By Melea VanOstrand | February 9, 2023
South Florida businesses are likely to scale further north as industrial inventory dwindles, further strengthening an outlook for stable rent growth.
By Melea VanOstrand | September 12, 2022
"Whether it was [the Zika virus] before the pandemic and with the uptick in COVID cases, people are less inclined to go to large business meetings."
Daily Business Review | Analysis|Research
By Raychel Lean | August 29, 2022
"We've just got to rewrite the rules in a proper way in order to get the types of projects that are going to make our community stronger and better, and more vibrant and more resilient," said David Martin, CEO of Terra in Miami.
By Raychel Lean | August 29, 2022
"People are coming with that on the top of their list, whereas before we had very few or we had people who got here and then learned about the topic," said one environmental law professor at the University of Miami.
Daily Business Review | Analysis
By Raychel Lean | August 29, 2022
"If there's a direct-hit Category 5 storm that hits Miami, you're going to see 20 insurance companies go bankrupt and are not going to be able to pay claims. It's become a big problem," said South Florida insurance broker Joseph Gendelman.
Daily Business Review | Analysis
By Raychel Lean | August 29, 2022
"Can Miami not only rise to the occasion, pardon the pun, to address sea level rise for our own sustainability, but could we in fact become a transformative community that becomes a leader in mitigating these problems for the world?"
By Dan Roe | July 25, 2022
A region that prides itself on diversity still has work to do to ensure opportunities for all underrepresented law students.
Daily Business Review | News|Profile
By Michael A. Mora | June 7, 2022
"You can't cancel your face and get a new one," Paul J. Geller, a partner at Robbins Geller Rudman & Dowd, said about Facebook's facial-recognition system that led to the company paying a more than $650 million settlement.
By Jasmine Floyd | March 14, 2022
"I believe the student loan debt crisis will be the next bubble issue that could burst at any time now, which could wreck the economy, like the mortgage crisis did in 2008," attorney Ivan Reich said.
By Michael A. Mora | March 14, 2022
Eunice Sigler went beyond the efforts of other circuit courts by distributing advisories that notified lawyers when a person in a state court building tested positive for the coronavirus—more than 100 times.
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