California law now exempts highly paid tech professionals from OT rulesBy Michael Todd ScottCorporate Law Departments, January 2001Does your company have operations in California? If so you may be interested to know that a new law in California now exempts certain highly paid computer professionals, who are paid by the hour, from California's daily overtime law.
Calling all government attorneysCorporate Law Departments, January 2001The ISBA's Standing Committee on Government Lawyers wants to include you in its constituency.
Letter from the editorCorporate Law Departments, January 2001We are still looking for readers who would like to contribute articles for publication. This is a great opportunity for our members to get involved in the ISBA and specifically the Corporate Law Departments Section.
New laws affect the transfer of information across the AtlanticBy Bart Lazar & Inna TsimermanCorporate Law Departments, January 2001Multinational companies that transfer personal data on citizens or residents of the European Union (EU) to the United States must protect those individual's privacy rights.
Pro bono opportunities for corporate lawyers expandsCorporate Law Departments, January 2001In August of 1999, the leaders of the ISBA Corporate Law Departments Section adopted the Food Stamp Pro Bono Advocacy Project through the Legal Assistance Foundation of Metropolitan Chicago (LAFMC).
A review of the Corporate Law Departments Section’s Fall Dinner ProgramCorporate Law Departments, January 2001The CLD Fall Dinner Program provided an unusual opportunity for members of the Corporate Law Departments Section to interact with the Chicago Bar Association's Corporate Counsel Committee and with the general counsels or chief legal officers (CLOs) of five Chicago area organizations.
California Supreme Court approves mandatory predispute agreements to arbitrate statutory and other employment discrimination disputesBy Michael L. Wolframi & Matthew J. SaleyCorporate Law Departments, December 2000In a broad endorsement of predispute agreements to arbitrate employment claims, the California Supreme Court ruled in Armendariz v. Foundation Health Psychcare Services, Inc. that antidiscrimination claims brought under the California Fair Employment and Housing Act (FEHA) are arbitrable pursuant to a mandatory predispute arbitration agreement if the arbitration agreement permits an employee to vindicate his or her statutory rights.
Crisis communications: A mathematical formula for killing rumorsBy Helio Fred GarciaCorporate Law Departments, December 2000Every organization, whether a law firm, a corporation, a non-profit, or government, at some time or other faces a crisis that includes rumors.
Letter from the editorCorporate Law Departments, December 2000Welcome to the sixth edition of the Corporate Lawyer for the 2000-2001 bar year. I want to once again remind you that it is still not too late to sign up for the Corporate Law Department's January CLE program "Corporate Compliance/Voluntary Disclosure."
Seventh Circuit addresses diversity jurisdiction when defendant is a member corporationBy Michael Todd ScottCorporate Law Departments, December 2000In CCC Info. Services, Inc. v. American Salvage Pool Association (ASPA), Nos. 99-3393 & 99-3565 (7th Cir. Sept. 22, 2000) the court addressed the issue of diversity jurisdiction over member corporations.
UCITA is coming! UCITA is coming! (One if by land, two if by C)By Eugene F. FriedmanCorporate Law Departments, November 2000The Illinois General Assembly has recently witnessed the introduction of the Uniform Computer Information Transfer Act ("UCITA"), 1999 Illinois Senate Bill 1309.
D.C. circuit strikes down U.S. EPA’s periodic monitoring guidanceBy Eric E. BoydCorporate Law Departments, October 2000
In Appalachian Power Company, et al. v. EPA, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit struck down the U.S. EPA's periodic monitoring guidance. The court found that the Agency promulgated the guidance without following proper rulemaking requirements.
Does UPL by in-house counsel really waiver the attorney-client privilege?Corporate Law Departments, October 2000
In the June 2000 issue of The Corporate Lawyer, we ran an article entitledUnauthorized Practice of Law and In-house Counsel. That article stated that "many in-house counsel are grappling with the fear that engaging in the unauthorized practice of law may put their client at risk of losing attorney-client privilege arguments during litigation."
Illinois expands admissibility for expert testimony on causationBy Dixie Lee PetersonCorporate Law Departments, October 2000Four families sued Central Illinois Public Service Corporation in Illinois state court for nuisance and negligence. After an extended trial, the jury awarded the families a total of $3.2 million to compensate them for their small children developing a cancerous condition known as neuroblastoma.
Citizens’ suits are alive and wellBy Dixie Lee Peterson & Thomas D. DupoCorporate Law Departments, September 2000Until 1972, water pollution was regulated by looking at the quality of the receiving stream, not the source of the discharges. In enacting the Clean Water Act ("CWA"), Congress shifted the focus from water quality standards to direct limitations on the discharge of pollutants into the receiving waters.
Electronic signatures: John Hancock won’t be forgotten anytime soonBy Jon Wallack & Eric HandlerCorporate Law Departments, September 2000Will your children know the name John Hancock? Ever since he signed the Declaration of Independence, Hancock's name has been synonymous with ink signatures.
Report from the chairCorporate Law Departments, September 2000The planning for the CLD's January, 2001 Corporate Compliance CLE has been completed and the advertising has started (http://www.isba.org/Sections/Corplaw/cld.html).
Workplace violence—practical and legal issues and answersBy Seyfarth ShawCorporate Law Departments, September 2000You are the Human Resources vice president for your company. A division manager reports that an employee on the first shift has been acting very strangely and recently threatened to "blow his supervisor away."
An in-house counsel’s guide to the destruction of recordsBy Michael Todd ScottCorporate Law Departments, July 2000Every business has information that requires destruction. Some of this information is confidential and would be of interest to competitors, such as customer lists, price lists, sales statistics, drafts of bids and correspondence.
Subject index to substantive articles in Volumes 36 and 37 of The Corporate LawyerCorporate Law Departments, July 2000Benefits
Meeting the challenge of cash balance pension transactions
By Eric Lofgren and Kyle Brown, Vol. 37, No. 3 (Dec. 1999)
Supreme Court rules in COBRA case involving dual coverage
By Kathleen S. Rosenow, Vol. 36, No. 1 (Oct. 1998)
Civil procedure and evidence
Seventh Circuit holds that an employee can be liable for a corporation's discovery abuse
By Michael Todd Scott, Vol. 37, No. 3 (Dec. 1999)