- Posted September 06, 2012
- Tweet This | Share on Facebook
Judge blocks implementation of Mich. teacher benefits law
LANSING (AP) -- A judge has temporarily blocked full implementation of a new law requiring Michigan public school employees to pay more for their pensions.
The Detroit News reports Ingham County Circuit Judge Rosemarie Aquilina granted an injunction Tuesday that gives them more time to decide whether to pay more toward their pension, accept a lower pension or freeze their pension and switch to a defined contribution plan.
Earlier in the day, Republican Gov. Rick Snyder signed legislation requiring public school employees to pay more for pensions and ending state-provided health coverage in retirement for new hires.
The legislation required a decision from teachers by Oct. 26. The judge scheduled a Nov. 28 hearing on legal challenges by two teachers' unions.
The law's supporters say it will withstand the challenges.
Published: Thu, Sep 6, 2012
headlines Oakland County
- Judge’s memorial unveiled
- Judge to lead community-based behavioral health workshop
- ABA President Michelle A. Behnke calls Equity Summit 2026 ‘a step towards action’
- Michigan Human Trafficking Commission launches quarterly newsletter
- Nessel files testimony to protect ratepayers in Google data center proposal
headlines National
- Bill Kurtis’ memoir tells how law school trained him for covering trials
- ACLU and BigLaw firm use ‘Orange is the New Black’ in hashtag effort to promote NY jail reform
- Justice Barrett’s home targeted in attempted swatting call
- Texting-and-driving charges dropped against woman without right hand
- Fender warns guitar makers to stop producing Stratocaster look-a-likes
- General counsel compensation climbs, aligned with equity and company scale




