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Clark Hill PLC issued the following announcement on Jan. 11.
Clark Hill, an international AmLaw 200 ranked law firm, today announced the promotion of eight attorneys to membership in the firm. The new members come from six of the firm’s 25 offices and represent six of Clark Hill’s practice groups.
“We are very pleased to announce the advancement to firm membership of these eight individuals who have consistently demonstrated deep commitment to outstanding service to our clients and to Clark Hill’s core institutional values,” said Clark Hill’s new CEO, John Hensien. “We know that they will each make valuable contributions as we work together with our clients on our strategic priorities in key markets and industries.”
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Dec 21, 2020
Update 12/21/20 – Diamond Point and Castle Hill have completed construction on the Cascade Road self-storage facility in Atlanta. Opened on Nov. 5, the property comprises 96,090 square feet. Features include an executive conference room, workstations, a copy center and Amazon Hub locker, according to a press release. It’ll be managed by Life Storage Inc., a publicly traded real estate investment trust and third-party management firm.
“The Cascade Road area has a great deal of business executives that work at home,” Sommer said. “The community has overwhelmingly welcomed this upscale self-storage facility and business center.”
Based in Buffalo, N.Y., Life Storage operates more than 900 self-storage facilities in 30 states and Ontario, Canada. Its portfolio of owned and managed facilities comprises more than 65.8 million square feet.
NYCHA Violated Lead Paint Regulations For Years, Report Finds
arrow Mayor Bill de Blasio announces lead-based paint testing at 135,000 NYCHA apartments during a press conference at the Williamsburg Community Center in Brooklyn on Monday, April 15, 2019. Michael Appleton/Mayoral Photography
The leaders of a NYCHA unit charged with removing lead from public housing routinely falsified records meant to ensure the work was supervised, leaving an untold number of families at greater risk of lead poisoning, according to a new investigation.
The report released Thursday by the city s Department of Investigation, the Environmental Protection Agency, and the Department of Housing and Urban Development followed a 2017 whistleblower complaint from an EPA-certified lead inspector. He alleged that the manager of NYCHA s Lead Unit, Ralph Iacono, repeatedly pressured him to sign his name to paperwork for lead abatement jobs that he did not supervise.