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WITHOUT a full look at the reasons older children were abandoned at hospitals in Nebraska under that state's safe haven law, one would think the parents who did this were pretty awful.
That may not be the case.
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LINCOLN, Neb. - Deciding he could wait no longer to address what has become a state embarrassment, Gov. Dave Heineman said Wednesday he will call a special legislative session to amend Nebraska's loosely worded safe-haven law, which in just a few months has allowed parents to abandon nearly two dozen children as old as 17.
Heineman had planned to wait until the next regular legislative session convened in January, but changed his mind as the number of children dropped off at hospitals grew. Two teenagers were abandoned Tuesday night alone, and three children dropped off previously did not even live in Nebraska.
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LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) -- Deciding he could wait no longer to address what has become a state embarrassment, Gov. Dave Heineman said Wednesday he will call a special legislative session to amend Nebraska's loosely worded safe-haven law, which in just a few months has allowed parents to abandon nearly two dozen children as old as 17.
Heineman had planned to wait until the next regular legislative session convened in January, but changed his mind as the number of children dropped off at hospitals grew. Two teenagers were abandoned Tuesday night, and three children dropped off previously did not even live in Nebraska.
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...Syllabus. STENBERG, ATTORNEY GENERAL OF NEBRASKA, ET AL. v. CARHART. CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STA... to allow adoption of unwanted children as well as a certain degree of state assistance if... to an era I had thought we had at last abandoned. I. In the almost 30 years since Roe, this Court...
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A Georgia woman drove hundreds of miles to get rid of hers. A Miami man flew to drop his off. One Nebraska man dumped seven on a hospital doorstep. One woman, who had thrown her hands up in frustration, had second thoughts and wanted hers back.
We're talking about children, some as old as 17.
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...," however, excludes its application to children born of diplomatic representatives of a foreign st... is arbitrary or irrational, and have abandoned any requirement of "reasonableness." . Regulati...Nebraska held that differences of opinion as to the wisdom...
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The United States system of funding schools with local property tax dollars leads to qualitative disparities across school districts. It is crucial that state courts address this problem, since no federal right to education exists. Students and parents have successfully challenged these funding systems in many states, but courts in seven states - citing the political question doctrine - have refused to review these claims. It appears that most of these states lack a coherent political question history and have used the prudential standing doctrine to avoid education claims specifically. This Note argues that the political question doctrine should not be used as an excuse to ignore educational adequacy cases in states with an affirmative constitutional right to education.
... questions: Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, Nebraska, Florida, Alabama, Illinois, and Rhode Island. It ... affirmative right to education for all children of the state.9 Starting with the first schools in ...Thus, in Vieth, the plurality abandoned precedent and held that there are no judicially ma...
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OMAHA, Neb. - When Nebraska lawmakers passed a unique "safe- haven" law that allowed parents to abandon children as old as 19, they never seriously thought such dropoffs would become common.
But their worst fears have come true: At least 16 children, some of them teenagers, have been abandoned since the law took effect in July. Now elected officials are considering revising the law, and at least one anguished parent said he only surrendered his children because he felt he had no choice.
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The Maine Legislature is considering a package of budget cuts. Many of the cuts suggested for the Department of Health and Human Services will most certainly cost Maine far more money than it will save. And it will take us many steps backward.
The non-strategic, 10 percent, across-the-board cuts are reckless. They will begin to dismantle the system of care and the safety net that Maine has worked very hard to create for its most vulnerable people. The proposed 24 percent room and board subsidy to disabled people living in group homes is also a shortsighted move. Dumping people from stability into homelessness is egregious and, as a method to save money, is a poorly planned strategy as costs will skyrocket when people are displaced.
... the recent "safe haven" occurrences in Nebraska where reportedly 80 percent of the children abando...
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... to save young infants from being abandoned in unsafe public settings such as dumpsters and ba...Parents began dropping of folder children. This was an entirely unintended outcome. By Novem...