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Rollback of Federal Appliance Efficiency Standards Happening – What Businesses Need to KnowSaturday, July 11th, 2026
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Recent Environmental Law Articles
New Lead (Pb) in Soil Standard Now Effective in Maryland
By Stuart Kaplow|2022-01-22T15:25:49-05:00Sunday, July 12th, 2020|Categories: Environmental Law|
The EPA has described lead as the number one environmental public health hazard in the U.S. And despite that the CDC has in the past identified childhood lead poisoning prevention since 1971 as 1 of 10 great U.S. public health achievements which has included success ...
Four New LEED Pilot Credits Respond to COVID-19
By Stuart Kaplow|2022-01-22T15:25:48-05:00Sunday, June 14th, 2020|Categories: Environmental Law|
This article first appeared as an update to my June 6th blog post, Two New LEED Pilot Credits Respond to COVID-19, describing that the U.S. Green Building Council has now added two additional Pilot Credits responding to the novel coronavirus. You may reasonably infer that ...
New BREEAM In Use Version in a Changing World
By Stuart Kaplow|2022-01-22T15:25:47-05:00Monday, May 18th, 2020|Categories: Environmental Law|
Last week BRE Global announced that the “BREEAM USA In-Use Version 6 for Commercial and Residential” green building rating system has launched. In addition to improvements to the prior commercial building rating system BREEAM In-Use now includes residential for the first time (accepting that existing ...
The New and Improved 2020 ICC 700 National Green Building Standard
By Stuart Kaplow|2022-01-22T15:25:46-05:00Sunday, May 10th, 2020|Categories: Environmental Law|
The 2020 version of the ICC 700 National Green Building Standard (NGBS) is now available for free download and public use. You care about this because the NGBS is the most used green building standard in the United States. As of April 1, 2020, more ...
COVID-19 and the Risk from Recirculated Air in Buildings
By Stuart Kaplow|2022-01-22T15:25:45-05:00Thursday, April 30th, 2020|Categories: Environmental Law|
The Federation of European Heating, Ventilation and Air Conditioning Associations (REHVA) has in recent days issued guidance on how to occupy commercial and public buildings, from offices to schools, “in order to prevent the spread of the coronavirus.” As Americans begin to end coronavirus disease ...
Supreme Court Permits State Law Claims Against Superfund Property
By Stuart Kaplow|2022-01-22T15:25:43-05:00Sunday, April 26th, 2020|Categories: Environmental Law|
In an instructive environmental law decision last week, the U.S. Supreme Court held that the federal Superfund statute (the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability Act) does not preclude owners of adjacent contaminated land from pursuing state laws claims for money damages for nuisance, trespass ...
Maryland Enacts New Environmental Laws in 2020
By Stuart Kaplow|2022-01-22T15:25:42-05:00Tuesday, April 7th, 2020|Categories: Environmental Law|
The 440th session of the Maryland General Assembly commenced on January 8, 2020. The 90 day session was, for the first time since the Civil War cut short, ending three weeks early (.. of note, the predecessor, appointed not elected, General Assembly of Maryland was ...
Understand How EPA Does Not Expect to Seek Penalties during COVID-19 Pandemic
By Stuart Kaplow|2022-01-22T15:25:41-05:00Sunday, March 29th, 2020|Categories: Environmental Law|
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency announced last Thursday retroactively beginning March 13, 2020, a temporary policy regarding EPA enforcement of environmental legal obligations during the COVID-19 pandemic. EPA's admittedly unprecedented temporary “enforcement discretion policy” applies to civil violations during the COVID-19 outbreak as a response ...











