Eric Bugaile Elected Vice Chairman of the Board of Susquehanna Regional Transportation Authority
12.28.2021
Featured Insights
08.04.2026
Speaking Engagements & Seminars
Advanced Land Use and Zoning Disputes With Local Governments
Partner Andrew Fede will present two sessions at the National Business Institute’s full-day program, “Advanced Land Use and Zoning Disputes With Local Governments.” The program examines today’s increasingly complex land use and zoning landscape. Topics include expert insights on digital sign and billboard regulation, land use challenges created by recent technologies, legislative updates and case law developments, variances, litigation hurdles under zoning ordinances, eminent domain practice tips, and strategies for drafting development agreements.
06.23.2026
Press Releases
Archer Expands Business Litigation Group with Addition of Partner PJ Farinella
Archer today announced that PJ Farinella has joined the firm as a partner in its Business Litigation Practice Group, based in the Voorhees office. With a practice focused on complex commercial litigation, PJ’s arrival underscores the firm’s continued investment in expanding the depth, breadth, and sophistication of its litigation platform.
06.18.2026
Articles
EPA Proposes Rule to Repeal Federal Drinking Water Regulations for Certain PFAS Compounds
In an article written for the Legal Intelligencer, partner Charlie Dennen explains that the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has proposed a rule to repeal federal drinking water regulations for several PFAS compounds—specifically PFHxS, PFNA, GenX (HFPO-DA), and the Hazard Index used for mixtures involving those chemicals and PFBS—arguing that the prior standards were promulgated through an “unlawful process” and did not properly follow the Safe Drinking Water Act’s required steps for setting enforceable limits. The article outlines the EPA’s prior 2024 rule establishing maximum contaminant levels for certain PFAS, the agency’s subsequent reconsideration in 2025, and its current position that the mixture-based Hazard Index and several individual PFAS limits exceeded statutory authority and misapplied feasibility and risk-assessment requirements. Charlie further highlights the EPA’s reliance on the Supreme Court’s decision in Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo, which eliminated Chevron deference and requires courts to independently interpret statutory meaning, increasing legal risk for agency rulemaking. While the proposal would remove monitoring and treatment obligations for the affected PFAS, he notes the relief may be temporary because the EPA has indicated it will continue evaluating these substances for possible future regulation, even as separate standards for PFOA and PFOS remain in place and continue to drive most PFAS-related compliance obligations.