Legal News – LexBlogosphere: 3/27/09
March 27, 2009
After a day away from doing these LexBlogosphere roundups—caused by the 500 mile drive from Missoula to Seattle—we’re back. This one comes from the Seattle office for the first time in a while. The Missoula beers are open and it’s time for the weekend.
- House Agriculture Committee contributes to a bumper crop of proposed climate change legislation – East Palo Alto lawyer John Horan at Howrey’s Global Climate Law Blog
- US Congress Continues To Debate Follow-On Biologics Legislation – Management consultant Cliff Mintz of BioInsights Inc. at his Bio Job Blog
- SO2 Allowance Prices Drop: Is There a Lesson Here? – Boston attorney Seth Jaffe of Foley Hoag on the firm’s blog, Law & The Environment
- 6 Public Relations Tips – Small business coach Stephen Fairley of The Rainmaker Institute in The Rainmaker Blog
- The End of Mountain-top Mining? – Pittsburgh lawyer David Wagner of Reed Smith on the firm’s Environmental Law Resource
- Estate of Jorgensen v. Commissioner: IRS wins another Family Limited Partnership Case due to the Taxpayer Doing Everything Wrong – Fort Lauderdale attorney David Shulman on his South Florida Estate Planning Law Blog
- Is it The Economy or Just Plain Legal Malpractice? – Andrew Lavoott Bluestone on the New York Attorney Malpractice Blog
- Employer Gets Punished for Accessing Employee’s Personal E-Mails – Ohio and Arizona lawyer Ellen Simon on her blog, Employee Rights Post
- FCC to Revisit Newspaper-Broadcast Cross Ownership Restrictions – Maybe the Rule Will Die Before the Newspaper Does – Washington, D.C. attorney David Oxenford of Davis Wright Tremaine in the firm’s Broadcast Law Blog
- If the White House Can Chat With Constituents, Why Can’t You Do The Same With Your Clients? – Washington, D.C. lawyer Carolyn Elefant at her blog, My Shingle
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