Legal/Regulation: Page 29
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Supreme Court denies request to halt border wall construction
In a 5-4 decision, the court refused to stop construction on the U.S.-Mexico border wall.
By Kim Slowey , Zachary Phillips • Updated Aug. 3, 2020 -
SeaWorld's properties in Central Florida rack up $23M worth of construction liens
GCs and subs including Balfour Beatty and Rocky Mountain Amusements filed the claims after several theme parks were shut down in response to the COVID-19 pandemic.
By Kim Slowey • June 23, 2020 -
House Democrats introduce $1.5T infrastructure bill
The bill includes $500 billion in green measures at the same time construction industry groups have called for additional streamlining of environmental and permitting reviews.
By Kim Slowey • June 22, 2020 -
$8B Atlantic Coast Pipeline project canceled due to legal uncertainties
The decision reflects increasing issues surrounding large-scale energy and industrial infrastructure development in the United States, according to Dominion Energy Chairman Thomas Farrell.
By Kim Slowey • Updated July 6, 2020 -
Court rejects bid for OSHA COVID-19 emergency standard
Construction industry groups applauded the decision regarding a lawsuit from the AFL-CIO requesting a temporary emergency standard to address coronavirus in the workplace.
By Jennifer Goodman • June 12, 2020 -
Fluor shareholder sues execs, directors, alleging low bids cost firm billions
The derivative lawsuit asks for restitution due to the actions of company directors and executives, as well as for business reforms and greater shareholder input.
By Kim Slowey • June 11, 2020 -
Construction unions call on Massachusetts governor to strengthen COVID-19 protections
The Massachusetts Building Trades Council wants more worker protections regarding coronavirus, such as the right to stop work and not lose out on pay.
By Kim Slowey • June 9, 2020 -
White House loosens environmental law to speed up infrastructure projects
Industry groups including the Associated Builders and Contractors praised the Trump administration's updates to the National Environmental Policy Act, which are designed to streamline the project approval process.
By Kim Slowey • Updated July 16, 2020 -
Wulff, Andreas. (2015). "New York City" [Photograph]. Retrieved from Flickr.
New York City reopens nonessential construction work
Phase 1 is underway, allowing construction to reboot on almost 32,500 nonessential projects across the city's five boroughs.
By Kim Slowey • June 8, 2020 -
Justice Department joins whistleblower lawsuit against AECOM
The lawsuit, originally filed in 2016 but unsealed last week, claims that the contractor and other defendants knowingly inflated repair estimates for post-Hurricane Katrina FEMA work.
By Kim Slowey • June 5, 2020 -
House Democrats introduce $494B transportation bill
Construction industry officials say comprehensive legislation could generate construction jobs and help with the post-COVID-19 economic recovery.
By Kim Slowey • June 4, 2020 -
What new PPP loan guidance means for contractors
The clarifications are intended to make the Paycheck Protection Program more flexible for construction and other businesses while Congress works to expand some of the program's parameters.
By Kim Slowey • June 2, 2020 -
Retrieved from Amazon on May 16, 2019
Residents near Amazon's $1.5B Kentucky air hub project sue Whiting-Turner Kokosing JV
Homeowners within a mile of the jobsite at the Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport said the blasting and other earthwork activity has caused damage to their houses.
By Kim Slowey • June 2, 2020 -
Q&A
Who pays for extra time, work to keep construction workers safe?
There's no simple answers to this and other COVID-19 jobsite questions, says one construction attorney.
By Jennifer Goodman • May 29, 2020 -
OSHA issues new COVID-19 guidance
The agency's latest workplace enforcement guidance for contractors details how to determine if a coronavirus case is work related.
By Kim Slowey • May 29, 2020 -
Michigan judge rules that state safety violations are not felonies
Judge Christopher Murray ruled that Gov. Gretchen Whitmer exceeded her authority when she set possible felony penalties for contractors and other employers that violate her coronavirus safety orders.
By Kim Slowey • Updated June 10, 2020 -
Deep Dive
What does Maryland's Purple Line project team breakup mean for P3s?
Although one of the country's most-watched public-private partnerships has stalled, the delivery method has advantages for many large civil projects, experts say.
By Kim Slowey • May 27, 2020 -
The Dotted Line: How will clients approach contracts post-pandemic?
Owners will likely demand more flexibility in future construction contracts so they can easily suspend or stop projects, as well as mitigate their risk.
By Kim Slowey • May 26, 2020 -
Mechanics liens up 40% as COVID-19 pandemic disrupts industry
The increase in liens filed from January through March indicates that contractors and suppliers took action to protect their payments as projects began to shut down in response to the novel coronavirus.
By Kim Slowey • May 21, 2020 -
Deep Dive
How construction firms can prepare for a potential second wave of COVID-19
Although work is restarting in most jurisdictions, contractors can't let their guard down regarding coronavirus precautions for the future.
By Kim Slowey • May 18, 2020 -
HVAC worker sues for overtime, PPE
The fired Florida worker alleges that his previous employer did not provide PPE to protect him from COVID-19 and that he was misclassified as a salaried employee.
By Lisa Burden • May 18, 2020 -
What contractors need to know about the Paycheck Protection Program
Attorneys say the big takeaway for construction firms that use PPP loans is to document everything — from the decisions that led to their applications to how they used the proceeds.
By Kim Slowey • May 13, 2020 -
Q&A
Bay Area construction opens to new set of rules and guidance
Companies must work with owners to re-imagine "essential" onsite personnel, create work shifts and structure the layout of the way work is performed, says AGC of California CEO Peter Tateishi.
By Jennifer Goodman • May 7, 2020 -
Nurses contracted by Tampa, Florida, officials drop in on jobsites in fight against coronavirus
Developers are behind the new initiative and are paying for the visits to the city's bigger construction projects amid pressure to prep for Super Bowl 2021.
By Kim Slowey • May 6, 2020 -
Deep Dive
The new normal: 8 ways the coronavirus crisis is changing construction
U.S. jobsites are reopening but construction will not look the same as before the COVID-19 outbreak. Are you ready for the paradigm shift?
By Jennifer Goodman • April 30, 2020