The Juvenile Justice and Children’s Rights Section annual CLE will be held April 1, 2022, from 9 a.m. to noon. You can attend in person or by live webcast. Register for the CLE here.
The CLE will consist of 3.0 MCLE hours, covering legislative changes in juvenile delinquency law, restorative justice, and family accountability and recovery court:
Chief Judge Elizabeth A. “Beth” Heath (North Carolina District Court for Judicial District 8, Kinston) will present on the Family Accountability and Recovery Court (FARC), which provides treatment, intensive care management, and judicial supervision to increase the likelihood of reunification of families in child welfare cases. Judge Heath has been the “driving force” behind FARC. Due to its success, FARC is now a nationally recognized model. In November 2021, it was selected by the National Center for State Court’s Rural Justice Collaborative (RJC) as one of nine Rural Innovation Sites that will serve as examples for other communities nationwide. Over the next three years, the RJC will work with FARC to create educational materials that will be featured on an online resource center, and will offer visits to FARC by leaders from other communities.
https://ncbarblogprod.wpengine.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/Blog-Header-1-1030x530.png00JuvenileJusticehttps://ncbarblogprod.wpengine.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/Blog-Header-1-1030x530.pngJuvenileJustice2022-03-23 09:49:252022-03-23 09:49:25Juvenile Justice and Children's Rights Section Annual CLE – April 1, 2022
Tina Hlabse has joined Ramseur Maultsby. Hlabse engages in employment litigation, counseling, training, and workers’ compensation defense. She has more than 20 years of experience in litigation and counseling. Hlabse previously served as General Counsel for the N.C. Department of Agriculture & Consumer Services and as a Special Deputy Attorney General with the Tort Claims section of the N.C. Department of Justice. Hlabse also worked in private practice. She graduated from Wake Forest University School of Law with a J.D. and from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, where she received a bachelor’s degree.
Daniel Goldstein Joins Bell and Howell
Daniel Goldstein has joined Bell and Howell as corporate counsel. Goldstein has prior experience in the areas of business law, intellectual property, litigation entertainment and sports law. He is a 2020 graduate of Campbell Law School, where he was a member of the Order of Old Kivett and received Book Awards for International Business and Criminal Procedure. He holds a B.A. from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, where he double majored in political science and peace, war and defense and minored in history.
Welcome to the first post of the Outside the Office blog post series! Have you been missing the opportunity to connect with fellow Corporate Counsel Section members? Are you curious about the 524 other members in our fabulous section? Here’s your opportunity to get to know each other Outside the Office. Read more
The Paralegal Division has partnered with the Family Law Section to hold a Pro Se Custody and Family Law Advice Clinic for residents of Wake County. This clinic is a pilot program, and while it is currently limited to the Wake County area, the hope is that it can eventually be expanded to other counties around the state several times per year. In order for an individual to be assisted in the clinic, the individual must be a resident of Wake County or the biological parent of a child/children who live in Wake County.
https://ncbarblogprod.wpengine.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/Blog-Header-1-1030x530.png00Paralegalshttps://ncbarblogprod.wpengine.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/Blog-Header-1-1030x530.pngParalegals2022-03-17 16:44:552022-03-17 16:44:55Volunteer Opportunity: NCBA Pro Se Custody and Family Law Advice Clinic
Robinson Bradshaw & Hinson, PA’s Blaine Sanders is not only committed to pro bono work in his own practice but in facilitating opportunities for others to serve as well. For over thirty-five years, Sanders has built a litigation practice focusing on commercial, real estate, employment, and sports & entertainment law, and he is a member of the NCBA’s Litigation and Employment sections. His pro bono practice, described by his colleagues as a “tremendous combination of pro bono work,” spans landlord/tenant matters, expungement cases, non-profit work, and more.
Section 501(a) provides an exemption from income taxation for certain organizations. For decades, the IRS has provided a procedure allowing multiple organizations to receive tax exemption under the same umbrella central organization. Such group exemption process was instituted to relieve the IRS from the burden of individually processing a large number of applications for organizations that are affiliated and operate for the same purpose.
The central organization receives a group exemption letter (“GEL”) granting tax-exempt status not only to itself but also to all of its subordinate organizations. The subordinate organizations are not required to provide individual documentation supporting their exemption. Instead, the central organization attests that the subordinates qualify and provides the information required by the IRS. Common examples of group exemptions are churches, fraternal societies, and other central-hub-style organizations.
https://ncbarblogprod.wpengine.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/Blog-Header-1-1030x530.png00TAXhttps://ncbarblogprod.wpengine.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/Blog-Header-1-1030x530.pngTAX2022-03-11 10:12:112022-03-11 10:23:45New Proposed Rules for Group Tax Exemptions
I spent this past summer as a legal intern in the Office of the Federal Public Defender for the Eastern District of North Carolina. I have always been interested in public interest, as well as in the role of defense attorneys, and thanks to the $1,000 scholarship provided by the North Carolina Bar Association’s Government & Public Sector Section, I was able to gain invaluable experience in both public interest and in criminal defense.
https://ncbarblogprod.wpengine.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/Blog-Header-1-1030x530.png00GovernmentandPublicSectorhttps://ncbarblogprod.wpengine.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/Blog-Header-1-1030x530.pngGovernmentandPublicSector2022-03-10 17:00:062022-03-10 17:00:06NCBA Government & Public Sector Section Scholarship Experience
You may have seen that nominations for the North Carolina Bar Association’s Legal Practice Hall of Fame are now open and are set to close on March 25, 2022. All of you are busy and have other things to do, but I want to encourage you take a little time to consider this opportunity to nominate a lawyer who meets the criteria for this honor. One thing I can promise you is that it will mean more than you can know to that person – and to his or her family, friends, and colleagues.
https://ncbarblogprod.wpengine.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/Blog-Header-1-1030x530.png00Senior Lawyershttps://ncbarblogprod.wpengine.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/Blog-Header-1-1030x530.pngSenior Lawyers2022-03-09 13:14:122022-03-09 13:14:12Nominate a Deserving Colleague for the Legal Practice Hall of Fame Award!
The Military & Veterans Law (MVL) Section is proud to recognize professor John W. Brooker as the 2021 recipient of the Kirk Warner Award for Distinguished Service to Military and Veterans. This award recognizes an individual who has provided not only outstanding service to military members and/or veterans, but who also encourages others to do the same.
Brooker’s selfless devotion to military members and veterans was seamlessly borne out of his own selfless service to this nation. Brooker is a 20-year Army veteran who currently serves as the director of the Military and Veterans Law Clinic at the University of North Carolina (UNC) School of Law. He also teaches a variety of courses in the national security law field. Brooker is a 2003 graduate of UNC School of Law.
https://ncbarblogprod.wpengine.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/Blog-Header-1-1030x530.png00MilitaryandVeteranshttps://ncbarblogprod.wpengine.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/Blog-Header-1-1030x530.pngMilitaryandVeterans2022-03-04 15:22:082022-03-04 15:22:08Military and Veterans Law Section Honors John Brooker
Having been involved in a fair number of due diligence reviews over the course of my career, I can’t imagine there is a single due diligence checklist that doesn’t include an examination of key employment agreements. And anyone tasked with performing that assessment would certainly check to ensure those agreements include post-employment restrictions for those key employees. Having litigated employment disputes for over 20 years, however, I’ve come to the realization that going just a few steps further than what may be found on the typical diligence list can prevent a lot of headaches, distractions, and costs that so often occur post-transaction.
Juvenile Justice and Children’s Rights Section Annual CLE – April 1, 2022
Juvenile Justice & Children's RightsBy Michelle F. Lynch
The Juvenile Justice and Children’s Rights Section annual CLE will be held April 1, 2022, from 9 a.m. to noon. You can attend in person or by live webcast. Register for the CLE here.
The CLE will consist of 3.0 MCLE hours, covering legislative changes in juvenile delinquency law, restorative justice, and family accountability and recovery court:
Chief Judge Elizabeth A. “Beth” Heath (North Carolina District Court for Judicial District 8, Kinston) will present on the Family Accountability and Recovery Court (FARC), which provides treatment, intensive care management, and judicial supervision to increase the likelihood of reunification of families in child welfare cases. Judge Heath has been the “driving force” behind FARC. Due to its success, FARC is now a nationally recognized model. In November 2021, it was selected by the National Center for State Court’s Rural Justice Collaborative (RJC) as one of nine Rural Innovation Sites that will serve as examples for other communities nationwide. Over the next three years, the RJC will work with FARC to create educational materials that will be featured on an online resource center, and will offer visits to FARC by leaders from other communities.
Read more
Checking In: March 22, 2022
Checking InCompiled by Jessica Junqueira
Ramseur Maultsby LLP Welcomes Tina Hlabse
Daniel Goldstein Joins Bell and Howell
Outside the Office: Featuring Greg Higgins
Corporate CounselWelcome to the first post of the Outside the Office blog post series! Have you been missing the opportunity to connect with fellow Corporate Counsel Section members? Are you curious about the 524 other members in our fabulous section? Here’s your opportunity to get to know each other Outside the Office. Read more
Volunteer Opportunity: NCBA Pro Se Custody and Family Law Advice Clinic
Paralegal DivisionBy the Paralegal Division Pro Bono Committee
The Paralegal Division has partnered with the Family Law Section to hold a Pro Se Custody and Family Law Advice Clinic for residents of Wake County. This clinic is a pilot program, and while it is currently limited to the Wake County area, the hope is that it can eventually be expanded to other counties around the state several times per year. In order for an individual to be assisted in the clinic, the individual must be a resident of Wake County or the biological parent of a child/children who live in Wake County.
Read more
Pro Bono Spotlight: Blaine Sanders
Pro Bono CommitteeBlaine Sanders
By Allison Standard Constance
Robinson Bradshaw & Hinson, PA’s Blaine Sanders is not only committed to pro bono work in his own practice but in facilitating opportunities for others to serve as well. For over thirty-five years, Sanders has built a litigation practice focusing on commercial, real estate, employment, and sports & entertainment law, and he is a member of the NCBA’s Litigation and Employment sections. His pro bono practice, described by his colleagues as a “tremendous combination of pro bono work,” spans landlord/tenant matters, expungement cases, non-profit work, and more.
Read more
New Proposed Rules for Group Tax Exemptions
Tax SectionSection 501(a) provides an exemption from income taxation for certain organizations. For decades, the IRS has provided a procedure allowing multiple organizations to receive tax exemption under the same umbrella central organization. Such group exemption process was instituted to relieve the IRS from the burden of individually processing a large number of applications for organizations that are affiliated and operate for the same purpose.
The central organization receives a group exemption letter (“GEL”) granting tax-exempt status not only to itself but also to all of its subordinate organizations. The subordinate organizations are not required to provide individual documentation supporting their exemption. Instead, the central organization attests that the subordinates qualify and provides the information required by the IRS. Common examples of group exemptions are churches, fraternal societies, and other central-hub-style organizations.
Read more
NCBA Government & Public Sector Section Scholarship Experience
Government & Public SectorI spent this past summer as a legal intern in the Office of the Federal Public Defender for the Eastern District of North Carolina. I have always been interested in public interest, as well as in the role of defense attorneys, and thanks to the $1,000 scholarship provided by the North Carolina Bar Association’s Government & Public Sector Section, I was able to gain invaluable experience in both public interest and in criminal defense.
Read more
Nominate a Deserving Colleague for the Legal Practice Hall of Fame Award!
Senior Lawyers DivisionBy
Dan Hartzog
You may have seen that nominations for the North Carolina Bar Association’s Legal Practice Hall of Fame are now open and are set to close on March 25, 2022. All of you are busy and have other things to do, but I want to encourage you take a little time to consider this opportunity to nominate a lawyer who meets the criteria for this honor. One thing I can promise you is that it will mean more than you can know to that person – and to his or her family, friends, and colleagues.
Read more
Military and Veterans Law Section Honors John Brooker
Military & Veterans LawThe Military & Veterans Law (MVL) Section is proud to recognize professor John W. Brooker as the 2021 recipient of the Kirk Warner Award for Distinguished Service to Military and Veterans. This award recognizes an individual who has provided not only outstanding service to military members and/or veterans, but who also encourages others to do the same.
Brooker’s selfless devotion to military members and veterans was seamlessly borne out of his own selfless service to this nation. Brooker is a 20-year Army veteran who currently serves as the director of the Military and Veterans Law Clinic at the University of North Carolina (UNC) School of Law. He also teaches a variety of courses in the national security law field. Brooker is a 2003 graduate of UNC School of Law.
Read more
Don’t Overlook Key Employment Agreement Provisions During Due Diligence
Business LawHaving been involved in a fair number of due diligence reviews over the course of my career, I can’t imagine there is a single due diligence checklist that doesn’t include an examination of key employment agreements. And anyone tasked with performing that assessment would certainly check to ensure those agreements include post-employment restrictions for those key employees. Having litigated employment disputes for over 20 years, however, I’ve come to the realization that going just a few steps further than what may be found on the typical diligence list can prevent a lot of headaches, distractions, and costs that so often occur post-transaction.
Read more