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  #1  
Old 01-31-2007, 03:54 AM
david1984 david1984 is offline
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Default Utah (the difference between the federal and the state law)

I'm a lawstudent from the netherlands and i have to write a paper. The main topic in this paper is the difference between the federal law and the Utah state law. I'm surging for at least three things, a difference in employment law, labor law and social security?

Could somebody please help me?

Every little bit of help is welcome... Perhaps some internetsites.. or maybe other solutions...

thank you
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  #2  
Old 01-31-2007, 03:57 AM
cbg cbg is offline
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The majority of posters here do not help with homework. It is unlikely that any of our regular posters know Utah law off the top of their heads, and frankly it's not fair for them to do the research and you to get the grade.
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Old 01-31-2007, 04:14 AM
david1984 david1984 is offline
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i'm not asking for somebody to do my homework.. i was just asking if somebody could help me a little bit.. because it's very difficult to find this kind of information.. I thought that maybe it was an easy question for someone who lives in Utah.. I can imagine that a citizen of utah knows this kind of stuff.. Again it was not my plan to find someone who could do my homework.. I just thought that maybe someone knows by the top of their head by example the difference between the workers compensation act in Utah and the federal act.. Or maybe somebody knew a small difference between the federal TANF and the one in Utah... Or maybe somebody could only tell me a site where i could find this kind of information..

and if not.. i thought i could give it a try..

thank you for your time
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Old 01-31-2007, 05:00 AM
Pattymd Pattymd is offline
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Because you asked for some sites, I WILL provide these links (which I normally don't do---sorry, cbg).
http://www.laborcommission.utah.gov/
http://jobs.utah.gov/ui/
http://www.dol.gov/


You'll have to do your own comparisons. I will also tell you that "employment law" and "labor law" are, generally speaking, the same thing in the U.S. Also, that no state in the U.S. has a "social security" program (although I'm not sure if your definition is the same as ours).
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Old 01-31-2007, 10:15 AM
cbg cbg is offline
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This is an issue I feel very strongly about, and am coming to feel even stronger about as the number of people looking for such "help" increases.

While each and every one of them claims, "I'm not looking for someone to do my homework", that's essentially what it boils down to.

Are the other students in your class going to have the benefit of others providing them with links? Are they going to have the benefit of professionals in the field doing the research to find those links? Aren't you supposed to be finding your own links and doing your own research? What makes it fair for you to have this extra help when they don't? How does this not equate to you getting credit for someone else's work?
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