Category Archives: Environment and Law
“Rocky Flats: Causes of Action”- November 18, 2016
Toward a Sustainable 21st Century Series
Rocky Flats: Causes of Action
November 18, 2016
1pm-5pm
Beckman Center for the National Academies of Sciences and Engineering
The Rocky Flats nuclear weapons production facility just northwest of Denver, CO, has been the epicenter of some of the longest-running civil litigation in U.S. history. From its opening in the early 1950s until its closure four decades later, the plant was the site of multiple plutonium fires, extensive contamination by radioactive materials and ultrahazardous waste, an unprecedented raid by the FBI, and a cleanup operation of over ten years and $7 billion.
At the heart of the multiple, decades-long civil actions surrounding Rocky Flats is the question of whether the government’s national security demands can supersede the duty of care it is entrusted to maintain for its citizens and natural environment. As that litigation has shifted the question to one of redress, it has revealed a compartmentalization of risk and bureaucratization of defense involving conflicts of interest not only between the government and citizens, but among government agencies, contractors, lawyers, and the very branches of government itself.
Rocky Flats: Causes of Action will explore these conflicts through presentations by lead counsel in four landmark cases spanning from the first cluster of lawsuits in 1975 to the $375M settlement reached in May 2016.
Featured speakers include:
Hartley Alley, Attorney, Law Offices of Hartley Alley
Adam Babich, Professor of Law and Director of the Environmental Law Clinic, Tulane University Law School
Merrill Davidoff, Managing Shareholder and Chair of the Environmental Group, Berger & Montague P.C.
Howard Holme, former President, Bandwidth Market, Ltd.; former President, Fairfield and Woods P.C.
Book Discussion, Merchants of Doubt – 10/27/16
UCI Law’s Environmental Law Society is holding a book discussion on Merchants of Doubt by Naomi Oreskes and Erik Conway on October 27th. The discussion will be moderated by Professor Michael Robinson-Dorn. We would like to focus the discussion on science-denial and the role it has played in our current election cycle. Possible subtopics include climate denial, the relationships of our major parties with science, and ways in which we, as lawyers and academics, can help increase transparency with regards to the relationship between science and our political system.
Anyone interested in learning and talking about the relationship between the law, our environment, and our current state of political affairs is welcome to attend.
Environmental Law Society Book Discussion
October 27, 2016
5-7 pm
3500 LAW
(Building #4 on the campus map – http://uci.edu/visit/maps.php)
To RSVP and for questions: email Calvin Bryne at calvinbryne@gmail.com
Cosponsored by the Newkirk Center for Science and Society