Texas Lawyer | Commentary|Expert Opinion
By Suzanne Wilson, Brian Stansbury, Joe Eisert, Arlene Hennessey, Marcella Burke, Jim Vines and Cynthia Stroman | December 23, 2021
This is arguably the most significant TCEQ rulemaking in two decades and would impact a wide variety of industrial companies that have catastrophic events at their facilities.
Texas Lawyer | Analysis|Expert Opinion
By Marcella Burke, Ilana Saltzbart, Suzanne Wilson, I. Cason Hewgley and Elizabeth Holden | December 1, 2021
If finalized in its current form, the rule will upend the current state of play for methane control and enforcement in the oil patch.
By Brenda Sapino Jeffreys | November 3, 2021
With Big Law lateral hiring hot in Texas this year, King & Spalding picked up a corporate partner from Norton Rose Fulbright and Hunton Andrews Kurth snagged an environmental lawyer with years of government experience.
By ALM Staff | October 13, 2021
This lawsuit was surfaced on Law.com Radar. Read the complaint here.
Texas Lawyer | Commentary|Expert Opinion|Q&A
By Kenneth Artz | October 6, 2021
"The practice has always been litigious, and this ... may be one characteristic that sets environmental practice apart from other areas of the law."
Texas Lawyer | Commentary|Expert Opinion
By Eric Groten and Taylor Holcomb | August 31, 2021
The Texas Audit Act is widely used by the regulated, who are incentivized by the regulator to look for, voluntarily disclose, and promptly correct violations in exchange for immunity from civil penalties.
By Dan Packel | August 3, 2021
A common misperception at law firms is a "sense of immunity" that they can advise clients on ESG issues without ensuring that their own house is in order.
By Amanda Bronstad | April 5, 2021
The $202 million in attorney fees requested by lawyers who obtained a settlement for residents of Flint, Michigan, faces objections in court, and in public.
By Katheryn Tucker | April 2, 2021
Justice Amy Coney Barrett gave Georgia a dose of caution with its victory. "Florida has not met the exacting standard necessary to warrant the exercise of this Court's extraordinary authority to control the conduct of a coequal sovereign. We emphasize that Georgia has an obligation to make reasonable use of Basin waters in order to help conserve that increasingly scarce resource."
By Mark Sherman, Associated Press | April 1, 2021
"Considering the record as a whole, Florida has not shown that it is 'highly probable' that Georgia's alleged overconsumption played more than a trivial role in the collapse of Florida's oyster fisheries," Barrett wrote.
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