
Michael Stutman
Articles
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Apr 23, 2024 |
feeds.feedblitz.com | Michael Stutman |Gary Strong |Elizabeth Napierkowski |Michael Rich
As part of the recent legislative package designed to reshape the landscape of affordable housing compliance, the New Jersey Legislature has also adopted in parallel a number of potential incentives and inducements for developers looking to produce the housing vitally necessary to solve New Jersey’s long-standing shortage of affordable housing.
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Apr 23, 2024 |
feeds.feedblitz.com | Charles Toutant |Michael Stutman |Colleen Murphy |Michael Rich
In the last five years, initially in 2019 and more recently as of January 2024, New Jersey has enacted major changes to the sheriff’s foreclosure sale process. The primary purpose, as expressly stated in the legislative history and reflected in the lion’s share of changes made, has been for increased protection for residential homeowners with mortgages on their primary residences. However, some of the changes also affect sheriff’s foreclosure sales of non-residential properties.
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Apr 23, 2024 |
feeds.feedblitz.com | Michael Stutman |Cameron MacLeod |Gary Strong |Elizabeth Napierkowski
Modular construction is not simply tract and pre-fabricated homes, but a growing portion of all sectors of the permanent construction industry, from multi-family to industrial to commercial. According to the Modular Building Institute, as noted in its 2023 “Permanent Modular Construction Report,” permanent modular construction exceeded $12 billion in North America in 2022—approximately 6% of all new construction—nearly tripling its share of 2.14% in 2015.
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Apr 23, 2024 |
feeds.feedblitz.com | Justin Henry |Colleen Murphy |Charles Toutant |Michael Stutman
Grammar is a curious thing. It has been a subject of debate from classrooms to coffeehouses and living rooms to law firms. Amateur and professional grammarians tend to fall into two categories: prescriptivists and descriptivists. Grammarians who fall into the prescriptivist camp believe the rules of grammar are etched in stone, never to be broken: Don’t split an infinitive. Never end a sentence with a preposition. “They” may be used only as a plural pronoun. Want to continue reading?
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