Privacy, cybersecurity for schools examined at Clark Hill webinar
Clark Hill PLC will present a webinar on “Privacy and Cybersecurity for a New School Year” beginning at noon on Thursday, August 19, via Zoom.
This interactive webinar will focus on privacy and cybersecurity concerns schools should be addressing as the new school year gets underway.
Speaking at the webinar will be Clark Hill Senior Counsel Charles M. Russman, Birmingham office, and David G. Ries, Of Counsel. They will discuss current risks, best practices, how to protect data, and more.
The webinar will also answer questions from participants who submit them when registering or who ask them while on the webinar.
To register for the webinar, visit www.clarkhill.com and click on “News & Events.”
Book Club to discuss ‘I am Malala’
The Women Lawyers Association of Michigan will present its next Literary Ladies Book Club on Thursday, Aug. 26, beginning at 6 p.m. via Zoom.
The club will be discussing “I Am Malala” by Malala Yousafzai.
To register for this online discussion by Tuesday, Aug. 24, visit www.womenlawyers.org and click on “events.”
Nessel: Don’t deny unemployment for pot use outside work
LANSING (AP) — People fired from their jobs for using marijuana outside the workplace still should be eligible for unemployment benefits, state Attorney General Dana Nessel said in a filing before the Unemployment Insurance Appeals Commission.
The brief, filed this week, focuses on three cases currently consolidated before the board. It says the commission’s ruling will “directly impact many law-abiding Michigan workers who may be terminated for the use of marijuana.”
Each case deals with whether an employee should be disqualified from collecting unemployment if they are fired solely for using marijuana during their personal time — meaning marijuana was not used on the job or on the employers’ premises, nor did it impair the employee during work hours, Nessel said.
Administrative law judges have reached different results in different cases on whether a person may be disqualified for “illegal drugs” based on their use of marijuana, according to the brief.
But Nessel points to Michigan voters’ approval in 2018 for making recreational marijuana use legal in the state.
“Nobody over 21 can be penalized or denied any right or privilege solely for legally using marijuana, and employers cannot control their employees’ private lives by calling the legal use of marijuana outside of work hours ‘misconduct,’” Nessel said in a release.
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