While Florida doctors continue to argue that they are paying too much for medical malpractice insurance, there are growing signs that the insurance market that was left for dead in 2003 is making a
THE UNITED States, it has been said, is a nation of immigrants. For more than 200 years, people from around the world have come to America to start new lives. Immigration continues to reshape the county in the 21st century; and as Dave Mannato, an
The following article is based on Ms. Allison's presentation at the ASCnet Conference, which was held in October in Nashville, Tenn. RAISE YOUR HAND if you've been trained in the art of negotiation. It's not a skill taught in school. You learn it in
Unless you're considerably past your wonder years or are a devotee of 1970s news milestones, you probably don't remember the name Spiro T. Agnew. Yet, if not for a certain court pleading back in the
Contractors are performing industrial cleanup and street cleaning--and pre-Katrina, pollution policies were in place, available and affordable, reported Michael Tubbs, vice president and construction
We all have one that leaps to mind: a flood at a convention center days before a major event, an acid spill at a semi-conductor facility in the middle of a production run, or a fire at a toy factory
A GREAT variety of businesses face environmental exposures. Some are obvious; some are not. Agents and brokers can distinguish themselves from their competitors and prove their professionalism to their clients by identifying these exposures and
WHEN new residents settle in the Outer Banks islands, flood insurance is usually the farthest thing from their minds. They come here to clear their heads of such worries in the cobalt blue waters of the North Carolina coast. Drawn to the