South East Water must pay £30.5m for supply failures – BBC News

Posted July 14th, 2026 in news by michael

‘Water regulator Ofwat said this follows the conclusion of three investigations into the company’s repeated failures.’

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BBC News, 14th July 2026

Source: www.bbc.co.uk

“Net zero”, church heating, and the consistory courts – VI – Law & Religion UK

Posted July 14th, 2026 in news by michael

‘Following the General Synod decision in February 2020, new provisions on carbon reduction were introduced under the Faculty Jurisdiction (Amendment) Rules 2022 (“the new provisions”) came into force 1 July 2022. This is the sixth in the series of posts which update the list of determinations under the revised provisions.’

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Law & Religion UK, 13th July 2026

Source: lawandreligionuk.com

Does the Lloyd review mark the end of the Legal Services Act? – Legal Futures

Posted July 14th, 2026 in news by michael

‘Reading between the lines of Richard Lloyd’s independent review of the LSB published yesterday – an impressively rapid achievement, as these things go, given the Ministry of Justice (MoJ) only formally commissioned him in February – I sense the ‘stakeholders’ he spoke to rather enjoyed putting the boot in.’

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Legal Futures, 14th July 2026

Source: www.legalfutures.co.uk

Section 25(2)(g): Consign It to the Past So Survivors Can Start Their Future – Financial Remedies Journal

Posted July 14th, 2026 in news by michael

‘The 2026 judgments of Cusworth J reported as LP v MP [2025] EWFC 473 and Wei Lyn Loh and Ardal Loh-Granger [2025] EWFC 483 have dusted off s 25(2)(g) Matrimonial Causes Act 1973. Limited to use in only the most serious instances, this factor should be consigned to the history books rather than being hailed as a path to victim recompense.’

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Financial Remedies Journal, 13th July 2026

Source: financialremediesjournal.com

New Audit Wales code strengthens guidance on AI – Local Government Lawyer

Posted July 14th, 2026 in news by michael

‘Published on Thursday (9 July), the new code replaces the 2020 Code and takes into account the rise of artificial intelligence, legislative changes, and current resource constraints affecting the public sector.’

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Local Government Lawyer, 13th July 2026

Source: www.localgovernmentlawyer.co.uk

C of E’s £100m plan to address historical links to slavery faces legal challenge – The Guardian

Posted July 14th, 2026 in news by michael

‘The Church of England is facing a legal challenge over Project Spire, its £100m plan to further reparative justice for historical links to enslavement, as staff come under “vile abuse” from critics.’

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The Guardian, 13th July 2026

Source: www.theguardian.com

Landlords must address excess heat issues under new rules after boy’s death – The Independent

Posted July 14th, 2026 in news by michael

‘Under the new rules from November 30, brought in under Awaab’s Law, social housing tenants will have strengthened rights to have serious problems addressed faster.’

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The Independent, 13th July 2026

Source: www.independent.co.uk

UK bans support for Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps – The Guardian

Posted July 14th, 2026 in news by michael

‘The prime minister announced his government would designate the branch of the Iranian military under a new National Security Act, enabling law enforcement to take action against anyone deemed to be providing it with support.’

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The Guardian, 13th July 2026

Source: www.theguardian.com

University worker wins £51,000 disability payout after misgendering trans colleague – The Independent

Posted July 14th, 2026 in news by michael

‘A university worker has been awarded over £51,000 in a disability discrimination case after her employer failed to account for her short-term memory issues when she misgendered a transgender colleague.’

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The Independent, 13th July 2026

Source: www.independent.co.uk

Injunction over unauthorised placement of flags on highways made permanent – Local Government Lawyer

Posted July 13th, 2026 in news by Simon

‘A High Court injunction preventing the unauthorised placement of flags on highway infrastructure secured by Oxfordshire County Council has been made permanent.’

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Local Government Lawyer, 10th July 2026

Source: www.localgovernmentlawyer.co.uk

Court of Appeal rules environmental information is ‘held’ at date of request, not internal review – Local Government Lawyer

Posted July 13th, 2026 in news by Simon

‘The Court of Appeal has unanimously allowed an appeal by the Information Commissioner and the Health and Safety Executive, ruling that the date for determining whether environmental information is held by a public authority under regulation 12(4)(a) of the Environmental Information Regulations 2004 is the date the authority receives the request, not the date of any subsequent internal review decision under regulation 11.’

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Local Government Lawyer, 10th July 2026

Source: www.localgovernmentlawyer.co.uk

Independent review of the Legal Services Board – Legal Services Board

Posted July 13th, 2026 in news by Simon

‘The independent review of the Legal Services Board, conducted by Richard Lloyd and published by the Ministry of Justice, was published on 13 July 2026.’

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Legal Services Board, 13th July 2026

Source: legalservicesboard.org.uk

CPS admits putting hallucinated cases before High Court – Legal Futures

Posted July 13th, 2026 in news by Simon

‘The Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) put hallucinated cases produced by artificial intelligence (AI) before the High Court in an extradition appeal, it has admitted.’

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Legal Futures, 10th July 2026

Source: www.legalfutures.co.uk

Government pilot aims to identify and support children with a parent in prison – Family Law

Posted July 13th, 2026 in news by Simon

‘The initiative, announced by the Ministry of Justice and the Department for Education, will see information shared between prisons, police forces and local authorities to help identify children whose parent has entered custody. The pilot is intended to address long-standing concerns that many of these children remain “hidden” from public services and therefore miss out on support.’

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Family Law, 13th July 2026

Source: www.familylaw.co.uk

Decapod Crustaceans under the Law – UK Human Rights Blog

Posted July 13th, 2026 in news by Simon

‘Under the Animal Welfare (Sentience) Act 2022 the government gave legal recognition to decapod crustaceans as sentient beings. The Animal Law Foundation has now written to the Welsh Government to advise on what this means for the killing of crabs and lobsters in Wales.’

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UK Human Rights Blog, 12th July 2026

Source: ukhumanrightsblog.com

The Weekly Round Up — Scrutiny of the Immigration and Asylum Bill, 62nd Session of the UNHRC, eVisas and the ICO, Facial Recognition, and Rulings on Deportation, Extradition and Modern Slavery Guidance – UK Human Rights Blog

Posted July 13th, 2026 in news by Simon

‘The Joint Committee on Human Rights (JCHR) has this week launched its legislative scrutiny of the Immigration and Asylum Bill.’

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UK Human Rights Blog, 13th July 2026

Source: ukhumanrightsblog.com

Hleb Buziuk: Independent by Assertion: The Immigration and Asylum Bill and the Re-Departmentalisation of Adjudication – UK Constitutional Law Association

Posted July 13th, 2026 in news by Simon

‘On 13 July 2026, the Immigration and Asylum Bill is scheduled to receive its second reading in the House of Commons. Public attention has fixed on Part 2 and its Article 8 clauses. This post is about Part 1 (clauses 1-16 and Schedules 1-3), which has attracted less commentary but may prove the more consequential. It abolishes the First-tier Tribunal (Immigration and Asylum Chamber) as the forum for immigration and asylum appeals, replacing it with the Independent Immigration Appeals Authority (“IIAA”): hearings from late 2027, a period of parallel running, then full transfer of the jurisdiction.’

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UK Constitutional Law Association, 13th July 2026

Source: ukconstitutionallaw.org

Law and religion roundup – 12th July – Law & Religion UK

Posted July 13th, 2026 in news by Simon

‘On Tuesday, in a written question, Lord Birt (CB) asked HMG “what plans they have to legislate to ensure a Prime Minister of any religious faith can discharge all of his or her responsibilities” – to which the short answer is evidently, “none”.’

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Law & Religion UK, 12th July 2026

Source: lawandreligionuk.com

Common law can cope with AI harms, say experts – Law Society Gazette

Posted July 13th, 2026 in news by Simon

‘England and Wales common law is well placed to cope with claims for damage caused by chatbots, self-driving cars and other AI-powered innovations, according to a government-sponsored expert report. However “liability gaps” may emerge over the problem of proving causation when decisions are made by autonomous systems, the report’s authors said this week..

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Law Society Gazette, 9th July 2026

Source: www.lawgazette.co.uk

Some Thoughts on Possible Structural and Resource Issues for the Financial Remedies Court Arising Out of the Government’s Approach to Reform of Financial Remedies Law in Their Paper ‘A Fairer End to Relationships’ – Financial Remedies Journal

Posted July 13th, 2026 in news by Simon

‘The purpose of this paper is not to comment on the merits of the reforms themselves but to make some observations on the possible structural and resource issues for the Financial Remedies Court (FRC) which may arise out of the anticipated legislation which may emerge from the suggested reforms. The comments also relate to the separate, but linked, government published paper Regulatory Impact Assessment on the Cohabitation and Financial Remedies Reform Consultation.’

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Financial Remedies Journal, 10th July 2026

Source: financialremediesjournal.com