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Project Summary: Government/Business Relations
Many of HAI's litigation research projects involve
documenting historical contractual or regulatory relations between government
and business. Often this work is related to particular legal disputes
between our private sector clients and government officials or vice versa.
For other cases government regulatory documents provide the most extensive
and publicly accessible record of a company's past actions related to
the legal issues in dispute. Not only does this information supplement
what is known from internal corporate files, but it allows our clients
to know what other parties can learn from the public record.
HAI used its understanding of historic government
institutions and their documents to:
- compile hundreds of site histories that document the extent and nature of federal government involvement in historic defense contracting activities that helped many of our clients secure significant contributions from the federal government in environmental cost recovery actions;
- locate surviving copies of government contracts along with related correspondence and procurement policy documentation to substantiate claims of government liability for environmental costs, product liability, and toxic tort damages;
- collect the scattered record of complex negotiations over water and power
rights during the 1930s to clarify the terms of an agreement that
is now the center of a hundred million dollar litigation;
- document the corporate succession of hundreds of companies through
the nineteenth and twentieth centuries to establish the viability
of numerous potentially responsible parties in environmental cases;
and
- trace the paper and money trail between historic contract obligations and their related congressional appropriations to determine if a means of funding a contract claim remains viable.
To document the historic evolution of regulatory policy
to address a myriad of questions including those pertaining to standard
practice and state-of-the-art knowledge, HAI has also explored the government's
role (at the federal, state, and/or local levels) in such areas as occupational
health, public health, environmental protection, facility licensing, product
licensing, intellectual property, utility pricing and operation, labor
relations, and land and water use.
Note: Although the confidential nature of our
work precludes detailed descriptions of specific projects, we will be
happy to provide relevant references upon request.
  
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