Skip to content

The Starting Line: A Preview of the Biden EPA’s Priorities, Challenges, and Initiatives

April 6, 2021

In this 75-minute webinar, our panel discusses the legal and practical implications of the numerous environmental policy, legislative, and enforcement priorities being rolled out by the Biden Administration. This includes climate change responses, Environmental Justice policy and procedures, Regional Haze standards, NAAQS reviews, re-re-definition of Waters of the U.S., regulation of PFAS/PFOA, the future of EPA’s audit policy, supplemental environmental projects (SEPs), and several new enforcement initiatives.

View Recorded Webinar

Related

Legal Updates

Long Saga of Colorado AI Act Appears to Have Come to Close With Revised Law

Ever since its initial passage into law in 2024, the Colorado AI Act has been a lightning rod for controversy and calls for change. Over the ensuing two years, multiple attempts to amend the law were floated and proposed by consumer and industry groups. The implementation of the law itself was delayed several times to allow for such changes, with Governor Jared Polis calling a special session of the legislature last August to specifically address potential changes. All of those attempts appear to have culminated in Senate Bill 189 having passed both the Colorado House (57-6) and Senate (34-1) this week. The bill next heads to the desk of Governor Jared Polis where it is expected to be signed into law and to take effect as of January of 2027.

Explore more
Legal Updates

Mexican Ministry Of Finance Issues General Guidelines Aimed At Promoting Investment and Tax Compliance

Note: On May 4, 2026, the “General criteria and operational guidelines of an advisory nature to promote investment and tax compliance” (the “Guidelines”) was published in the Federal Register.

The purpose of the Guidelines is to direct administrative action in tax matters, strengthening legal certainty, efficiency, and trust in the relationship between the tax authority and taxpayers, as well as to promote investment, administrative simplification and voluntary compliance.

Explore more
Legal Updates

CIT Strikes Down Section 122 Tariffs: Big Holding, Narrow Relief, and a Refund Map for Importers

On May 7, 2026, a divided three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of International Trade (“CIT”) held that President Trump exceeded the statutory authority under Section 122 of the Trade Act of 1974 when he imposed the Administration’s temporary 10 percent “balance‑of‑payments” tariffs earlier this year.

Explore more