Developments in Interstate Compact Law and Practice 2022


Book Description

2022 was an interesting year for interstate compacts. While there were no blockbuster judicial decisions, several decisions illustrated a premium on uniform application and interpretation of compacts and several others missed opportunities to apply well-established principles of interstate compact law. Administrative developments included compact agencies taking advantage of federal funding opportunities in the 2021 Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, which has some preferences for cooperative actions and some references to specific compact agencies. Also notable is that the Military Interstate Children's Compact Commission developed a plan for the states to fix a scrivener's in the Interstate Compact in Educational Opportunity for Military Children, a heavy lift as all fifty states and the District of Columbia are members. Legislative developments included new state laws providing for a new bridge authority between local governments in Oregon and Washington; Massachusetts becoming the fiftieth state to join the Interstate Wildlife Violator Compact; Maryland resolving discrepancies between it and Virginia's enactment of amendments to the Potomac River Compact; and South Carolina withdrawing from the Interstate Insurance Product Regulation Compact, the first state to ever withdraw from that compact. This article discusses these and many more judicial, administrative and legislative developments in interstate compact law in 2022. Discussions of each case, agency action and legislative act present broadly applicable principles of law, not just the outcome for the compact at issue. For context, this article briefly summarizes the principles of law associated with the reported developments and provides citations for further reading.




The Evolving Use and the Changing Role of Interstate Compacts


Book Description

The Evolving Use and the Changing Role of Interstate Compacts is a long-needed guide to the law and use of interstate compacts. This book explains the historical basis of compacts and the legal underpinnings of compacts. It covers such diverse topics as federal and state court jurisdiction, compact-created administrative agencies, Eleventh Amendment immunity, drafting considerations, and the use of compacts in specific areas such as crime control, child welfare, environmental regulation and economic development. The book also examines why interstate compacts are providing to be the vehicle of choice for cooperation between states and provides practitioners with the tools they need to understand create and make the best use of such agreements.







Interstate Compact Law


Book Description

The law governing formal agreements between U.S. states is unique. Litwak's Interstate Compact Law continues to throw bright light on all facets of compact law as it compares and contrasts compact law with other intergovernmental agreements. This new edition, the Fourth, includes a new chapter on compacts with international participation.Covering materials through Spring 2020, the book includes all the cases, both historical and recent, that are vital to understanding the ways that states cooperate through interstate compacts. The cases have been edited to focus on the compact at issue, in addition to core legal principles. Notes and questions present related materials, supporting and contrary examples, and inviting discussion points.Examining how and why States cooperate, Litwak takes students through the interwoven constitutional, contractual, and administrative law of compacts. Still the only comprehensive book about the law of such agreements, Interstate Compact Law prepares lawyers to apply compact law principles to any manner of intergovernmental cooperation, including states' agreements with foreign governments.




Interstate Compacts


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Interstate Compacts


Book Description

The interstate compact, long dormant but now dynamic, has be­come a significant tool for agreement on vital issues. Prompted by the uncomfortable knowledge that changes are being made in the constitutional system by this device, without public awareness or appreciation, Miss Ridgeway has attempted to bring into focus what these compacts can do and what can be expected in the future from them by calling attention to four of the more important compacts a single state--Illinois--has with its neighbors. Her in-depth approach should prove extraordinarily revealing to elected officials as well as to students of government.







Interstate Compacts for Traffic Safety


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