Columns
Clock is ticking on environmental challenges we face
March 27 ,2025
Population growth and global warming are two of the “biggies” we discussed in previous columns.
:
Berl Falbaum
This column is the fourth in a series of articles on the environment.
Population growth and global warming are two of the “biggies” we discussed in previous columns.
But there are numerous other environmental challenges that threatened a habitable Earth. Each one foretells an ominous future.
These include: pollution of air, water, soil, noise, radiation, light and thermal; soil degradation; dying coral reefs, depletion of natural resources; waste disposal; ocean acidification and hundreds of “dead zones” in which fish can no longer breed because of pollution; plastic suffocation; overfishing, nuclear waste disposal and acid rain. And there are others -- many others.
Given the space limitations of newspaper columns, we cannot examine each one in depth although all deserve extensive analysis.
Thus, we will only cover a few with a paragraph or two. Most of the following comes from Earth.org, a leading environmental news website.
Biodiversity
The populations of mammals, fish, birds, reptiles and amphibians have experienced a decline of an average 68 percent between 1970 and 2016. More than 500 species of land animals are on the brink of extinction and are likely to be lost within 20 years.
Up to 1 million of the estimated 8 million plant and animal species on Earth are at risk of extinction — many of them within decades — according to scientists and researchers who produced a sweeping U.N. report.
Without human destruction of nature, this loss would have taken thousands of years.
Plastics
In 1950, the world produced about 2 million tons of plastic. By 2024, this annual production grew to 445 million tons, and it is expected to reach 540 million tons by 2050. If you are having trouble grasping these figures you are not alone. What’s more, 91 percent of all plastic that has ever been made has not been recycled. Plastic presents us with one of the most significant environmental dangers “of our lifetime,” says Earth.org.
We are being strangled by plastics on land and the seas. There are huge patches of plastics on oceans, some larger than twice the size of the state of Texas, and oceans bottoms are covered with microplastics which fish ingest.
A study in February found microplastics in 99 percent, or 180 out of 182 seafood samples, either from store bought fish or from fishing boats in Oregon.
In another study made public in early February, scientists reported that tiny microplastics are making their way into the human brain.
The new study, published in Nature, found that brain samples collected in 2024 contained significantly more microplastics than those taken eight years earlier. The amount of plastic in the brain has increased by about 50 percent -- the equivalent of an entire plastic spoon in weight.
Deforestation
Given the degree of deforestation every day, every hour, by the year 2030, the planet might only have 10 percent of its forests left. All forests could be gone in less than a century.
Most of the deforestation occurs in three countries: Brazil, The Democratic Republic of Congo and Indonesia. The Amazon, the world’s largest rain forest, is home to about three million species of plants and animals. Rain forests are also vital, as mentioned in a previous column, because they absorb CO2.
Air Pollution
Between 4.2 and 7 million people die from air pollution worldwide every year and 9 out of 10 people breathe air that contains high levels of pollutants. In Africa, 258,000 people died as a result of outdoor air pollution in 2017, up from 164,000 in 1990.
More than half a million people in European countries died from heath issues directly linked to toxic pollutants exposure in 2021.
Melting Ice Caps/Sea Level Rise
The Artic is warming twice as fast as anywhere else on the planet. As a result, sea levels are rising more than twice as quickly as they did for most of the 20th century.
In 2019, Greenland lost a record amount of ice -- an average of a million tons per minute throughout the year. In the summer of 2020, 60 billion tons of ice were lost in Greenland. The Greenland ice sheet, the second largest ice sheet in the world, is cracking more rapidly than ever before, scientists reported in early February.
This melting is causing record sea level increases, threatening floods in coastal areas that are home to 340 to 480 million people. Five Solomon Islands have “disappeared” because of rising seas and another 20 are expected to sink around the world by the end of the century. Experts predict that by 2100 seas will rise enough to sink eight U.S. cities on the East Coast.
Agriculture/Clean Water
The global food system is responsible for up to one-third of all human-caused greenhouse gas emissions with 30 percent caused by livestock and fisheries. Projections by experts warn that global food demand may increase by 70 percent by 2050.
About 1.1 billion people worldwide lack access to water, and 2.7 billion find water scarce for at least once a month.
Fashion and Textile Waste
This is one category, I am confident, no one reading this series ever thought would be a threat to the planet. Yet, it accounts for 10 percent of global carbon emissions. It produces more greenhouse gas emissions than aviation and shipping combined.
The world generates an estimated 101 million tons of textiles waste every year, and that number is expected to increase to 147 million tons by 2030.
I have not even given any space to the following in this series: Dying coral reefs, nuclear waste disposal, overfishing, ocean acidification, soil degradation or garbage disposal (yes, garbage disposal is a horrendous problem).
Again, none of this tells the full story, and I almost feel like apologizing for reporting all this bad news. But we need to understand the problem in order to solve it.
If you believe these problems or the others discussed in previous columns, can be fixed, then you don’t want to read my conclusion, the next and final column in this series on the environment.
—————
Berl Falbaum is a political author and journalist and the author of several books.
Population growth and global warming are two of the “biggies” we discussed in previous columns.
But there are numerous other environmental challenges that threatened a habitable Earth. Each one foretells an ominous future.
These include: pollution of air, water, soil, noise, radiation, light and thermal; soil degradation; dying coral reefs, depletion of natural resources; waste disposal; ocean acidification and hundreds of “dead zones” in which fish can no longer breed because of pollution; plastic suffocation; overfishing, nuclear waste disposal and acid rain. And there are others -- many others.
Given the space limitations of newspaper columns, we cannot examine each one in depth although all deserve extensive analysis.
Thus, we will only cover a few with a paragraph or two. Most of the following comes from Earth.org, a leading environmental news website.
Biodiversity
The populations of mammals, fish, birds, reptiles and amphibians have experienced a decline of an average 68 percent between 1970 and 2016. More than 500 species of land animals are on the brink of extinction and are likely to be lost within 20 years.
Up to 1 million of the estimated 8 million plant and animal species on Earth are at risk of extinction — many of them within decades — according to scientists and researchers who produced a sweeping U.N. report.
Without human destruction of nature, this loss would have taken thousands of years.
Plastics
In 1950, the world produced about 2 million tons of plastic. By 2024, this annual production grew to 445 million tons, and it is expected to reach 540 million tons by 2050. If you are having trouble grasping these figures you are not alone. What’s more, 91 percent of all plastic that has ever been made has not been recycled. Plastic presents us with one of the most significant environmental dangers “of our lifetime,” says Earth.org.
We are being strangled by plastics on land and the seas. There are huge patches of plastics on oceans, some larger than twice the size of the state of Texas, and oceans bottoms are covered with microplastics which fish ingest.
A study in February found microplastics in 99 percent, or 180 out of 182 seafood samples, either from store bought fish or from fishing boats in Oregon.
In another study made public in early February, scientists reported that tiny microplastics are making their way into the human brain.
The new study, published in Nature, found that brain samples collected in 2024 contained significantly more microplastics than those taken eight years earlier. The amount of plastic in the brain has increased by about 50 percent -- the equivalent of an entire plastic spoon in weight.
Deforestation
Given the degree of deforestation every day, every hour, by the year 2030, the planet might only have 10 percent of its forests left. All forests could be gone in less than a century.
Most of the deforestation occurs in three countries: Brazil, The Democratic Republic of Congo and Indonesia. The Amazon, the world’s largest rain forest, is home to about three million species of plants and animals. Rain forests are also vital, as mentioned in a previous column, because they absorb CO2.
Air Pollution
Between 4.2 and 7 million people die from air pollution worldwide every year and 9 out of 10 people breathe air that contains high levels of pollutants. In Africa, 258,000 people died as a result of outdoor air pollution in 2017, up from 164,000 in 1990.
More than half a million people in European countries died from heath issues directly linked to toxic pollutants exposure in 2021.
Melting Ice Caps/Sea Level Rise
The Artic is warming twice as fast as anywhere else on the planet. As a result, sea levels are rising more than twice as quickly as they did for most of the 20th century.
In 2019, Greenland lost a record amount of ice -- an average of a million tons per minute throughout the year. In the summer of 2020, 60 billion tons of ice were lost in Greenland. The Greenland ice sheet, the second largest ice sheet in the world, is cracking more rapidly than ever before, scientists reported in early February.
This melting is causing record sea level increases, threatening floods in coastal areas that are home to 340 to 480 million people. Five Solomon Islands have “disappeared” because of rising seas and another 20 are expected to sink around the world by the end of the century. Experts predict that by 2100 seas will rise enough to sink eight U.S. cities on the East Coast.
Agriculture/Clean Water
The global food system is responsible for up to one-third of all human-caused greenhouse gas emissions with 30 percent caused by livestock and fisheries. Projections by experts warn that global food demand may increase by 70 percent by 2050.
About 1.1 billion people worldwide lack access to water, and 2.7 billion find water scarce for at least once a month.
Fashion and Textile Waste
This is one category, I am confident, no one reading this series ever thought would be a threat to the planet. Yet, it accounts for 10 percent of global carbon emissions. It produces more greenhouse gas emissions than aviation and shipping combined.
The world generates an estimated 101 million tons of textiles waste every year, and that number is expected to increase to 147 million tons by 2030.
I have not even given any space to the following in this series: Dying coral reefs, nuclear waste disposal, overfishing, ocean acidification, soil degradation or garbage disposal (yes, garbage disposal is a horrendous problem).
Again, none of this tells the full story, and I almost feel like apologizing for reporting all this bad news. But we need to understand the problem in order to solve it.
If you believe these problems or the others discussed in previous columns, can be fixed, then you don’t want to read my conclusion, the next and final column in this series on the environment.
—————
Berl Falbaum is a political author and journalist and the author of several books.
Population growth continues to trigger unwanted challenges
March 13 ,2025
The Earth reached an historic milestone at year-end 2023 which should
have been met with a woeful outcry but instead was greeted with a
deafening silence.
:
Berl Falbaum
The Earth reached an historic milestone at year-end 2023 which should have been met with a woeful outcry but instead was greeted with a deafening silence.
The world population of 7.9 billion slipped over the 8 billion mark. Worse, projections are that we will hit 9.1 billion by 2050, just 25 years away. This addition of another 1.1 billion people will require huge supplies of clean water, land, shelter, food, and energy, and it will further invade wildlife habitats.
Not only was this growth greeted with a yawn, but those who reported on the growth discussed it in entirely economic terms. Hardly a word was said about what it meant in terms of our environmental future.
Just one “minor” example: The New York Times in April 2023, reported that India will soon pass China in population, writing: “With size -- a population that now exceeds 1.4 billion -- comes geopolitical, economic and cultural power…And with growth comes the prospect of a ‘demographic dividend’.’’
The Times devoted three pages analyzing this development. There was not one word on what this meant to the environment.
Now, you don’t have to be a climate change expert, scientist or scholar to know that growth requires resources. We will now need more land for shelter, food, water, and energy -- resources which are already at a minimum. We are already using resources faster than the Earth can replenish them.
The dire warnings regarding population growth are not new; many experts in the past have tried to get the attention of the world on the threat that population growth poses to our existence.
For instance, the United Nations has estimated the planet will need twice as much food by 2050 than we are producing now. Its Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) has reported we will need to increase world food production by 60 to 70 percent to feed 9 billion people.
In 2006, when former Vice President Al Gore released his award-winning book and movie, “An Inconvenient Truth,” which warned about the environmental challenges we face, the world population stood at 6.6 billion. We have witnessed an increase of 1.4 billion people or a 21.2 percent jump in just 19 years.
In 1968, Paul R. Ehrlich, and his wife, Anne Howland Ehrlich, two Stanford University researchers, warned in their book, “The Population Bomb,” that the Earth cannot sustain the growth it was experiencing.
The population at the time: a mere 3.5 billion.
In 2016, Edward Osborne Wilson, a biologist known as the Darwin of the 21st century who won two Pulitzer Prizes, warned in his book, “Half-Earth: Our Planet’s Fight for Life,” that to survive, mankind needs to reserve half the Earth for wildlife. He also warned in his studies that the Earth has only the capacity to support 9 to 10 billion people.
In the early 1970s, a small group of scientists created a computer model called World3 which analyzed population growth. Its findings were published in a book, “The Limits to Growth.” The conclusion?
“…humanity was despoiling nature so fast that civilizational collapse would occur sometime within the next one hundred years.”
To give these abstract forecasts some meaning let’s look at Kenya. In 1971, it had a population of 11 million which grew to 53.7 million by 2021. In 1971, the country had 160,000 elephants and 20,000 black rhinos. By 2021, those numbers dropped to 35,000 elephants and 1,000 black rhinos and only two white rhinos (both female.) The same scenario is playing out throughout the world. (I chose Kenya as an example because I visited the country on a photo safari in 1996. It was an experience of a lifetime.)
Let’s focus on a place closer to home: Oakland County. Every time friends would point to a beautiful new subdivision, I would reply, “that’s pollution” because it took habitat from insects, bees, deer, coyotes, skunks, racoons, etc., all essential to the “circle of life.” Of course, the growth also created problems of water supply and pollution in the county’s many lakes.
When I was in my teens in the 1950s (yes, I’m old), much of where I now live, West Bloomfield, was farmland. I paid a farmer a couple of bucks to go horseback riding. It was a win-win for the farmer. He earned a few dollars and I exercised his horses. Now, when I sit in a traffic jam at Orchard Lake Road and Maple, I wish I was back in the saddle again.
I doubt there is much land left on which to expand in my suburb. Space is, after all, finite.
The problem: by the time the world understands the meaning of the emergency flashes on the radar and tries to respond appropriately, it will probably be too late.
The NATO Review, reported under the headline, “Population Growth, the Defining Challenge of the 21st Century:”
“Without taking action now, billions of people across the world will face thirst, hunger, slum conditions and conflict in response to droughts, food shortages, urban squalor, migration and ever depleting natural resources, while capacity tries to catch up with demand.”
The Population Center wrote:
“Slowing down, stopping and eventually reversing human population growth ---these are ethical imperatives that will help improve the chances for future generations establishing living scenarios with the planet. The most ethical gift we can give people and creatures of the last 21st century and early 22nd century is a chance.”
Regrettably, we are not living up to our moral and ethical obligation.
(Editor’s Note: This is the second in a series of five columns on the environment.)
—————
Berl Falbaum is a political author and journalist and the author of several books.
The world population of 7.9 billion slipped over the 8 billion mark. Worse, projections are that we will hit 9.1 billion by 2050, just 25 years away. This addition of another 1.1 billion people will require huge supplies of clean water, land, shelter, food, and energy, and it will further invade wildlife habitats.
Not only was this growth greeted with a yawn, but those who reported on the growth discussed it in entirely economic terms. Hardly a word was said about what it meant in terms of our environmental future.
Just one “minor” example: The New York Times in April 2023, reported that India will soon pass China in population, writing: “With size -- a population that now exceeds 1.4 billion -- comes geopolitical, economic and cultural power…And with growth comes the prospect of a ‘demographic dividend’.’’
The Times devoted three pages analyzing this development. There was not one word on what this meant to the environment.
Now, you don’t have to be a climate change expert, scientist or scholar to know that growth requires resources. We will now need more land for shelter, food, water, and energy -- resources which are already at a minimum. We are already using resources faster than the Earth can replenish them.
The dire warnings regarding population growth are not new; many experts in the past have tried to get the attention of the world on the threat that population growth poses to our existence.
For instance, the United Nations has estimated the planet will need twice as much food by 2050 than we are producing now. Its Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) has reported we will need to increase world food production by 60 to 70 percent to feed 9 billion people.
In 2006, when former Vice President Al Gore released his award-winning book and movie, “An Inconvenient Truth,” which warned about the environmental challenges we face, the world population stood at 6.6 billion. We have witnessed an increase of 1.4 billion people or a 21.2 percent jump in just 19 years.
In 1968, Paul R. Ehrlich, and his wife, Anne Howland Ehrlich, two Stanford University researchers, warned in their book, “The Population Bomb,” that the Earth cannot sustain the growth it was experiencing.
The population at the time: a mere 3.5 billion.
In 2016, Edward Osborne Wilson, a biologist known as the Darwin of the 21st century who won two Pulitzer Prizes, warned in his book, “Half-Earth: Our Planet’s Fight for Life,” that to survive, mankind needs to reserve half the Earth for wildlife. He also warned in his studies that the Earth has only the capacity to support 9 to 10 billion people.
In the early 1970s, a small group of scientists created a computer model called World3 which analyzed population growth. Its findings were published in a book, “The Limits to Growth.” The conclusion?
“…humanity was despoiling nature so fast that civilizational collapse would occur sometime within the next one hundred years.”
To give these abstract forecasts some meaning let’s look at Kenya. In 1971, it had a population of 11 million which grew to 53.7 million by 2021. In 1971, the country had 160,000 elephants and 20,000 black rhinos. By 2021, those numbers dropped to 35,000 elephants and 1,000 black rhinos and only two white rhinos (both female.) The same scenario is playing out throughout the world. (I chose Kenya as an example because I visited the country on a photo safari in 1996. It was an experience of a lifetime.)
Let’s focus on a place closer to home: Oakland County. Every time friends would point to a beautiful new subdivision, I would reply, “that’s pollution” because it took habitat from insects, bees, deer, coyotes, skunks, racoons, etc., all essential to the “circle of life.” Of course, the growth also created problems of water supply and pollution in the county’s many lakes.
When I was in my teens in the 1950s (yes, I’m old), much of where I now live, West Bloomfield, was farmland. I paid a farmer a couple of bucks to go horseback riding. It was a win-win for the farmer. He earned a few dollars and I exercised his horses. Now, when I sit in a traffic jam at Orchard Lake Road and Maple, I wish I was back in the saddle again.
I doubt there is much land left on which to expand in my suburb. Space is, after all, finite.
The problem: by the time the world understands the meaning of the emergency flashes on the radar and tries to respond appropriately, it will probably be too late.
The NATO Review, reported under the headline, “Population Growth, the Defining Challenge of the 21st Century:”
“Without taking action now, billions of people across the world will face thirst, hunger, slum conditions and conflict in response to droughts, food shortages, urban squalor, migration and ever depleting natural resources, while capacity tries to catch up with demand.”
The Population Center wrote:
“Slowing down, stopping and eventually reversing human population growth ---these are ethical imperatives that will help improve the chances for future generations establishing living scenarios with the planet. The most ethical gift we can give people and creatures of the last 21st century and early 22nd century is a chance.”
Regrettably, we are not living up to our moral and ethical obligation.
(Editor’s Note: This is the second in a series of five columns on the environment.)
—————
Berl Falbaum is a political author and journalist and the author of several books.
The 100th anniversary of the Federal Arbitration Act: A century of dispute resolution
March 13 ,2025
The Federal Arbitration Act (FAA), enacted on February 12, 1925, has
been a cornerstone of American dispute resolution for a century.
:
Lisa W. Timmons
Lisa W. Timmons, PLLC, Arbitrator and Mediator
Lisa W. Timmons, PLLC, Arbitrator and Mediator
Introduction
The Federal Arbitration Act (FAA), enacted on February 12, 1925, has been a cornerstone of American dispute resolution for a century. It transformed arbitration from a seldom-used alternative into a central feature of the U.S. legal system. Over the past 100 years, the FAA has evolved through legislative amendments, judicial interpretations, and policy shifts, establishing arbitration as a preferred method for resolving disputes in commercial, labor, and consumer contexts, as evidenced by the widespread inclusion of arbitration clauses in contracts across these sectors. This article explores the origins of the FAA, its legislative history, and recent U.S. Supreme Court cases that may shape its future.
Historical Origins of the FAA
A. Pre-FAA: Hostility Toward Arbitration in Early America
Before the FAA's enactment, arbitration faced significant resistance in the United States. Influenced by English common law, the U.S. legal system was often hostile toward arbitration agreements, viewing them as attempts to bypass judicial authority. Courts frequently refused to enforce arbitration clauses, compelling parties to litigate despite prior agreements to arbitrate disputes.
This reluctance was rooted in concerns that arbitration lacked procedural safeguards and the belief that private dispute resolution should not supplant formal judicial processes. Many state laws rendered arbitration agreements unenforceable, making arbitration an impractical alternative to litigation.
B. The Need for Reform: Rise of Commercial Arbitration
In the early 20th century, the rapid expansion of commerce and industry in the U.S. led to increased litigation, congesting court dockets and creating inefficiencies in contract enforcement. Business leaders and trade organizations advocated for arbitration reform, viewing it as a more efficient and cost-effective method for resolving commercial disputes.
The American Bar Association (ABA) and the New York Chamber of Commerce spearheaded efforts for federal legislation to ensure the enforceability of arbitration agreements. These efforts culminated in the drafting of the United States Arbitration Act, later known as the Federal Arbitration Act.
Passage of the Federal Arbitration Act
A. Congressional Sponsors and Presidential Signing
The Federal Arbitration Act was enacted on February 12, 1925, and became effective on January 1, 1926. It was introduced by Senator Charles L. Bernheimer, who was also a dry goods merchant in Manhattan, and supported by members of Congress who viewed arbitration as essential for American commerce. President Calvin Coolidge signed the Act into law, marking a significant shift in the legal landscape regarding arbitration agreements. The FAA aimed to:
1. Make arbitration agreements legally enforceable, preventing courts from arbitrarily invalidating them.
2. Reduce judicial hostility toward arbitration.
3. Promote efficiency and finality in dispute resolution by diverting disputes from congested courts.
Initially, the FAA applied primarily to maritime and commercial contracts, leaving employment and consumer arbitration largely unregulated at the time. This changed gradually over the decades, largely due to judicial interpretation rather than legislative amendments. The expansion of the FAA’s reach, particularly into employment contracts, occurred through a series of Supreme Court decisions that broadened its scope beyond its original intent. Examples include:
1. Gilmer v. Interstate/ Johnson Lane Corp., 500 U.S. 20 (1991) – Employment Arbitration Expansion. In Gilmer the Supreme Court ruled that employment arbitration agreements were enforceable under the FAA unless Congress had explicitly stated otherwise. This decision marked a significant shift in how the FAA applied to workers, effectively allowing employers to compel arbitration of employment disputes.
The ruling encouraged employers across industries to adopt mandatory arbitration clauses in employment contracts.
2. Circuit City Stores v. Adams, 532 U.S. 105 (2001) – Narrowing the FAA's Employment Exemption. Held that the FAA contains a transportation worker exemption in 9 U.S.C. § 1, excluding “contracts of employment of seamen, railroad employees, or any other class of workers engaged in foreign or interstate commerce.”
3. AT&T Mobility LLC v. Concepcion, 563 U.S. 333 (2011)– Consumer Arbitration Expansion. In AT&T Mobility the Supreme Court held that the FAA preempted state laws that prohibited mandatory arbitration clauses in consumer contracts. This ruling overturned state laws that had attempted to restrict forced arbitration, leading to widespread enforcement of arbitration agreements in consumer contracts. After this case, businesses increasingly included class action waivers in arbitration agreements, limiting consumers' ability to bring collective lawsuits.
4. Epic Sys. Corp. v. Lewis, 584 U.S. 497 (2018)– Class Action Waivers Upheld. The Supreme Court ruled that employers could enforce arbitration clauses that require employees to waive their right to collective or class action lawsuits. This decision further strengthened employer-controlled arbitration, limiting workers' ability to pursue legal claims collectively.
Legislative inaction also played a key role in the expansion of arbitration, as Congress has not amended the FAA to limit its scope, effectively allowing the courts to determine its application. Additionally, pro-business policy shifts contributed to this expansion, as arbitration became increasingly favored by businesses due to its cost-effectiveness and efficiency compared to litigation. Finally, preemption of state laws further solidified arbitration’s dominance, with the Supreme Court consistently striking down state attempts to restrict arbitration agreements in employment and consumer contracts.
B. Worker Exemptions Under the FAA
Certain classifications of workers are exempt from the FAA, despite its broad applicability to most private-sector employees. Among these exemptions, transportation workers, seamen, federal government employees, and independent contractors in the transportation industry are notably excluded from FAA provisions due to industry-specific regulations and legal precedents. These exemptions highlight a congressional intent to exclude certain workers reach of the FAA due to the presence of other statutory frameworks that govern their labor rights, such as the Railway Labor Act (RLA) (railroad and airline employees), Civil Service Reform Act (CSRA)(federal employees), and 9 U.S.C. § 1(seamen and maritime workers).
C. Restoring Choice: The End of Forced Arbitration in Sexual Misconduct Cases
On March 3, 2022, President Joseph Biden signed into law the Ending Forced Arbitration of Sexual Assault and Sexual Harassment Act of 2021 (EFASHA). This landmark legislation amended the FAA rendering pre-dispute arbitration agreements unenforceable for claims involving sexual assault or sexual harassment. The Act empowers survivors to choose between pursuing their claims in court or through arbitration, rather than being compelled into private arbitration proceedings. Notably, the law applies to any dispute or claim that arises on or after its enactment date, regardless of when the underlying conduct occurred. This ensures that individuals who experience such misconduct have the autonomy to decide the forum in which to seek justice.
Recent U.S. Supreme Court Cases Impacting the FAA
• Morgan v. Sundance, Inc., 596 U.S. 411(2022): Clarified that a party does not have to prove prejudice when arguing that another party has waived their right to arbitration.
• Viking River Cruises, Inc. v. Moriana, 596 U.S. 639 (2022): The Supreme Court ruled that California’s Private Attorneys General Act (PAGA) claims can be subject to arbitration, limiting employees’ ability to
bring representative labor law claims.
• Coinbase, Inc. v. Bielski, 599 U.S. 736 (2023): Held that when a federal district court denies a motion to compel arbitration, the losing party has a statutory right to an interlocutory appeal. 9 U.S.C.S. § 16(a).
The district court must stay its pre-trial and trial proceedings while an interlocutory appeal is ongoing.
Then in 2024 alone, the Supreme Court issued several significant decisions regarding arbitration:
• Smith v. Spizzirri, 601 U.S. 472 (2024): The Court unanimously held that under Section 3 of the FAA, federal courts are required to stay proceedings when a dispute is referred to arbitration, rather than dismissing the case. This decision emphasizes the mandatory nature of staying proceedings pending arbitration, ensuring that parties can return to court, if necessary, after arbitration concludes.
• Coinbase, Inc. v. Suski, 602 U.S. 143 (2024): The Court stressed the contractual foundation of arbitration agreements, ruling that disputes over the applicability of arbitration clauses should be resolved based on traditional contract principles. The decision underscores that parties are bound by the terms to which they have mutually agreed, reinforcing the importance of clear and explicit arbitration provisions in contracts. The Court also ruled that when parties have agreed to two contracts, one that sends arbitrability disputes to arbitration, and the other either explicitly or implicitly sends arbitrability disputes to the courts, a court must decide which contract governs.
• Bissonnette v. LePage Bakeries Park St., LLC, 601 U.S. 246 (2024): In a unanimous decision, the Court clarified that transportation workers do not need to be employed within the transportation industry to qualify for the FAA's exemption. This ruling broadens the scope of workers who can seek exemption from mandatory arbitration under the FAA, focusing on the nature of the work performed rather than the employer's industry classification.
Conclusion
For the last century, the Federal Arbitration Act has shaped the way Americans resolve disputes. Initially enacted to promote efficiency and fairness in commercial transactions, the FAA has since expanded to nearly all areas of law, including employment, consumer rights, and international commerce. As arbitration continues to evolve, debates over its fairness and accessibility remain at the forefront. The next century will determine whether arbitration remains dominant or faces greater regulation. As we mark its 100th anniversary, the FAA’s legacy remains unparalleled in American law.
—————
Lisa W. Timmons, Esq., has over 27 years of experience in alternative dispute resolution (ADR). She is the chair of the ADR Section of the Michigan State Bar, and the Executive Director of the Mediation Tribunal Association. Timmons serves as an arbitrator, mediator, and case evaluator of labor, employment, and commercial cases with the American Arbitration Association (AAA), FMCS, USPS, MERC, FINRA, and several other public and private arbitration and mediation panels.
The Federal Arbitration Act (FAA), enacted on February 12, 1925, has been a cornerstone of American dispute resolution for a century. It transformed arbitration from a seldom-used alternative into a central feature of the U.S. legal system. Over the past 100 years, the FAA has evolved through legislative amendments, judicial interpretations, and policy shifts, establishing arbitration as a preferred method for resolving disputes in commercial, labor, and consumer contexts, as evidenced by the widespread inclusion of arbitration clauses in contracts across these sectors. This article explores the origins of the FAA, its legislative history, and recent U.S. Supreme Court cases that may shape its future.
Historical Origins of the FAA
A. Pre-FAA: Hostility Toward Arbitration in Early America
Before the FAA's enactment, arbitration faced significant resistance in the United States. Influenced by English common law, the U.S. legal system was often hostile toward arbitration agreements, viewing them as attempts to bypass judicial authority. Courts frequently refused to enforce arbitration clauses, compelling parties to litigate despite prior agreements to arbitrate disputes.
This reluctance was rooted in concerns that arbitration lacked procedural safeguards and the belief that private dispute resolution should not supplant formal judicial processes. Many state laws rendered arbitration agreements unenforceable, making arbitration an impractical alternative to litigation.
B. The Need for Reform: Rise of Commercial Arbitration
In the early 20th century, the rapid expansion of commerce and industry in the U.S. led to increased litigation, congesting court dockets and creating inefficiencies in contract enforcement. Business leaders and trade organizations advocated for arbitration reform, viewing it as a more efficient and cost-effective method for resolving commercial disputes.
The American Bar Association (ABA) and the New York Chamber of Commerce spearheaded efforts for federal legislation to ensure the enforceability of arbitration agreements. These efforts culminated in the drafting of the United States Arbitration Act, later known as the Federal Arbitration Act.
Passage of the Federal Arbitration Act
A. Congressional Sponsors and Presidential Signing
The Federal Arbitration Act was enacted on February 12, 1925, and became effective on January 1, 1926. It was introduced by Senator Charles L. Bernheimer, who was also a dry goods merchant in Manhattan, and supported by members of Congress who viewed arbitration as essential for American commerce. President Calvin Coolidge signed the Act into law, marking a significant shift in the legal landscape regarding arbitration agreements. The FAA aimed to:
1. Make arbitration agreements legally enforceable, preventing courts from arbitrarily invalidating them.
2. Reduce judicial hostility toward arbitration.
3. Promote efficiency and finality in dispute resolution by diverting disputes from congested courts.
Initially, the FAA applied primarily to maritime and commercial contracts, leaving employment and consumer arbitration largely unregulated at the time. This changed gradually over the decades, largely due to judicial interpretation rather than legislative amendments. The expansion of the FAA’s reach, particularly into employment contracts, occurred through a series of Supreme Court decisions that broadened its scope beyond its original intent. Examples include:
1. Gilmer v. Interstate/ Johnson Lane Corp., 500 U.S. 20 (1991) – Employment Arbitration Expansion. In Gilmer the Supreme Court ruled that employment arbitration agreements were enforceable under the FAA unless Congress had explicitly stated otherwise. This decision marked a significant shift in how the FAA applied to workers, effectively allowing employers to compel arbitration of employment disputes.
The ruling encouraged employers across industries to adopt mandatory arbitration clauses in employment contracts.
2. Circuit City Stores v. Adams, 532 U.S. 105 (2001) – Narrowing the FAA's Employment Exemption. Held that the FAA contains a transportation worker exemption in 9 U.S.C. § 1, excluding “contracts of employment of seamen, railroad employees, or any other class of workers engaged in foreign or interstate commerce.”
3. AT&T Mobility LLC v. Concepcion, 563 U.S. 333 (2011)– Consumer Arbitration Expansion. In AT&T Mobility the Supreme Court held that the FAA preempted state laws that prohibited mandatory arbitration clauses in consumer contracts. This ruling overturned state laws that had attempted to restrict forced arbitration, leading to widespread enforcement of arbitration agreements in consumer contracts. After this case, businesses increasingly included class action waivers in arbitration agreements, limiting consumers' ability to bring collective lawsuits.
4. Epic Sys. Corp. v. Lewis, 584 U.S. 497 (2018)– Class Action Waivers Upheld. The Supreme Court ruled that employers could enforce arbitration clauses that require employees to waive their right to collective or class action lawsuits. This decision further strengthened employer-controlled arbitration, limiting workers' ability to pursue legal claims collectively.
Legislative inaction also played a key role in the expansion of arbitration, as Congress has not amended the FAA to limit its scope, effectively allowing the courts to determine its application. Additionally, pro-business policy shifts contributed to this expansion, as arbitration became increasingly favored by businesses due to its cost-effectiveness and efficiency compared to litigation. Finally, preemption of state laws further solidified arbitration’s dominance, with the Supreme Court consistently striking down state attempts to restrict arbitration agreements in employment and consumer contracts.
B. Worker Exemptions Under the FAA
Certain classifications of workers are exempt from the FAA, despite its broad applicability to most private-sector employees. Among these exemptions, transportation workers, seamen, federal government employees, and independent contractors in the transportation industry are notably excluded from FAA provisions due to industry-specific regulations and legal precedents. These exemptions highlight a congressional intent to exclude certain workers reach of the FAA due to the presence of other statutory frameworks that govern their labor rights, such as the Railway Labor Act (RLA) (railroad and airline employees), Civil Service Reform Act (CSRA)(federal employees), and 9 U.S.C. § 1(seamen and maritime workers).
C. Restoring Choice: The End of Forced Arbitration in Sexual Misconduct Cases
On March 3, 2022, President Joseph Biden signed into law the Ending Forced Arbitration of Sexual Assault and Sexual Harassment Act of 2021 (EFASHA). This landmark legislation amended the FAA rendering pre-dispute arbitration agreements unenforceable for claims involving sexual assault or sexual harassment. The Act empowers survivors to choose between pursuing their claims in court or through arbitration, rather than being compelled into private arbitration proceedings. Notably, the law applies to any dispute or claim that arises on or after its enactment date, regardless of when the underlying conduct occurred. This ensures that individuals who experience such misconduct have the autonomy to decide the forum in which to seek justice.
Recent U.S. Supreme Court Cases Impacting the FAA
• Morgan v. Sundance, Inc., 596 U.S. 411(2022): Clarified that a party does not have to prove prejudice when arguing that another party has waived their right to arbitration.
• Viking River Cruises, Inc. v. Moriana, 596 U.S. 639 (2022): The Supreme Court ruled that California’s Private Attorneys General Act (PAGA) claims can be subject to arbitration, limiting employees’ ability to
bring representative labor law claims.
• Coinbase, Inc. v. Bielski, 599 U.S. 736 (2023): Held that when a federal district court denies a motion to compel arbitration, the losing party has a statutory right to an interlocutory appeal. 9 U.S.C.S. § 16(a).
The district court must stay its pre-trial and trial proceedings while an interlocutory appeal is ongoing.
Then in 2024 alone, the Supreme Court issued several significant decisions regarding arbitration:
• Smith v. Spizzirri, 601 U.S. 472 (2024): The Court unanimously held that under Section 3 of the FAA, federal courts are required to stay proceedings when a dispute is referred to arbitration, rather than dismissing the case. This decision emphasizes the mandatory nature of staying proceedings pending arbitration, ensuring that parties can return to court, if necessary, after arbitration concludes.
• Coinbase, Inc. v. Suski, 602 U.S. 143 (2024): The Court stressed the contractual foundation of arbitration agreements, ruling that disputes over the applicability of arbitration clauses should be resolved based on traditional contract principles. The decision underscores that parties are bound by the terms to which they have mutually agreed, reinforcing the importance of clear and explicit arbitration provisions in contracts. The Court also ruled that when parties have agreed to two contracts, one that sends arbitrability disputes to arbitration, and the other either explicitly or implicitly sends arbitrability disputes to the courts, a court must decide which contract governs.
• Bissonnette v. LePage Bakeries Park St., LLC, 601 U.S. 246 (2024): In a unanimous decision, the Court clarified that transportation workers do not need to be employed within the transportation industry to qualify for the FAA's exemption. This ruling broadens the scope of workers who can seek exemption from mandatory arbitration under the FAA, focusing on the nature of the work performed rather than the employer's industry classification.
Conclusion
For the last century, the Federal Arbitration Act has shaped the way Americans resolve disputes. Initially enacted to promote efficiency and fairness in commercial transactions, the FAA has since expanded to nearly all areas of law, including employment, consumer rights, and international commerce. As arbitration continues to evolve, debates over its fairness and accessibility remain at the forefront. The next century will determine whether arbitration remains dominant or faces greater regulation. As we mark its 100th anniversary, the FAA’s legacy remains unparalleled in American law.
—————
Lisa W. Timmons, Esq., has over 27 years of experience in alternative dispute resolution (ADR). She is the chair of the ADR Section of the Michigan State Bar, and the Executive Director of the Mediation Tribunal Association. Timmons serves as an arbitrator, mediator, and case evaluator of labor, employment, and commercial cases with the American Arbitration Association (AAA), FMCS, USPS, MERC, FINRA, and several other public and private arbitration and mediation panels.
Is employment exploitation? The ideological battle over paid sick leave and minimum wages
March 13 ,2025
Michigan’s Republican House majority and Democratic Senate majority
face an early test of whether they can agree with each other.
:
By James Hohman
Mackinac Center for Public Policy
Michigan’s Republican House majority and Democratic Senate majority face an early test of whether they can agree with each other. That’s because there will be a paid sick leave mandate coming in late February, along with increases in the minimum wage. Some lawmakers want to change the laws before they go into effect. They want to reduce the likelihood that these laws result in unintended consequences, such as job losses for low wage workers and complications for overregulated small business.What lawmakers are discussing is not whether the state will have a minimum wage or mandate paid sick leave benefits. The question is how to do it, whom it applies to, and how much the state will require.
Yet in the fight around the margins of the laws, it is a battle between two ideas. One is that employment is good for both employers and employees. The other is that employment is exploitative.
People hold different views on the question and are informed by their experience, their sense of fairness, their peers, their tastes and their ideology. I hope that for many, especially the elected officials making the decisions, the question is informed by an objective study of the effects of the laws.
The people who believe employment is exploitative see that employers want to pay workers as little as they can and will replace them at the slightest inconvenience. That business owners make more money when they lower their costs. Thus, they see that minimum wage laws and paid sick leave rules counter the business owners’ incentive to exploit workers. The laws ensure employers can’t pay too little and keep them from firing people who get ill.
On the opposite side, some people believe that employees have options about where to work. Workers can earn an honest wage at another employer if one treats them poorly or doesn’t offer them what they’re worth. Many employers pay well because they recognize workers’ worth, but even miserly employers must compete for workers. Part of that competition is over how well employees are treated.
These are two conflicting ideas. They both recognize that employers strive to make money, that they make more money with lower costs, and that employment is a cost. One side thinks that this results in exploitation. The other side says that competition ensures that workers are treated better.
Data on wages and benefits can tell us which side is more correct.
If we lived in an exploitative world, 79% of private sector workers in America probably wouldn’t have paid sick leave benefits. (This is above 90% in some industries and professions.) Back in 2011, 60% of
workers had paid sick leave benefits, with vacation and holiday pay offered even more readily. And that was before a wave of states began to mandate the benefits.
Likewise, employers were paying more for people at the low end of earnings ladder even before states increased their minimum wage requirements. Average wages and salaries in the lowest quintile in America increased 16% above inflation from 2019 to 2023, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. This increase stems more from competition than increases in wage mandates.
It’s a sign that free markets deliver better outcomes to workers than government employment mandates. Economists who use sophisticated methods to assess the effects of the laws agree.
Do minimum wage laws cost low wage workers more in lost jobs and employment opportunities than they gain in higher pay? “There is a preponderance of negative estimates in the literature,” according to an extensive
review.
There is less research on paid sick leave mandates, however, because they don’t have the hundred-year history of minimum wage laws. Economists have so far found mixed effects, some good for workers and some bad for workers. But it’s clear that there is no free lunch from the mandate. And some proponents’ view that workers won’t have access to benefits until employers are forced to offer them is clearly false.
The literature and economic trends may question the effectiveness of minimum wage and paid sick leave mandates. But the question lawmakers are asking is not whether to have these laws at all. It’s whether they should mitigate their expected negative consequences.
The biggest change lawmakers are discussing is whether employees can use sick leave without notifying the employer first. Another proposed change is to apply the mandates for both minimum wage and sick leave to workplaces with 50 or more employees or to every employer.
Other important changes would apply to servers and other tipped employees. Employers are currently required by law to ensure that tips cover an employee’s earnings up to the minimum wage. Hourly wages that do not include wages can be less than the minimum wage.
This arrangement would be eliminated without the proposed changes under a bill passed by the House. The Democratic Senate majority may abstain from adopting the changes passed by the House. It may prefer the rules set to be implemented in late February. Abstaining would be an indicator that there are potent political forces that believe employment is inherently exploitative. Those who hold this view should look deeper at the evidence.
Environmental warning signs are blinking red
March 06 ,2025
I thought long and hard on how to start this series to get the attention
of readers. And I don’t mean just to “tickle” their interest in the
subject so they read it but with the hope they understand the ominous
message about the future we face.
:
Berl Falbaum
(EDITOR’S NOTE: With this column, we begin to publish a five-part series on the environment written by our contributing political columnist Berl Falbaum, a veteran journalist and author of 12 books. The columns will appear over the next few weeks. Berl has studied the issue for the last two decades, including writing a book, “Code Red! Code! Red! How Destruction of the Environment Poses Lethal Threat to Life on Earth.” We welcome your comments.)
I thought long and hard on how to start this series to get the attention of readers. And I don’t mean just to “tickle” their interest in the subject so they read it but with the hope they understand the ominous message about the future we face.
Full disclosure: I am a journalist, not a scientist. I did not conduct any independent research. My reporting comes from researching the research done by world experts.
In these articles, I did not attribute every statistic, conclusion, prediction or finding because I thought that would be awkward and annoying to readers. But it all comes from authoritative sources. In my book, I list more than 100 references.
This series is not recreational reading. There is no good news to report.
With that warning, here goes.
David Wallace-Wells, who has written extensively on the environment, did it by starting his book with the following eight words: “It is worse, much worse, than you think.”
I will try it with the following: The Earth is becoming uninhabitable for humans much faster than many experts predicted. And it may well be too late to stop the environmental deterioration on numerous fronts, not just global warming that receives most of the attention.
Scientists are warning we are on the cusp of the Earth experiencing its sixth extinction, the first one caused by humans -- you and me.
The last extinction, the fifth, happened 65 million years ago when an asteroid crashed into the Earth, wiping out the dinosaurs.
There is not an inch of land, or a body of water on the planet, no matter how small or isolated, which is not being impacted by environmental issues. Yes, including your beautiful gated subdivision.
The following comes from a story, published by The Guardian, on a report written by renowned environmental experts:
“Many of Earth’s ‘vital signs’ have hit record extremes, indicating that the future of humanity hangs in the balance….
“More and more scientists are now looking into the possibility of societal collapse… [The report] assessed 35 vital signs in 2023 and found that 25 were worse than ever recorded, including carbon dioxide levels and human population. This indicates a ‘critical and unpredictable new phase of the climate crisis.’”
Consider the following: Patagonia, which sits on the western side of South America, is one of the least populated regions on the planet. With an area of one million square kilometers, Patagonia is larger than 80 percent of countries on Earth. It has less than five percent of the population of both Chile and Argentina, making it a sparsely populated region.
Yet, it is being severely impacted by polluted air and water carried by currents of both and it is inundated with microplastics.
Or consider this: A scientist testing a submarine took it to the deepest depths of the oceans, some 36,000 feet. What did he find? Plastic garbage bags and candy wrappers.
Even the shape of the Earth is being affected. You read that correctly.
Scientists at ETH Zurich in Switzerland, published a report in the National Academy of Sciences of the U.S. that the moon’s gravitational pull has steadily lengthened days, but polar melting is redistributing water closer to the equator.
This makes the Earth more oblate -- or fatter -- slowing the rotation of the planet and lengthening the day faster than the lunar effect alone.
While we should be addressing environmental dangers, the deadly threats have been met with apathy and/or denial. We should be discussing the environment as we did COVID at its peak. Instead, raging fires, floods, melting glaciers, soaring temperatures, plastic contamination, air and water pollution, nuclear waste disposal, deforestation --- and so much more -- are met with a sentence or two in news reports. Like in, “By the way…”
Jonathan Watts, The Guardian’s global environment editor, wrote: “…weather catastrophes have become so commonplace that they risk being normalized. Instead of outrage and determination to reduce the dangers, there is a sense of complacency: these things happen. Someone else is responsible. Somebody else will fix it.”
The Guardian, incidentally, publishes four stories on the environment every day and they contain mostly negative news.
In one opinion piece The Nation wrote during the Los Angeles fire calamity:
“These mega-fires have called forth a mega-failure by much of the news media. A review of coverage to date shows that most journalism is still not accurately representing how the climate crisis is upending our civilization by driving increasingly frequent and severe extreme weather.
“Too much of the [Los Angeles fire] coverage has simply ignored the climate crisis altogether, an inexcusable failure when the scientific link between such mega-fires and a hotter, dryer planet is unequivocal.”
—————
Berl Falbaum is a political author and journalist and the author of several books.
I thought long and hard on how to start this series to get the attention of readers. And I don’t mean just to “tickle” their interest in the subject so they read it but with the hope they understand the ominous message about the future we face.
Full disclosure: I am a journalist, not a scientist. I did not conduct any independent research. My reporting comes from researching the research done by world experts.
In these articles, I did not attribute every statistic, conclusion, prediction or finding because I thought that would be awkward and annoying to readers. But it all comes from authoritative sources. In my book, I list more than 100 references.
This series is not recreational reading. There is no good news to report.
With that warning, here goes.
David Wallace-Wells, who has written extensively on the environment, did it by starting his book with the following eight words: “It is worse, much worse, than you think.”
I will try it with the following: The Earth is becoming uninhabitable for humans much faster than many experts predicted. And it may well be too late to stop the environmental deterioration on numerous fronts, not just global warming that receives most of the attention.
Scientists are warning we are on the cusp of the Earth experiencing its sixth extinction, the first one caused by humans -- you and me.
The last extinction, the fifth, happened 65 million years ago when an asteroid crashed into the Earth, wiping out the dinosaurs.
There is not an inch of land, or a body of water on the planet, no matter how small or isolated, which is not being impacted by environmental issues. Yes, including your beautiful gated subdivision.
The following comes from a story, published by The Guardian, on a report written by renowned environmental experts:
“Many of Earth’s ‘vital signs’ have hit record extremes, indicating that the future of humanity hangs in the balance….
“More and more scientists are now looking into the possibility of societal collapse… [The report] assessed 35 vital signs in 2023 and found that 25 were worse than ever recorded, including carbon dioxide levels and human population. This indicates a ‘critical and unpredictable new phase of the climate crisis.’”
Consider the following: Patagonia, which sits on the western side of South America, is one of the least populated regions on the planet. With an area of one million square kilometers, Patagonia is larger than 80 percent of countries on Earth. It has less than five percent of the population of both Chile and Argentina, making it a sparsely populated region.
Yet, it is being severely impacted by polluted air and water carried by currents of both and it is inundated with microplastics.
Or consider this: A scientist testing a submarine took it to the deepest depths of the oceans, some 36,000 feet. What did he find? Plastic garbage bags and candy wrappers.
Even the shape of the Earth is being affected. You read that correctly.
Scientists at ETH Zurich in Switzerland, published a report in the National Academy of Sciences of the U.S. that the moon’s gravitational pull has steadily lengthened days, but polar melting is redistributing water closer to the equator.
This makes the Earth more oblate -- or fatter -- slowing the rotation of the planet and lengthening the day faster than the lunar effect alone.
While we should be addressing environmental dangers, the deadly threats have been met with apathy and/or denial. We should be discussing the environment as we did COVID at its peak. Instead, raging fires, floods, melting glaciers, soaring temperatures, plastic contamination, air and water pollution, nuclear waste disposal, deforestation --- and so much more -- are met with a sentence or two in news reports. Like in, “By the way…”
Jonathan Watts, The Guardian’s global environment editor, wrote: “…weather catastrophes have become so commonplace that they risk being normalized. Instead of outrage and determination to reduce the dangers, there is a sense of complacency: these things happen. Someone else is responsible. Somebody else will fix it.”
The Guardian, incidentally, publishes four stories on the environment every day and they contain mostly negative news.
In one opinion piece The Nation wrote during the Los Angeles fire calamity:
“These mega-fires have called forth a mega-failure by much of the news media. A review of coverage to date shows that most journalism is still not accurately representing how the climate crisis is upending our civilization by driving increasingly frequent and severe extreme weather.
“Too much of the [Los Angeles fire] coverage has simply ignored the climate crisis altogether, an inexcusable failure when the scientific link between such mega-fires and a hotter, dryer planet is unequivocal.”
—————
Berl Falbaum is a political author and journalist and the author of several books.
Laying the foundation for settlement with ex parte communications
February 06 ,2025
Ex Parte communications are commonplace and completely ethical in the
mediation process. Indeed, where “shuttle diplomacy” is the process
model all communication is ex parte. In this paper, I recommend
using ex parte communication with counsel prior to the date of mediation
but after receipt of written submissions. The call has multiple goals
and objectives including:
:
Sheldon J. Stark
Mediator and Arbitrator (Retired)
Mediator and Arbitrator (Retired)
Introduction
Ex Parte communications are commonplace and completely ethical in the mediation process. Indeed, where “shuttle diplomacy” is the process model all communication is ex parte. In this paper, I recommend using ex parte communication with counsel prior to the date of mediation but after receipt of written submissions. The call has multiple goals and objectives including:
• Cementing a prior relationship with counsel or building a relationship where none previously existed.
• Gathering important information not included in written submissions.
• Providing advocates an opportunity to speak candidly outside the presence of their clients.
• Demonstrating the mediator’s commitment to helping advocates achieve their client’s goals.
• Planting seeds for useful techniques to be used once the mediation begins.
• Reminding counsel to sign the Agreement to Mediate, have their clients do so, and return it to the mediator.
Establishing Confidentiality
The call should start with an explanation that this is a standard part of the mediator’s preparation; all counsel will be contacted; and it is traditional/customary to start with plaintiff counsel, unless time does not allow waiting until plaintiff counsel is available.
To encourage candor the mediator should first establish confidentiality ground rules for the conversation. If there is anything counsel wouldn’t want disclosed to the other side, they need only say so and the mediator will keep it under wraps. My practice was to place responsibility on counsel. Unless they expressly designated something confidential, I explain, I would consider it fair to use in the other room especially if I thought it might be helpful.
I would promise to provide an opportunity to place any other information disclosed in the confidential category before hanging up. Finally, if it later appeared disclosure might be helpful, I would explain my thinking; then live with whatever decision they made.
Gathering Information Through Questions
Once ground rules for confidentiality are established, I recommend soliciting suggestions from counsel for techniques or an approach the mediator might employ. Many advocates offer mediation services and could provide thoughtful insight. “You’ve been living with the dispute for some time,” I might begin. “Do you have any ideas for me? If you were mediating this case, what approach or techniques would you employ?” Most often they do not have suggestions. Advocates appreciate the question, and sometimes have helpful ideas.
My second topic seeks insight into the parties. “Tell me about your client,” I always asked. “Is there anything I can do to help you with your client? Is there a message you’ve been reluctant to deliver, for example, that I could do the heavy lifting on? Is there a message you have delivered but which could use some reinforcement from me?” Lawyers are often candid and frequently provided useful insight to guide management of the process.
I next asked about non-economic needs, demands or terms. “Have you discussed with your client their non-economic objectives?” Often, the answer is no. This call, therefore, gets that conversation started between counsel and party. This is important, because once a dollar negotiation starts, non-economic terms can become stumbling blocks to resolution. It’s generally best, therefore, to get these out on the table at the very beginning. In an employment dispute, for example, is plaintiff seeking a letter of recommendation? Does a party believe liquidated damages are needed to discourage disclosure of confidential terms? It is often easier to reach agreement on non-economic terms before addressing money.
If the dispute does not settle, I wanted to know counsel’s biggest concern. What are they most worried about? “What might keep you up at night? Are you worried about disclosure of proprietary business information, for example? Or public exposure of private or embarrassing internal conflicts or problems? Do you worry about dragging an important customer or client into the dispute?” Answers to these questions often bring out important risk topics to consider at the mediation table.
How are they getting along with the other side? Do the lawyers trust one another? Have personality conflicts aggravated the dispute or made settlement more difficult? What’s driving any hostility? Issues lurking beneath the surface – lawyers rubbing each other the wrong way, for example – can threaten progress if not identified early. And related: are there any other non-legal issues that might impact resolving this dispute the mediator should know about?
What do the advocates consider the biggest impediments to resolution? Do they have suggestions for neutralizing or ameliorating them, finessing or otherwise getting around them?
Whose turn is it to make the first move at the mediation table? I always ask whether the parties are willing to disclose the status of their negotiations during the joint pre-mediation conference call. The reason to ask with all lawyers present is that the parties do not agree in at least half the cases! Most lawyers believe that where there have been no pre-mediation negotiations, the plaintiff should make the first offer. Plaintiff brought the case and presumably knows what the dispute is worth.
Accordingly, plaintiff should start. Lawyers also believe that if one side made the last offer, the offeree should put the first number out at mediation. On occasion, a plaintiff lawyer may try to shift the first number burden onto the defense. I try to discourage that with the following points:
• Plaintiff going first is the natural order of things.
• If plaintiff tries forcing defendant to start, plaintiff’s counsel risks losing respect and credibility. And, regrettably, so does a mediator who goes along with the request.
• Defendants might disengage and leave the table.
• No plaintiff attorney in my experience has ever been happy with an opening offer where defendant was forced to go first.
• Finally, “anchoring” research suggests that the final settlement number is generally closer to the first number offered in a negotiation than to the second. In other words, plaintiffs get better results when they go first.
As noted above, during the joint pre-mediation conference call I use for process design and deadline setting, I encourage defense counsel to share boilerplate Final Settlement and Release of all Claims language with plaintiff’s counsel. Most promise to do so. If the document is shared and reviewed in advance, hours of negotiations over language after agreement is reached on dollars and terms can be avoided. The ex parte call provides an opportunity to remind counsel to make it happen. The hope is that exchanging final language gets counsel talking, sets the stage for productive negotiation and gives the parties a sense of optimism about a positive outcome. “Does plaintiff counsel have any problems with the language? Is it acceptable as written?
What changes, if any, are sought?”
I also recommend soliciting potential risk questions to ask in the other room. “You know the case better than I do. What do you consider the biggest risks the other side faces? What questions would you be asking if you were me?” If counsel is candid and willing to engage on this, I might also ask for a list of the toughest risk questions to ask their own client.
Does counsel need any additional information from the other side before they can mediate effectively? What do they need? Can I help obtain it for them on short notice? What’s been the hold up? If important discovery or document exchange is late, I did my best to obtain it for them.
Who needs to be present for each side for an agreement to be reached at the table? In my experience, when real decision-makers are not at the table, it is easy for them to reject final offers by telephone. They were not present to hear the risk questions, observe the reactions, or participate in the discussions that are part of the softening up process. Bringing someone up to speed can be challenging, especially if resistant to what they are hearing.
Is the defendant collectible? If defendant is claiming poverty or inability to pay a settlement, what evidence would be needed to accept the assertion as credible? For the party claiming poverty, I encouraged production of their books and records to demonstrate the credibility of their claim. Refusal to produce them adds fuels a plaintiff’s belief that the assertion of poverty is a pretense. I could often rely on experienced defense counsel to support the effort.
Are there any facts which the other side doesn’t have that might cause them to change their evaluation of the claim? What do you suppose those facts are and why don’t they have them?
How much has been incurred in attorney fees and costs to date? If counsel doesn’t have that information: “Are you willing and able to pull it together by the morning of mediation?” There are two reasons for this: First, overall costs and fees are an important consideration in determining whether to settle and on what terms. Second, a prevailing party may be entitled to recover fees and costs as in employment discrimination disputes. Precise amounts expended are very relevant to valuation.
Has counsel prepared a litigation budget if the matter doesn’t resolve at mediation? How much more is the litigation expected to cost? Has the client been informed? If the parties have not prepared a litigation budget – or it has been a long time since a budget was prepared: “Will you prepare a rough budget by the time of mediation so we can discuss potential fees and costs compared with the other side’s last and best offer?” I encourage them to include the cost of experts, if any; the preparation, drafting and argument of dispositive motions they might be considering; and how much additional discovery might be needed.
Has counsel analyzed the underlying needs and interests of their own client? In other words, what is driving this dispute? Are there external factors impacting motivation to settle? What are they? What about opposing party? What are their needs and interests? Does identification of needs and interests inform possible terms to include in their proposals to settle?
Are there any safety or danger issues we should know about? PPOs, threats, prior lawsuits, history of violent or threatening actions?
If mediating via Zoom, will counsel and client be in the same location? This information will help me recognize who is seeking admission to a Zoom session when parties seek to join the meeting.
Finally, are there any other issues they think need discussion?
Before hanging up, I clarified what we marked as confidential, if anything, and asked whether in retrospect anything else we discussed should be added to the protected list. “Here’s what I marked as confidential. Is there anything else we discussed you wouldn’t want me to disclose?”
Conclusion
The approach suggested here is designed to strengthen the mediator’s relationship with counsel, and gain additional trust and confidence in the mediator and the mediator’s process. At the conclusion of the call, advocates will have observed the mediator’s thorough preparation which should enhance confidence and trust. The questions help counsel recognize that the mediator’s goal is to help find a satisfactory resolution; and that the mediator is fair minded and capable of managing a safe, productive and useful process. By employing this ex parte tool as recommended, the mediator builds credibility and capital to overcome obstacles, build trust, improve communication and understanding and establish the foundation upon which the parties can reach a resolution of their dispute.
Check List
1. Explain confidentiality.
2. Do you have any ideas or suggestions for what a mediator might do to assist the parties in reaching an agreement?
3. Tell me about your client. How can I help you with your client?
4. Does your client have any non-economic needs or/ demands/terms?
5. If the case does NOT settle, what is your biggest fear/concern?
6. How are you getting along with the other side?
7. What do you consider the biggest impediments to settlement? Why has this case not settled?
8. What is the status of negotiations: whose turn is it to make the next move?
9. a. Was a proposed draft settlement agreement exchanged in advance?
b. Is it acceptable? What changes would you like to see, if any?
c. What are your thoughts on what a path to resolution might look like?
10. Do you have suggestions for questions I can ask in the other room that will help the other side appreciate the risks they face? How about such questions for YOUR client?
11. What can you tell me about the bargaining dynamics and personalities in the case? What non-legal issue should be on my radar screen?
12. Do you need any additional information from the other side in order to mediate effectively? What’s missing and why do you not have it yet?
13. Who needs to be present for the other side? Is there any problem with who will be there for YOUR side?
14. Have you done an asset check to determine whether the defendant is collectible?
15. Are there facts the other side might not have which could cause them to change their evaluation of the claim?
16. Litigation budget - done one; provided it to client? What are your costs to date? How much are the attorney fees to date?
17. Have you looked at the underlying needs and interests of your client? What are they? What do you think are the underlying needs and interests of the other side? What kinds of terms might be proposed to meet those needs and interests?
18. Are there safety or danger issues - PPOs, prior lawsuits, etc.?
19. If the mediation is via Zoom, will your client be at your office or will they join the meeting from their own location?
20. Are there any other issues you would like to discuss before we ring off?
Ex Parte communications are commonplace and completely ethical in the mediation process. Indeed, where “shuttle diplomacy” is the process model all communication is ex parte. In this paper, I recommend using ex parte communication with counsel prior to the date of mediation but after receipt of written submissions. The call has multiple goals and objectives including:
• Cementing a prior relationship with counsel or building a relationship where none previously existed.
• Gathering important information not included in written submissions.
• Providing advocates an opportunity to speak candidly outside the presence of their clients.
• Demonstrating the mediator’s commitment to helping advocates achieve their client’s goals.
• Planting seeds for useful techniques to be used once the mediation begins.
• Reminding counsel to sign the Agreement to Mediate, have their clients do so, and return it to the mediator.
Establishing Confidentiality
The call should start with an explanation that this is a standard part of the mediator’s preparation; all counsel will be contacted; and it is traditional/customary to start with plaintiff counsel, unless time does not allow waiting until plaintiff counsel is available.
To encourage candor the mediator should first establish confidentiality ground rules for the conversation. If there is anything counsel wouldn’t want disclosed to the other side, they need only say so and the mediator will keep it under wraps. My practice was to place responsibility on counsel. Unless they expressly designated something confidential, I explain, I would consider it fair to use in the other room especially if I thought it might be helpful.
I would promise to provide an opportunity to place any other information disclosed in the confidential category before hanging up. Finally, if it later appeared disclosure might be helpful, I would explain my thinking; then live with whatever decision they made.
Gathering Information Through Questions
Once ground rules for confidentiality are established, I recommend soliciting suggestions from counsel for techniques or an approach the mediator might employ. Many advocates offer mediation services and could provide thoughtful insight. “You’ve been living with the dispute for some time,” I might begin. “Do you have any ideas for me? If you were mediating this case, what approach or techniques would you employ?” Most often they do not have suggestions. Advocates appreciate the question, and sometimes have helpful ideas.
My second topic seeks insight into the parties. “Tell me about your client,” I always asked. “Is there anything I can do to help you with your client? Is there a message you’ve been reluctant to deliver, for example, that I could do the heavy lifting on? Is there a message you have delivered but which could use some reinforcement from me?” Lawyers are often candid and frequently provided useful insight to guide management of the process.
I next asked about non-economic needs, demands or terms. “Have you discussed with your client their non-economic objectives?” Often, the answer is no. This call, therefore, gets that conversation started between counsel and party. This is important, because once a dollar negotiation starts, non-economic terms can become stumbling blocks to resolution. It’s generally best, therefore, to get these out on the table at the very beginning. In an employment dispute, for example, is plaintiff seeking a letter of recommendation? Does a party believe liquidated damages are needed to discourage disclosure of confidential terms? It is often easier to reach agreement on non-economic terms before addressing money.
If the dispute does not settle, I wanted to know counsel’s biggest concern. What are they most worried about? “What might keep you up at night? Are you worried about disclosure of proprietary business information, for example? Or public exposure of private or embarrassing internal conflicts or problems? Do you worry about dragging an important customer or client into the dispute?” Answers to these questions often bring out important risk topics to consider at the mediation table.
How are they getting along with the other side? Do the lawyers trust one another? Have personality conflicts aggravated the dispute or made settlement more difficult? What’s driving any hostility? Issues lurking beneath the surface – lawyers rubbing each other the wrong way, for example – can threaten progress if not identified early. And related: are there any other non-legal issues that might impact resolving this dispute the mediator should know about?
What do the advocates consider the biggest impediments to resolution? Do they have suggestions for neutralizing or ameliorating them, finessing or otherwise getting around them?
Whose turn is it to make the first move at the mediation table? I always ask whether the parties are willing to disclose the status of their negotiations during the joint pre-mediation conference call. The reason to ask with all lawyers present is that the parties do not agree in at least half the cases! Most lawyers believe that where there have been no pre-mediation negotiations, the plaintiff should make the first offer. Plaintiff brought the case and presumably knows what the dispute is worth.
Accordingly, plaintiff should start. Lawyers also believe that if one side made the last offer, the offeree should put the first number out at mediation. On occasion, a plaintiff lawyer may try to shift the first number burden onto the defense. I try to discourage that with the following points:
• Plaintiff going first is the natural order of things.
• If plaintiff tries forcing defendant to start, plaintiff’s counsel risks losing respect and credibility. And, regrettably, so does a mediator who goes along with the request.
• Defendants might disengage and leave the table.
• No plaintiff attorney in my experience has ever been happy with an opening offer where defendant was forced to go first.
• Finally, “anchoring” research suggests that the final settlement number is generally closer to the first number offered in a negotiation than to the second. In other words, plaintiffs get better results when they go first.
As noted above, during the joint pre-mediation conference call I use for process design and deadline setting, I encourage defense counsel to share boilerplate Final Settlement and Release of all Claims language with plaintiff’s counsel. Most promise to do so. If the document is shared and reviewed in advance, hours of negotiations over language after agreement is reached on dollars and terms can be avoided. The ex parte call provides an opportunity to remind counsel to make it happen. The hope is that exchanging final language gets counsel talking, sets the stage for productive negotiation and gives the parties a sense of optimism about a positive outcome. “Does plaintiff counsel have any problems with the language? Is it acceptable as written?
What changes, if any, are sought?”
I also recommend soliciting potential risk questions to ask in the other room. “You know the case better than I do. What do you consider the biggest risks the other side faces? What questions would you be asking if you were me?” If counsel is candid and willing to engage on this, I might also ask for a list of the toughest risk questions to ask their own client.
Does counsel need any additional information from the other side before they can mediate effectively? What do they need? Can I help obtain it for them on short notice? What’s been the hold up? If important discovery or document exchange is late, I did my best to obtain it for them.
Who needs to be present for each side for an agreement to be reached at the table? In my experience, when real decision-makers are not at the table, it is easy for them to reject final offers by telephone. They were not present to hear the risk questions, observe the reactions, or participate in the discussions that are part of the softening up process. Bringing someone up to speed can be challenging, especially if resistant to what they are hearing.
Is the defendant collectible? If defendant is claiming poverty or inability to pay a settlement, what evidence would be needed to accept the assertion as credible? For the party claiming poverty, I encouraged production of their books and records to demonstrate the credibility of their claim. Refusal to produce them adds fuels a plaintiff’s belief that the assertion of poverty is a pretense. I could often rely on experienced defense counsel to support the effort.
Are there any facts which the other side doesn’t have that might cause them to change their evaluation of the claim? What do you suppose those facts are and why don’t they have them?
How much has been incurred in attorney fees and costs to date? If counsel doesn’t have that information: “Are you willing and able to pull it together by the morning of mediation?” There are two reasons for this: First, overall costs and fees are an important consideration in determining whether to settle and on what terms. Second, a prevailing party may be entitled to recover fees and costs as in employment discrimination disputes. Precise amounts expended are very relevant to valuation.
Has counsel prepared a litigation budget if the matter doesn’t resolve at mediation? How much more is the litigation expected to cost? Has the client been informed? If the parties have not prepared a litigation budget – or it has been a long time since a budget was prepared: “Will you prepare a rough budget by the time of mediation so we can discuss potential fees and costs compared with the other side’s last and best offer?” I encourage them to include the cost of experts, if any; the preparation, drafting and argument of dispositive motions they might be considering; and how much additional discovery might be needed.
Has counsel analyzed the underlying needs and interests of their own client? In other words, what is driving this dispute? Are there external factors impacting motivation to settle? What are they? What about opposing party? What are their needs and interests? Does identification of needs and interests inform possible terms to include in their proposals to settle?
Are there any safety or danger issues we should know about? PPOs, threats, prior lawsuits, history of violent or threatening actions?
If mediating via Zoom, will counsel and client be in the same location? This information will help me recognize who is seeking admission to a Zoom session when parties seek to join the meeting.
Finally, are there any other issues they think need discussion?
Before hanging up, I clarified what we marked as confidential, if anything, and asked whether in retrospect anything else we discussed should be added to the protected list. “Here’s what I marked as confidential. Is there anything else we discussed you wouldn’t want me to disclose?”
Conclusion
The approach suggested here is designed to strengthen the mediator’s relationship with counsel, and gain additional trust and confidence in the mediator and the mediator’s process. At the conclusion of the call, advocates will have observed the mediator’s thorough preparation which should enhance confidence and trust. The questions help counsel recognize that the mediator’s goal is to help find a satisfactory resolution; and that the mediator is fair minded and capable of managing a safe, productive and useful process. By employing this ex parte tool as recommended, the mediator builds credibility and capital to overcome obstacles, build trust, improve communication and understanding and establish the foundation upon which the parties can reach a resolution of their dispute.
Check List
1. Explain confidentiality.
2. Do you have any ideas or suggestions for what a mediator might do to assist the parties in reaching an agreement?
3. Tell me about your client. How can I help you with your client?
4. Does your client have any non-economic needs or/ demands/terms?
5. If the case does NOT settle, what is your biggest fear/concern?
6. How are you getting along with the other side?
7. What do you consider the biggest impediments to settlement? Why has this case not settled?
8. What is the status of negotiations: whose turn is it to make the next move?
9. a. Was a proposed draft settlement agreement exchanged in advance?
b. Is it acceptable? What changes would you like to see, if any?
c. What are your thoughts on what a path to resolution might look like?
10. Do you have suggestions for questions I can ask in the other room that will help the other side appreciate the risks they face? How about such questions for YOUR client?
11. What can you tell me about the bargaining dynamics and personalities in the case? What non-legal issue should be on my radar screen?
12. Do you need any additional information from the other side in order to mediate effectively? What’s missing and why do you not have it yet?
13. Who needs to be present for the other side? Is there any problem with who will be there for YOUR side?
14. Have you done an asset check to determine whether the defendant is collectible?
15. Are there facts the other side might not have which could cause them to change their evaluation of the claim?
16. Litigation budget - done one; provided it to client? What are your costs to date? How much are the attorney fees to date?
17. Have you looked at the underlying needs and interests of your client? What are they? What do you think are the underlying needs and interests of the other side? What kinds of terms might be proposed to meet those needs and interests?
18. Are there safety or danger issues - PPOs, prior lawsuits, etc.?
19. If the mediation is via Zoom, will your client be at your office or will they join the meeting from their own location?
20. Are there any other issues you would like to discuss before we ring off?
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