Anne Arundel housing attorneys have all left Maryland Legal Aid Now the end of the eviction moratorium looms capitalgazette.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from capitalgazette.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Council selects site for new water tower
By Sandy Rose Schwieterman - For the Sidney Daily News
MINSTER – Minster Council agreed at its meeting Tuesday, April 6, to the potential location of the new water tower destined to replace the aging one on Ohio Street. They also cleared the way for Bud’s Pizza to be able to obtain a liquor license.
The new water tower location is slated to be off of West Seventh Street next to the village composting site. Estimated cost for the new tower will be $2 million. Village Administrator Don Harrod said the next step is to do soil test borings at the site to make certain it is suitable for the new structure.
O Melveny makes raft of leadership changes across departments, practice groups
12 February 2021
Apalla Chopra named litigation co-chair, Eric Richards becomes corporate co-chair; second vice chair also appointed
Eric Richards and Apalla Chopra O’Melveny & Myers has shaken up its leadership team with a host of fresh appointments across the firm’s departments, practice groups and global offices. Among those taking up new roles include Apalla Chopra, who has been named co-chair of its litigation department, and Eric Richards, who becomes corporate co-chair. They replace Randy Oppenheimer and Warren Lazarow respectively, both of whom are stepping up to the firm’s executive committee after roughly a decade as department heads – longer than any chairs in the firm’s history. Chopra will co-chair alongside Rich Goetz while Richards will serve alongside Brophy Christensen.
PMQ Pizza Magazine
Pandemic Raises Difficult Questions About Insurance for Pizzeria Owners Amy Siegel Oran (right) checks out a Hawaiian pizza at Pizza Girls, owned by Phoebe and Jennifer Morales-Reckseit. Pizza Girls
Pandemic Raises Difficult Questions About Insurance for Pizzeria Owners
What happens if a pizzeria employee falls ill with COVID-19 on the job or gets injured while making a curbside delivery? The answers are complex, says attorney Amy Siegel Oran.
By Amy Siegel Oran
As the pandemic began to sweep across the country in March 2020, business owners found themselves struggling to understand what their future would hold. In Florida, governmental efforts to stop the spread of the disease shut down non-essential businesses. Restaurants were allowed to remain open for takeout and delivery only. Most restaurants were not set up to pivot to takeout-based operations, so survival was a struggle and, for many, an impossibility. But Americans needed their pi