Legal/Regulation: Page 43
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Herc Solutions CEO gets 18-month sentence for government fraud
Gary Duff was charged in co-conspiring to defraud the U.S. out of more than $1.3 million through State Department-related projects.
By Kim Slowey • July 11, 2018 -
Report: Design-build to deliver almost half of US projects by 2021
The project delivery method considered the "alternative" to design-bid-build is expected to represent 44% of construction spending.
By Kathleen Brown • July 9, 2018 -
What contractors need to know about the tax act
Last year's Tax Cuts and Jobs Act will bring both potential benefits and drawbacks for contractors this year.
By Kim Slowey • July 9, 2018 -
Swinerton strikes back at Sacramento Kings in court
The NBA team alleges Swinerton Builders' mismanagement pushed a hotel project $50 million over budget. Now, Swinerton has filed a cross-complaint against the team's development partnership, claiming it's owed $27.5 million.
By Kim Slowey • Updated Aug. 6, 2018 -
Denver attaches hiring goals to part of $1B project
City officials could impose permanent local, low-income or veteran hiring requirements if the Hensel Phelps pilot program is successful.
By Kim Slowey • July 2, 2018 -
OSHA cites Ohio contractor for fatal trench collapse
Contractor JK Excavation & Utilities is now in the agency's Severe Violator Enforcement Program and faces a potential $200,000 fine.
By Kim Slowey • July 2, 2018 -
Many DC projects don't comply with local hiring mandate
Despite an audit revealing that Washington, D.C.'s First Source mandate is often not adhered to, the district's Department of Employment Services has issued only one fine during the history of the program.
By Kim Slowey • July 2, 2018 -
NYC alliance: Janus decision not 'death knell' for unions
A director of a construction group said the U.S. Supreme Court's ruling that public-sector employees who are not union members cannot be forced to foot the bill for collective bargaining will not end organized labor in the city.
By Kim Slowey • June 29, 2018 -
Global cement giant Lafarge charged with financing terror
French firm Lafarge allegedly endangered employees and paid terror groups to be able to keep its operations in Syria running.
By Kim Slowey • June 29, 2018 -
BREAKING: Supreme Court strikes major blow to unions
The decision in Janus will change how public-sector unions work, but it also will have implications for private-sector labor issues, experts say.
By Kate Tornone • June 27, 2018 -
Plaintiffs in Zachry, Odebrecht wage lawsuit file for class action status
Six individuals who worked for the companies on the Houston-area SH 99 Grand Parkway project alleged that Zachry and Odebrecht intentionally did not pay them overtime wage rates.
By Kim Slowey • June 27, 2018 -
North Dakota senator's bill would advance cross-border work
Proponents of the bill say it will help speed up the permitting process for critical energy-related projects than span the U.S.-Canada border.
By Kim Slowey • June 26, 2018 -
New York state tax loophole put millions in builders' pockets
In one of the most extreme cases, a Syracuse apartment owner shaved $527,000 off property taxes by installing three vending machines.
By Kim Slowey • June 22, 2018 -
Brooklyn contractor pays more than $300K to settle worker wage theft claims
The Urban Group, which pleaded guilty to second-degree grand larceny against 21 employees, made full restitution, but has been debarred from public work in the state for five years.
By Kim Slowey • June 21, 2018 -
Sentencing set for New York's 'Buffalo Billion' fraud convicts
A federal jury convicted LPCiminelli CEO Louis Ciminelli Jr. and Alain Kaloyeros of wire fraud and wire fraud conspiracy. COR Development execs Steve Aiello and Joseph Gerardi were charged in the case as well. All face October sentencing dates.
By Kim Slowey • Updated July 19, 2018 -
Litigation looms in MGT Construction's $28M debt, $50K assets bankruptcy
A Chapter 7 bankruptcy trustee asked the court for a special litigation council to try to uncover any of the defunct firm's "undisclosed assets" to help it pay the more than 500 companies and individuals it owes.
By Kim Slowey • June 20, 2018 -
Utility company fights damaging Bechtel report
South Carolina Electric & Gas Co. wants to collect $3.8 billion from ratepayers in the next 20 years to partially recoup costs for the failed, $9 billion construction of a nuclear power plant, though Bechtel's assessment puts blame on SCE&G.
By Kim Slowey • June 19, 2018 -
Deep Dive
Forensic BIM: Using modeling to resolve disputes and claims
The ability to use BIM to retrospectively verify that the scope of work completed matches what the contract required could save millions in some lawsuits.
By Kim Slowey • June 18, 2018 -
Kiewit awarded $45M in Los Angeles utility project dispute
The federal jury also awarded the Department of Water and Power $1 million on a counterclaim against the contractor.
By Kim Slowey • June 13, 2018 -
Philadelphia's 1% construction tax narrowly passes council
Revenue from the Construction Impact Tax will go toward the Pennsylvania city's Philly 1st homebuyers assistance program, but opponents say it's not enough to make a dent in the affordable housing problem.
By Kim Slowey • Updated June 27, 2018 -
Colorado to investigate construction worker misclassification
The state's governor formed a task force to eliminate payroll fraud that would occur when employers intentionally misclassify their employees as independent contractors.
By Kim Slowey • June 12, 2018 -
Florida DOT fighting to keep FIU bridge collapse records under wraps
A judge has given the agency two weeks to decide whether it will defend itself in court for refusing to hand over to the Miami Herald internal documents related to the structural failure.
By Kim Slowey • June 8, 2018 -
Contractor pleads guilty to violating EPA lead exposure law
Authorities allege that Bitner Brothers Construction Co. mishandled lead-based interior paint and could face probation and a $200,000 fine.
By Kim Slowey • June 7, 2018 -
Michigan may nix prevailing wage law
Repeal of legislature that guarantees a prevailing wage rate to construction workers on state-funded projects would make the state the fifth since 2015 to revoke such a law.
By Kim Slowey • June 7, 2018 -
Buffalo, New York fraud case down to one defendant
Prosecutors have dropped all charges against former LPCiminelli president Michael Laipple, leaving Louis Ciminelli the last of three defendants named in the "Buffalo Billion" construction fraud trial.
By Kim Slowey • Updated June 8, 2018