At a Glance . . .

 Law firm hosts seminar for businesses owners

Southeast Michigan businesses can discover legal tools and learn tips they need to thrive during a half-day Detroit Business Symposium presented by Butzel Long.

The program will take place from 7:45 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. on Thursday, January 8 at the M@dison Building, 1555 Broadway in Detroit.

The cost is $50, which includes breakfast and lunch. 

The event will benefit Young Detroit Builders, an educational training program that helps qualified low income young adults ages 18-24 earn their GEDS while getting construction training.

Register online at butzel.com/event.

For additional information, contact Charmese Wilson at 313.983.6904 or  wilsonc@butzel.com.

State tightens rules for childhood vaccinations

LANSING (AP) — Michigan’s health agency is working to make it harder for parents to get out of immunizing their children against contagious diseases.

The Michigan Department of Community Health has rules that take effect January 1 requiring parents to take extra steps in order to get permission to leave their children unprotected.

MLive.com says parents seeking vaccination waivers will have to hear from a health worker about vaccines and the diseases they’re intended to prevent.

Parents also will have to sign a form acknowledging they may be putting their own and other people’s children at risk with the failure to vaccinate.

The Joint Committee on Administrative Rules recently approved the new requirements.

High court rules for energy firm 

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Supreme Court won’t make it tougher for defendants in class-action lawsuits to transfer cases from state courts to more business-friendly federal court.

The justices ruled 5-4 this week in favor of a Michigan energy company that wanted to move a class-action case from Kansas state court to federal court without showing evidence that damages in the case would exceed $5 million. 
 
That is the minimum amount required for transferring such cases.

The case involved a group of royalty owners who sued Dart Cherokee Basin Operating Co. alleging they were underpaid royalties on oil and gas wells.

A federal judge refused to transfer the case without evidence of damages. 

A federal appeals court declined to consider an appeal, but the Supreme Court said the law does not require such evidence.
 

Couple steals donation bucket to buy drugs

MCDONALD, Pa. (AP) — Police say an unemployed couple facing eviction admitted swiping a Salvation Army donation bucket from a Pittsburgh-area convenience store so they could use the cash to buy drugs.
 
Joshua Basinger, 30, and Rachel Pecharka, 21, were arrested recently in McDonald and charged with theft, receiving stolen property and criminal conspiracy.

Police say Basinger and Pecharka told officers they emptied the bucket of cash after last Friday’s theft and threw it into an Aliquippa trash bin.

Police posted surveillance photos of the suspects on the department’s Facebook page. They say anonymous tips led them to Basinger and Pecharka.
 

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