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Moss & Barnett Announces New Infrastructure Practice Group

The pending infrastructure initiative of the United States is expected to result in substantial public investment in telecommunications, energy and transportation infrastructure. These investments — coupled with the nation’s need for substantially more infrastructure development — will create both opportunities and challenges for infrastructure-related businesses, including energy utilities, telecommunications carriers, local governments, contractors and developers.

To help these businesses and local governments take full advantage of these infrastructure-related opportunities and meet any resulting challenges, Moss & Barnett has created an Infrastructure Practice Group. This team includes some of Minnesota’s leading attorneys in areas such as wireline and wireless telecommunications, energy, environmental law, real estate, intellectual property, commercial transactions, finance and construction dispute resolution.

Whether you face the task of responding to an RFP, seek ways to better scale your business for major projects or have problems on an existing project, you will likely need more help than a single lawyer can provide, and you deserve assistance that is practical, coordinated and efficient. Moss & Barnett's new practice group disciplines together to create a cohesive, multi-disciplinary team that can provide businesses with state-of-the-art representation required to efficiently handle a broad spectrum of multi-faceted infrastructure projects. Working directly with our clients, as well as our clients' outside consultants and contractors, Moss & Barnett has refined a system that uses a secure, web-based extranet to document the status of each step in a project. In this way, our clients can receive online status reporting and have secure access to documents (including drawings and other project information), fully utilizing technology to enable completion of those projects on time and on budget.

ATTACHMENT: Moss & Barnett Announces New Infrastructure Practice Area
(Spring 2009 Firm Newsletter)

(March, 2009)


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[02/07] Perry v. Brown
In a challenge to Proposition 8, a California ballot initiative approved by the voters amending the state constitution to eliminate the right of same-sex couples to marry, the district court's judgment invalidating the initiative is affirmed, with the following rulings: 1) the proponents of Proposition 8 had standing to bring the appeal on behalf of the State of California, whose people must be allowed to defend in federal courts the validity of their use of the initiative power; 2) however, Proposition 8 violated the Equal Protection Clause of the federal constitution, as the people may not employ the initiative power to single out a disfavored group for unequal treatment and strip them, without a legitimate justification, of a right as important as the right to marry; and 3) the district court properly denied a motion to vacate the judgment, as the trial judge, who had been in a same-sex relationship for ten years, had no obligation to recuse himself or to disclose any personal conflict.

[02/03] In re Gabriel K.
On appeal from an order of the juvenile court declaring minors to be dependent children and denying the request of their mother for reunification services, the order is affirmed, where: 1) the juvenile court's denial of further reunification services to the mother for her younger son was consistent with the legislative intent and thus, fell within the spirit of the reunification services statute; 2) the evidence before the juvenile court supported its conclusion that the mother failed to make reasonable efforts to treat her drug issues; and 3) the mother demonstrated no basis for setting aside the juvenile court's decision to deny reunification services.

[02/02] Southerland v. City of New York
In a suit under 42 USC Section 1983 asserting that a New York City children's services caseworker entered the plaintiffs' home unlawfully and effected an unconstitutional removal of children into state custody, the district court's grant of summary judgment to the defendant caseworker is: 1) affirmed with respect to the dismissal of the father's substantive due process claim; but 2) vacated with respect to the father's and his children's Fourth Amendment unlawful-search and Fourteenth Amendment procedural due process claims and the children's unlawful-seizure claim, where the district court wrongfully concluded that the caseworker was entitled to qualified immunity with respect to all of the claims against him.

[02/02] Marriage of Walker
In a family court proceeding in which the recipient of a California State Teachers' Retirement System (CalSTRS) disability allowance challenged earlier family court orders awarding a community property interest in the allowance to his former spouse, the family court's denial of the appellant's motion to set aside the earlier orders is reversed, where the family court erred as a matter of law in concluding that the recipient had made "no mistake" in agreeing that his spouse had a community property interest in his disability allowance and thus should not have denied his motion on this basis.

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