More Real Estate Coverage

  • November 17, 2023

    Preschool Wants To Stop End Of Nature Center Lease

    An early childhood education institution on Friday sued the Audubon Society of Western Pennsylvania for $50,000, saying the organization breached a contract that provided space for the school by terminating the agreement early for no reason.

  • November 17, 2023

    Skanska Hit With $1.69M Verdict In Oyster Destruction Suit

    A Florida state jury has awarded the owner of an oyster farm nearly $1.7 million in damages in a trial against Skanska USA Civil Southeast Inc. over the destruction of 800,000 oysters during Hurricane Sally in 2020.

  • November 17, 2023

    DC Circ. Backs FERC Over Grid Replacement Projects Order

    The D.C. Circuit on Friday backed the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission's determination that transmission owners within the footprint of the nation's largest regional grid operator retain the authority to plan and build new projects to replace their aging facilities.

  • November 17, 2023

    Black La. Residents Lose Suit Over Chemical Plant Approvals

    A Louisiana federal judge permanently tossed a suit filed by Black Louisianians who claimed that St. James Parish's government and Legislature intentionally approved harmful petrochemical facilities in predominantly Black districts and protected predominantly white districts from those facilities.

  • November 17, 2023

    Property Plays: GreenRock, Alpine Income, Forethought Life

    GreenRock Capital and Petros PACE Finance have provided $62.2 million in financing for a California luxury hotel project, Alpine Income Property Trust has loaned $30.8 million for various retail properties and Forethought Life Insurance has loaned $131 million for an Illinois Amazon warehouse.

  • November 17, 2023

    NY Bill Seeks To Stop Selective Energy System Tax Breaks

    New York taxing jurisdictions would not be able to pick which solar or wind energy systems are exempt from property tax under a bill introduced in the state Assembly.

  • November 17, 2023

    Wis. Lawmakers OK Wider Farmland Preservation Tax Breaks

    Wisconsin would expand eligibility for farmland preservation tax credits and increase the amounts of credits that eligible landowners could receive for qualifying acres under a bill approved by state legislators.

  • November 17, 2023

    Treasury, IRS Propose Rules To Limit Easement Deductions

    The Internal Revenue Service proposed guidelines Friday clarifying a new law meant to stop partnerships from claiming unwarranted tax deductions for conservation easement donations, including detailed rules for calculating partners' bases and new recordkeeping requirements for substantiating deductions.

  • November 17, 2023

    IRS Floats Rules To Broaden Green Energy Investment Credit

    The IRS proposed rules Friday that would broaden eligibility for the clean energy investment tax credit, retooled in the 2022 landmark climate law, to include utility-scale properties outfitting or developing newer forms of technologies such as battery storage systems attached to solar energy properties.

  • November 16, 2023

    Alaska Says Tribal Fishing Suit's Aboriginal Rights Claim Fails

    Top Alaskan officials have opposed the Metlakatla Indian Community's latest bid to win its lawsuit claiming it is entitled to fish in a network of waterways near its reservation, telling a federal judge the tribe's aboriginal rights argument is unconvincing.

  • November 16, 2023

    DOE Floats Looser Enviro Reviews For Clean Energy Projects

    The U.S. Department of Energy put forth proposed amendments to its regulations governing compliance with the National Environmental Policy Act on Thursday — measures the American Council on Renewable Energy heralded as streamlining the siting and permitting of critical transmission and clean energy projects.

  • November 16, 2023

    Stevens & Lee Adds Real Estate, Wealth Attys In Allentown

    A pair of brother attorneys have moved their real estate and estate planning practices to Stevens & Lee's Allentown, Pennsylvania, office after formerly serving clients at their own firm for more than 40 years.

  • November 15, 2023

    Tribe Fights DOI's Bid To Redo Ruling In Burial Ground Suit

    The Muscogee (Creek) Nation is fighting the U.S. Department of the Interior's motion for an alternate ruling that would dismiss litigation against any federal defendants in a dispute over a 17th-century burial ground allegedly razed to make way for a multimillion dollar hotel and casino but allow the case against a fellow Alabama tribe to proceed.

  • November 15, 2023

    FERC Rammed Through Unneeded Gas Project, DC Circ. Told

    The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission put its thumb on the scale in approving a Northeast pipeline expansion project despite clear evidence that the project wasn't needed, project challengers told the D.C. Circuit.

  • November 15, 2023

    Ex-Conn. Real Estate Atty Gets Prison For Fraud Scheme

    A former real estate attorney in Stamford, Connecticut, was sentenced Wednesday to just over a year in prison after admitting to running a fraud scheme that ripped off his clients for more than $720,000, according to the U.S. attorney's office.

  • November 15, 2023

    Fried Frank Guides $260M Refinancing Deal For NYC Hotel

    MCR Hotels and Island Capital Group have come to a $260 million refinancing arrangement for the Sheraton New York Times Square Hotel, in a transaction led by Fried Frank Harris Shriver & Jacobson LLP, according to a Wednesday announcement.

  • November 14, 2023

    States, Industry Renew WOTUS Suits After Rule Update

    A litany of states and industry groups have renewed efforts to topple the Biden administration's recently revised rule defining the scope of Clean Water Act jurisdiction, alleging that the changed definition of "waters of the United States" neglects to address a range of other flaws.

  • November 14, 2023

    5th Circ. Nixes Air Permit For Texas LNG Terminal

    A Fifth Circuit panel on Tuesday scrapped a Texas emissions permit for a proposed liquefied natural gas export terminal on the Gulf Coast, holding that state regulators failed to explain a change in policy that allowed less stringent pollution controls compared to another, recently permitted project.

  • November 14, 2023

    Steptoe & Johnson Adds Ex-Bowles Rice Energy Atty In W.Va.

    A former partner with Bowles Rice LLP has joined Steptoe & Johnson PLLC's litigation department as of counsel in an effort to expand his focus on oil and gas litigation matters across West Virginia.

  • November 14, 2023

    Ohio Justices Urged To Adopt Broad Utica Shale View

    Gulfport Energy and Ohio oil and gas rights owner Tera LLC sparred before the Buckeye State Supreme Court on Tuesday, with the former telling the justices that a state appellate court rendered the language of the parties' oil and gas lease contracts "superfluous" by containing its drilling rights to the Utica Shale. 

  • November 14, 2023

    Justices Urged To Allow Highway Flooding Case To Proceed

    Texas landowners told the U.S. Supreme Court that the Lone Star State should make them whole after a highway project spurred recurrent flooding on their land, urging the justices to rule that the U.S. Constitution allows individuals to sue states over property seizures even though Congress has not provided a cause of action.

  • November 14, 2023

    Calif. Bar Sells San Francisco Headquarters For $54M

    The State Bar of California has sold its San Francisco headquarters for $54 million, giving the cash-strapped agency some breathing room, the agency said Tuesday.

  • November 14, 2023

    Tribe, Contractor Tell 9th Circ. They've Settled 15-Year Dispute

    A California tribe and a casino construction contractor are asking the Ninth Circuit to dismiss an appeal seeking sanctions and a reversal of a lower court's ruling, ending a 15-year dispute over alleged unpaid wages.

  • November 13, 2023

    Feds Insist They Can Approve Temp Nuke Waste Storage Sites

    The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission on Thursday told the D.C. Circuit that it had the authority to issue a license for a proposed temporary nuclear waste site in New Mexico, doubling down on its disagreement with a recent Fifth Circuit ruling.

  • November 13, 2023

    Attys Seek $2.1M Award In Pebble Mine Buildout Suit

    Lawyers for Northern Dynasty Minerals Ltd. shareholders have asked a New York federal court to sign off on a more than $2.1 million class counsel compensation request, saying the nearly $6.4 million settlement they secured is an "excellent" result for clients, given that the company is "strapped for cash."

Expert Analysis

  • How Justices' EPA Ruling Thwarts The Will Of The People

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    By reversing a long-standing presumption in favor of executive branch interpretations of ambiguous statutes, the U.S. Supreme Court's recent ruling limiting the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's powers to fight climate change blocks the will of the popular majority that elects the president, exacerbating our political system's dysfunction, says Jonathan Martel at Arnold & Porter.

  • High Court's New EPA Ruling And Its Long-Term Implications

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    The U.S. Supreme Court's decision in West Virginia v. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency will change the legal landscape in a number of ways — including constraining future climate regulations that may be advanced by the Biden administration and states, while providing litigants a powerful new administrative law precedent to challenge all kinds of agency rules, say attorneys at Beveridge & Diamond.

  • Capturing Carbon In California: Opportunities And Challenges

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    California is well situated to play a leading role in carbon capture and sequestration, but there remain barriers to widespread CCS deployment — including policy and regulatory hurdles, and the concerns of potentially affected communities, say Brian Israel and Samuel Pickerill at Arnold & Porter.

  • EPA Ruling Signals Arrival Of 'Major Questions Doctrine'

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    While the specific subject of the U.S. Supreme Court's decision in West Virginia v. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency was how the EPA may regulate greenhouse gas emissions under the Clean Air Act, the ruling's lasting legacy will be the elevation of the so-called major questions doctrine, which could constrain federal regulatory authority in many areas, says Allison Wood at McGuireWoods.

  • New P3 Authority Means Opportunities For Colo. Agencies

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    A recently passed Colorado law expanding public-private partnerships changes state-level project finance and infrastructure dramatically, allowing virtually all state agencies to avail themselves of P3 benefits including cost and schedule savings, sharing of risk, and access to innovation and private sector efficiency, say Gregory Johnson and Peter Gould at Squire Patton.

  • Texas Infrastructure Act And Renewables Projects: 1 Year In

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    A year into implementation of Texas' Lone Star Infrastructure Protection Act, Jennifer Pier at Husch Blackwell discusses how renewable energy project developers, owners and investors planning projects in Texas can incorporate LIPA-related provisions into transaction and financing documents.

  • How Cos. Can Track Infrastructure Act Projects — And Funds

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    As federal funds from the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act begin to flow to thousands of infrastructure projects across the nation, savvy contractors can determine which types of funded projects are likely to offer the best opportunities, and then follow the flow of federal money into those projects, says Nena Lenz at Fredrikson & Byron.

  • Cos. Should Comment Now On New Offshore Wind Areas

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    The Bureau of Ocean Energy Management's recent calls for information regarding potential wind energy areas along the Central Atlantic and Oregon coasts give developers an important opportunity to participate in creating a defensible environmental review process that will enable project development, says Andrew Glenn at Husch Blackwell.

  • How FERC Proposal Will Guide Clean Grid Development

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    The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission's major new proposal on regional electric transmission planning and cost allocation appears likely to substantially reshape how the transmission system is built out to accommodate the clean energy future, say attorneys at Day Pitney.

  • What To Expect From Biden Admin.'s NEPA Updates

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    The Council on Environmental Quality's recent National Environmental Policy Act updates will be critically important to federal agencies seeking to implement the Biden administration's renewable energy policies, but their practical impact may be limited, say attorneys at K&L Gates.

  • Adapting To New Hybrid Energy Project Contracts

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    As growing complexity and risk make contractors reluctant to sign lump-sum turnkey engineering, procurement and construction contracts for big energy projects, parties must give careful thought to how new procurement structures can encourage timely and efficient execution of the work, say Daniel Garton and David Strickland at White & Case.

  • What FERC Flip-Flop Says About Politics And Energy Projects

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    The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission's about-face on its policies for considering the environmental impacts of natural gas infrastructure shows that the agency is not immune to political pressure — so energy sector investors should stay mindful of broader politics when planning projects, say Martha Kammoun and Rachael Marsh at Bracewell.

  • Gov't On Solid Ground In Moving Against Offshore Wind Suit

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    The federal government's motion to dismiss Save Long Beach Island v. U.S. Department of the Interior, a lawsuit in a D.C. federal court over the designation of portions of the New York Bight as offshore wind energy areas, is backed by strong precedent — and the government could assert additional viable grounds to dismiss the plaintiff's claims, says Stacey Bosshardt at Perkins Coie.

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