New Jersey Law Journal | Analysis
By Justin Henry | March 25, 2024
Lee Cortes started his legal career with predecessor Kaye & Scholer before entering public service. The firm also added the leader of the environmental practice at Maine-based Preti, Flaherty, Beliveau & Pachios.
By Adolfo Pesquera | March 22, 2024
Inhance argues the EPA exceeded its authority because the company's 40-year-old fluorination process is not a "significant new use" under the Toxic Substances Control Act.
By Adolfo Pesquera | March 22, 2024
Inhance argues the EPA exceeded its authority because the company's 40-year-old fluorination process is not a "significant new use" under the Toxic Substances Control Act.
By Texas Lawyer | March 22, 2024
This year's Energy Law Special Section covers onshore wind farms, land disputes over energy projects, and regulatory uncertainties in the U.S.
By Matthew Karmel | March 22, 2024
"I would emphasize the importance of asking for help and then giving it," says Nicole DeNamur of Sustainable Strategies and Climate Aligned Law.
By Peter Berg | March 22, 2024
"Critical uncertainties exist in the proposed Section 45V regulations," according to Peter Berg of King & Spalding.
By Amanda Bronstad | March 21, 2024
Jeff Kray, of Marten Law in Seattle, accused of holding up DuPont's $1.19 billion water contamination settlement, called class counsel's sanctions motion an "intimidation tactic" based on a "fantastical conspiracy theory."
New Jersey Law Journal | Commentary
By Lewis Goldshore | March 20, 2024
"The proposal may have a feel-good quality for its advocates, but it is not the right approach in New Jersey," writes environmental attorney Lewis Goldshore.
Daily Business Review | Commentary
By Herschel Vinyard and Jeff Littlejohn | March 20, 2024
A District of Columbia federal district court judge ended the existence of Florida's "404 program" (for protection of federal wetlands) when he published his decision to vacate the EPA's "assumption decision" and its "approval of Florida's assumption application," ruling that the EPA acted illegally when it transferred the federal wetland permitting to the state in 2020.
By Amanda Bronstad | March 19, 2024
A March 15 sanctions motion accused the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California's lawyers of a "bad-faith course of conduct" that includes libeling class counsel, disseminating the wrong information to class members and filing frivolous objections.
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