From Cato Today <[email protected]>
Subject How COVID-19 Affects the Homeless
Date May 27, 2020 11:04 AM
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The California housing crisis means some people can't afford to stay at home. SCOTUS still won't decide on qualified immunity.

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May 27, 2020

dept-of-education ([link removed] )

The Evidence Behind Education Spending Cuts ([link removed] )

Researchers claim to have found evidence that spending cuts harm students. But perhaps what they actually found was that state regulations harm students.

- Do School Spending Cuts Really Hurt Students? ([link removed] )

By Max Eden and Corey A. DeAngelis

Supreme Court 1 ([link removed] )

SCOTUS Pushes Back Qualified Immunity ([link removed] )

As of now, ten qualified immunity petitions are scheduled for consideration at the May 28th conference, which means that we would expect to learn about a possible cert grant on Monday, June 1st.

- SCOTUS Continues to Delay Qualified Immunity Cert Petitions ([link removed] )

By Jay Schweikert

MULTIMEDIA

Coronavirus and Homelessness 16x9 still__PLAY_SMALL ([link removed] )

Stay-Home Orders and California’s Housing Crisis ([link removed] )

The COVID-19 crisis poses a serious threat to the most vulnerable members of society. Stay‐​home orders, for example, have been a central part of government’s response to the pandemic, but over 100,000 Californians have no home in which stay, according to the Department of Housing and Urban Development. Another 30,000 live in emergency shelters, which are poorly equipped to guard against the virus. The pandemic even further highlights the necessity of increasing California’s housing supply, so that people can get and stay off the streets.

- Coronavirus and Homelessness ([link removed] )

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