The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Timothy Lynch | March 14, 2019
Regardless of their size or geographic presence, firms are faced with higher expenses driven by technology advances, increased client sophistication, and the corresponding challenges of increased security (of documents and communications) needs.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Jane Fearn-Zimmer and Daniel B. Markind | March 14, 2019
A lateral transition can be a positive transformation, if done for the right reasons and with realistic expectations.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Joseph Napoli | March 12, 2019
In an age where the personal injury lawyer glorifies mass tort litigation, MDLs, and class actions, I prefer the challenge of the car crash, slip and fall on debris or ice, construction worker accident, the defective product or the negligent doctor or hospital.
By The Legal Intelligencer | February 26, 2019
In The Legal's Liquor Law supplement, read about how the industry has changed the way Pennsylvanians enjoy a drink, how to navigate FDA inspections and the effects of the government's involvement in the craft beer industry.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Matthew B. Andersen | February 25, 2019
In the ever-changing regulatory landscape that alcohol manufacturers must navigate, the regulations imposed by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) are often overlooked.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Kathleen Kline | February 23, 2019
Resiliency and innovation are hallmarks of the craft brewing industry. From experimenting with new ingredients to finding ways to survive in the face of prohibition, developing creative solutions to challenges is something we've come to expect from our favorite craft brewers.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Alexandra “Sasha” Sacavage | February 22, 2019
The Pennsylvania Department of Revenue recently announced that Pennsylvania breweries are to begin collecting 6 percent sales tax on direct to consumer beer sales. This is a significant departure from the department's prior determination that breweries were exempt from collecting and remitting sales tax from direct-to-consumer sales.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By M. Scott Gemberling | February 22, 2019
If we accept as true the proposition that 98 percent of civil cases settle, it would seem to make perfect sense for any one of the attorneys retained by any of the parties outlined above to ask themselves if this claim is the 2 percent case that will ultimately have to be decided by a jury in a small town in central Pennsylvania.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Robert “R.J.” O'Hara | February 21, 2019
Alcohol is not a product that is regulated, marketed or sold like any other product. As counsel and U.S. Supreme Court justices in the Tennessee Wine & Spirits Retailers Association v. Clayton Byrd case point out, it is not milk, asphalt, books or paint. It is regarded as “particularly dangerous,” and as a result it is closely regulated.
By PJ Stapleton III, Matthew Laver and Katherine Rymal | February 20, 2019
After decades of Pennsylvania's restrictive liquor laws limiting innovation, in 2016, broad changes to the Liquor Code were enacted under legislation known as Act 39 and Act 85 of 2016.
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