Dallas Gerstle Snelson, LLP Austin

Workers with face mask protect from outbreak of Corona Virus Disease 2019.

Yes, We’re Open: 3 Tips For Reopening The Physical Workplace

Gut-wrenching as it has been to close non-essential businesses or to keep essential businesses running while non-essential workers work remotely, it is proving equally, if not more, gut-wrenching to determine how to invite employees back into the physical workplace after the curve flattens and the pandemic subsides. What guidelines exist on reopening workplaces?  How do employers manage employee safety concerns while regaining some sense of back-to-business?  Will back-to-business ever return to pre-pandemic business as normal? Last week, the White House released federal guidelines for “Op
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3 Considerations For Layoffs In The COVID-19 Era

The numbers are at once astounding and depressing.  Over 22 million Americans have filed for unemployment between mid-March and mid-April 2020.  While the construction industry in Texas has been spared the worst largely due to being classified an Essential Service, it is not immune from the pandemic or rough economic times.  Layoffs in the COVID-19 era raises novel employment issues. Below are 3 employment considerations in the COVID-19 era. 1.     Don’t Forget the Alamo FFCRA FFCRA, a terrible acronym if one ever existed, stands for the newly enacted Families First Coronavirus Respon
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Say It Ain’t So: Pay-If-Paid And COVID-19

Although the economic effects of COVID-19 may be felt for many years to come, its effect on payment for ongoing construction may be more immediate.  What is the general contractor’s obligation to pay subcontractors when the project owner’s funds run out? Bluntly, it depends. One important consideration is whether the subcontract agreement contains a pay-if-paid clause.     1.    What is Pay-If-Paid? A pay-if-paid clause, more eloquently called a contingent payment clause, requires the owner to pay the general contractor before the general contractor has to pay its subcontractor. 
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We Did Not See That Coming: COVID-19 And Meeting Of The Minds

Very few people in the construction industry saw the novel coronavirus coming or reaching pandemic stage at the time they entered into their contracts.  Now that we are in full pandemic mode, with layers of federal, county and city guidelines or requirements for worksite safety, how does not seeing the pandemic impact your contractual obligations?  1.     Let’s Meet Texas, like most other states, requires proof of certain elements for a legally binding contract to exist.  One of the elements required for contract formation is a meeting of the minds of the contracting parties. What is
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May You Live In Interesting Times: Jobsite Safety During The COVID-19 Pandemic

With stay-at-home orders in effect in various cities and counties throughout Texas, what are reasonable precautions to keep workers safe from a coronavirus infection or to reduce the spread of the virus?   Although Governor Abbott clarified in Executive Order GA 14 that construction is an Essential Service in Texas and, therefore, exempt from stay-at-home orders, he did not set out a uniform set of requirements or recommendations for jobsite safety to reduce transmission of the novel coronavirus. To determine whether requirements exist and, if so, what they are for a specific project, the st