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Hospitality Industry: Another Twist in Purchasing a Florida Hotel Property: New Notification Requirements After a Change of Ownership or Control Alert - October 13, 2008

Purchase and sale transactions are generally structured in one of two ways: as an asset sale, where there is a direct transfer of ownership of the property, or as an entity sale, where there is a change of ownership or control, direct or indirect, of the property owning entity. Early in 2008 in Florida, the state Legislature added another twist to structuring the purchase and sale of hotel properties: changes in ownership of entity transactions now generate disclosure requirements and potential penalties if the property owner fails to comply.

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Dan Coffman Joins Holland & Knight's National Labor, Employment and Benefits Practice Group in Jacksonville

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. – Highly respected Jacksonville labor and employment attorney Dan Coffman has joined Holland & Knight's Jacksonville office as Of Counsel in the firm's national Labor, Employment and Benefits Practice Group. Prior to joining the firm, he was a founding partner at Coffman, Coleman, Andrews & Grogan in Jacksonville.

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Environment
Newsletter - First Quarter 2000
 
In this Issue...
Florida SWFWMD Proposed Minimum Flows and Levels Rules - Settlement of Rule Challenge
 
March 1, 2000
 
Roger W. Sims- Orlando

On November 25, 1998, the Southwest Florida Water Management District (the District) published in the Florida Administrative Weekly proposed rules regulating minimum flows and levels in the Northern Tampa Bay area. The Northern Tampa Bay area includes various existing wellfields that have generated concerns about associated environmental impacts.

The rules were developed in a lengthy process involving numerous affected parties. Among those parties were Hillsborough County (County) and the Environmental Protection Commission of Hillsborough County (EPC), which continued to have concerns about how the rules would be administered even after the District approved a final draft. The next phase of rule development was "scientific peer review" of the methodologies and data used to establish the minimum levels in designated lakes and cypress wetlands in the area of concern.

While the actual levels established were generally accepted by interested parties and upheld by the peer review panel, the proposed rules would have allowed these levels to be exceeded by new withdrawals, as long as "supplemental hydration" or other mitigation was provided by the permittee. The existing rule did not allow an applicant to anticipate exceedances and rely on mitigation to offset adverse impacts, but provided that in order to obtain a water use permit, an applicant must demonstrate that the water use, among other things, would not cause water levels or rates of flow to deviate from established minimums. Moreover, the proposed rule language purporting to explain how this "prospective mitigation" would be considered and implemented by the District contained several vague phrases and was difficult to understand.

In light of these considerations, the County and EPC, represented by Holland & Knight LLP, elected to challenge the proposed rules. Central to the concerns raised in the challenge was the potential for overuse of the supplemental hydration technique allowed by the broad rule language, which could have resulted in impacts to water resources and the environment unacceptable to the County and EPC. The County filed a Petition for Administrative Determination of the Invalidity of Proposed Rules on October 25, 1999. Shortly thereafter, Tampa Bay Water, formerly the West Coast Regional Water Supply Authority, intervened on behalf of the District.

Although the rule challenge proceeded through extensive discovery and legal arguments on preliminary matters, the parties were able to reach a settlement, which resulted in substantial changes to the proposed language. The new language, which will be published by the District in the Florida Administrative Weekly pursuant to the Settlement Agreement, provides greater clarity and additional safeguards concerning the manner in which water supply development will be balanced by the need for protecting the water resources of the area, and greater assurance to the public that the "sustainability" of withdrawals will be evaluated in the permitting phase, addressed by enforceable permit conditions, and subject to detailed monitoring criteria.