New York City decriminalized jaywalking in 2025, eliminating fines up to $250 after minimal prior enforcement (only 780 summonses in 2023). Littering remains prohibited ...
No specific Colorado law prohibits bear wrestling statewide; that statute exists in Missouri as a class A misdemeanor under 578.176, covering acts like wrestling, ...
No specific Kentucky law bans cursing while driving statewide, unlike a Rockville, Maryland ordinance treating it as a misdemeanor with fines up to $100 ...
No specific Louisiana law prohibits chopping down a cactus or imposes jail time for it, unlike Arizona’s strict protections for saguaro cacti that can ...
Vermont employers generally cannot access personal employee emails without consent or a warrant, but they have broader rights over company-provided email systems for legitimate ...
No, Georgia lacks a “right to disconnect” law granting employees protection from after-hours work contact. This concept, popular in places like France, Australia, and ...
North Carolina landlord-tenant laws, outlined in Chapter 42 of the General Statutes, balance rights and duties for renters and owners to ensure fair housing ...
Rainwater falling on private property belongs to the landowner under prior appropriation doctrine, but collection must not reduce natural runoff or interfere with downstream ...
Licensed retailers can deliver alcohol via employees, contractors, or curbside within 12 hours, requiring age verification (21+) and sealed packaging inaccessible to vehicle passengers. ...
No, Pennsylvania does not have laws making everyday jaywalking or littering automatic violations without context, though both carry penalties under specific vehicle and municipal ...