of color, immigrants and low-wage workers who cannot work remotely and have faced the worst health and economic fallout from the pandemic. Professor Shefali Milczarek-Desai is interviewed.
COVID-19 vaccine distribution underway in Arizona
Arizona 360
December 18, 2020
Former U.S. Surgeon General Richard Carmona and University of Arizona law professor Tara Sklar explain some of the legal stipulations related to the vaccine and its authorization from the federal government.
The CDC banned evictions for those affected by Covid. Why are tenants being thrown out on the street?
NBC News
December 17, 2020
In addition to an increased risk of COVID transmission because of evictions, there are costs associated with these cases that will be borne by taxpayers, analysts say. According, to research by the National Low Income Housing Coalition and Arizona Law’s Innovation for Justice Program, if one-quarter of the people who are evicted wind up in homeless shelters, taxpayers could face $130 billion in costs for emergency medical treatment, foster care, shelter and juvenile delinquency services.
Eviction protections for renters set to expire at the end of the year
Arizona Public Media
December 11, 2020
Dozens of Southern Arizona organizations are calling on Gov. Doug Ducey to protect renters after a CDC eviction moratorium expires on Dec. 31. Arizona Law's Mackenzie Pish, program manager for the Innovation for Justice program, discusses the economic, social and community cost that will come from evicting renters during, what is now, the worst part of the pandemic.
DIGGING DEEPER: Can Your Employer Require You to get the COVID-19 Vaccine?
KVOA News 4
December 10, 2020
Arizona Law Dean Emerita Toni Massaro discusses whether employers can require employees to get a COVID-19 vaccine.
Eviction looms for struggling US renters as stimulus talks drag
AlJazeera
December 7, 2020
A report by Arizona Law's Innovation for Justice program and the National Low Income Housing Initiative estimates that the public cost of eviction-related homelessness during the pandemic could be upwards of $128 billion.
Here's How Much Housing, Rental Prices Have Jumped In Phoenix Area
KJZZ
December 1, 2020
Increased home sales and lower inventory are driving up housing costs in the Phoenix area. A study by Arizona Law’s Innovation for Justice Program and the National Low Income Housing Coalition found between 121,372 and 274,000 Arizona households could be at risk of eviction this winter due to the pandemic and economic fallout.
Mortgage Outlook: Rates Stay Low as December Deadlines Loom
NerdWallet
November 30, 2020
A wave of evictions could cost social safety net programs more than $60 billion, according to a joint study from New Arizona Law's Innovation for Justice program and National Low Income Housing Coalition on costs associated with eviction-related homelessness.
Nearly 19 million Americans could lose their homes when eviction limits expire Dec. 31
CBS News
November 27, 2020
A report from the National Low Income Housing Coalition and Arizona Law's Innovation for Justice program estimates that 6.7 million households are in danger of losing their homes when federal and local limits on evictions expire at the end of the year.
Testing sewage can give school districts, campuses and businesses a heads-up on the spread of COVID-19
The Conversation
November 24, 2020
Arizona Law professor and water policy and law expert Robert Glennon and microbiologist Charles Gerba write for The Conversation on how testing wastewater can give school districts, campuses and businesses early warning signs on the spread of COVID-19.
Why nursing home aides exposed to COVID-19 aren’t taking sick leave
The Conversation (reposted by Yahoo News)
November 23, 2020
University of Arizona professors Shefali Milczarek-Desai and health law professor Tara Sklar write for the Conversation about why nursing home aides exposed to COVID-19 aren’t taking sick leave.
Legality of potential COVID-19 vaccination requirements
Arizona Public Media
November 20, 2020
Health Law professor of practice Kirin Goff discusses the history of vaccination requirements on Arizona 360.
The Shadow Pandemic
Arizona Public Media
October 18, 2020
The UN is reporting a troubling rise in domestic abuse due to COVID-19 lockdowns and is now referring to the crisis as “the Shadow Pandemic.” Negar Katirai, director of the Domestic Violence Law Clinic at the University of Arizona, discusses domestic violence during the pandemic and resources available in Pima county.
KTAR News
September 14, 2020
According to Tara Sklar, inadequate staffing, infection control and poor quality of care were among the main problems facing nursing homes before the pandemic hit. They have now been heightened during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Report says COVID-19 brought light to issues in nursing homes
KOLD News 13
September 11, 2020
The COVID-19 pandemic shined a spotlight on nursing homes as many became hot spots for the virus. Tara Sklar discusses her report which states the virus brought attention to health and safety issues within facilities that existed far before the 2020 outbreak.
Trump Plans Nationwide Eviction Moratorium Amid Stalled Stimulus Talks
Newsweek
September 1, 2020
Citing concerns about the spread of coronavirus, President Donald Trump is sidestepping Congress to pause most evictions through the end of the year. The article cites an August report from Innovation for Justice program that estimates that 30 million to 40 million people would be at risk of being evicted without additional action.
DIGGING DEEPER: Pandemic Violence
KVOA News 4
August 27, 2020
Negar Katirai, director of the Domestic Violence Law Clinic at the University of Arizona, discusses domestic violence during the COVID-19 pandemic.
COVID-19 in Classrooms: What should Tucson schools share with the public?
KOLD News 13
August 25, 2020
Although some schools switching to remote learning due to COVID-19 cases among students and staff, TUSD spokesperson cited HIPAA and ADA privacy issues as the reason why district will not be releasing cases per school or site if it doesn’t require a closure. Professor Tara Sklar discusses laws that permit schools to withhold information from the public.
Legal Experts Call on Officials to Shore Up Pandemic Response
Courthouse News
August 18, 2020
Given nursing homes’ struggles containing the virus, state and federal legislators have proposed granting them immunity from lawsuits, Arizona Law professor Tara Sklar report says that is not a good idea.