Co-Founder at Revved Up Kids, LLC www.revvedupkids.com (Self-employed)
Location:
Greater Atlanta Area
Industry:
Health, Wellness and Fitness
Work:
Revved Up Kids, LLC www.revvedupkids.com - Atlanta, GA since Mar 2009
Co-Founder
Education:
Miami University, Oxford Ohio 1982 - 1986
BS Business, General Business/Spanish
Lahser High School, Bloomfield Hills, MI
Skills:
Child Safety Expert Strategic Planning Customer Relations Public Speaking Marketing Strategy Training Web Design Project Management Customer Service Teaching
the federal government's move. Allison Neal of the American Civil Liberties Union of Alabama, which was among a group of organizations that also challenged the law in a separate complaint, said she hopes the "11th Circuit will act quickly on this because of the real harm we are seeing here in Alabama.
Date: Oct 07, 2011
Source: Google
US asks federal appeals court to block Alabama immigration law
federal governments move. Allison Neal of the American Civil Liberties Union of Alabama, which was among a group of organizations that also challenged the law in a separate complaint, said she hopes the 11th Circuit will act quickly on this because of the real harm we are seeing here in Alabama.
Date: Oct 07, 2011
Category: U.S.
Source: Google
US asks appeals court to halt Ala. immigration law
Advocates applauded the federal government's move. Allison Neal of the American Civil Liberties Union of Alabama, which was part of the coalition that sued, said she hopes the "11th Circuit will act quickly on this because of the real harm we are seeing here in Alabama."
Date: Oct 07, 2011
Category: U.S.
Source: Google
Alabama immigration threat: prove your legal status or lose water supply
Allison Neal, legal director of the Alabama branch of the American Civil Liberties Union, said: "If you want to see the harm that the law will cause, then you can't get much clearer than cutting off water services."
Date: Oct 07, 2011
Source: Google
Law Doesn't Mark End Of Alabama Immigration Battle
The requirement that employers demand documentation from anyone they suspect of working illegally is likely to result in "systematic racial profiling of anyone who looks or sounds foreign," said Allison Neal, the legal director of the ACLU of Alabama.