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Prof Triggernometry
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- Feb 7, 2017
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The butt hurt in the Governor's residence must be epic:
Leonardo BricenoThe Post Millennial
April 2, 2022 11:46 PM
In a decision handed down Friday, a judge in Los Angeles, California, struck down the state's corporate diversity law that would have required corporations based out of the progressive Golden State to include racial minorities and members of the LGBTQ community on their executive boards, ruling it "unconstitutional."
California's Assembly Bill No. 979 was approved by Gov. Gavin Newsom and signed into law on Sept. 30, 2020. Because of what progressive lawmakers saw as a general lack of representation of American minorities on corporate executive boards, the law would have required corporations to hire members of "underrepresented communities" proportional to the size of the entity.
If a corporation had nine or more officials on its board, it would have been required to have at least three members of "underrepresented communities."
If that number was five to eight, the requirement would have been two. And if the board had four members or fewer, at least one of those members would have to meet the requirements. Meanwhile, noncompliance would be costly.
According to its design, an initial violation of the law would result in a $100,000 fine. Additional offenses would be $300,000 or more for each repeat violation.
https://thepostmillennial.com/calif...law-ruled-unconstitutional?utm_campaign=64487
California's corporate diversity law ruled 'unconstitutional'
A Los Angeles judge ruled Friday that California's law mandating that corporations diversify their executive boards with members from certain racial, ethnic, or LGBT groups is "unconstitutional."Leonardo BricenoThe Post Millennial
April 2, 2022 11:46 PM
In a decision handed down Friday, a judge in Los Angeles, California, struck down the state's corporate diversity law that would have required corporations based out of the progressive Golden State to include racial minorities and members of the LGBTQ community on their executive boards, ruling it "unconstitutional."
California's Assembly Bill No. 979 was approved by Gov. Gavin Newsom and signed into law on Sept. 30, 2020. Because of what progressive lawmakers saw as a general lack of representation of American minorities on corporate executive boards, the law would have required corporations to hire members of "underrepresented communities" proportional to the size of the entity.
If a corporation had nine or more officials on its board, it would have been required to have at least three members of "underrepresented communities."
If that number was five to eight, the requirement would have been two. And if the board had four members or fewer, at least one of those members would have to meet the requirements. Meanwhile, noncompliance would be costly.
According to its design, an initial violation of the law would result in a $100,000 fine. Additional offenses would be $300,000 or more for each repeat violation.
https://thepostmillennial.com/calif...law-ruled-unconstitutional?utm_campaign=64487