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Will Increasing Housing Density in Single-Family Neighborhoods Help Solve California s Housing Crisis? | Alston & Bird
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PIP (3:1) Rule Downstream Notification Requirements Now Effective – What s Next? | Alston & Bird
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Supreme Court Decision in PennEast Pipeline Co v New Jersey Is Major Win for Pipelines | Alston & Bird
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A California district court has granted a preliminary injunction to the California Chamber of Commerce and prohibited the filing of new Proposition 65 lawsuits alleging exposure to acrylamide in food. Our Environment, Land Use & Natural Resources Group discusses the ruling and what it means to the food and beverage industry.
Why did CalChamber bring its suit?
What does the ruling cover in practical terms?
What comes next?
On March 30, 2021, Chief U.S. District Judge Kimberly Mueller granted the California Chamber of Commerce’s (CalChamber) motion for preliminary injunction in its case contending California has unconstitutionally compelled businesses to display misleading Proposition 65 warnings about the alleged dangers of acrylamide in food and beverage products. While the CalChamber action is pending, the preliminary injunction prohibits any person, including private enforcers, from filing or prosecuting a new laws
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The Environmental Protection Agency has pipped enforcement of a ban on phenol, isopropylated, phosphate (3:1). Our Environment, Land Use & Natural Resources Group discusses why companies must still comply with much of the rule despite a 180-day no-action assurance.
What does the no-action assurance cover?
What other requirements will companies need to comply with?
What is the EPA doing next?
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has granted temporary partial relief to companies subject to its recent rulemaking that prohibits, with a few exceptions, the processing and distribution of PIP (3:1) and PIP (3:1)-containing articles after March 8, 2021. The move comes after contributions from numerous industry stakeholders in recent days. “PIP” is short for phenol, isopropylated, phosphate (3:1), a chemical used as a flame retardant, plasticizer, and an anti-wear or anti-compressibility additive in coatings, adhe