About Beth Taylor
Beth Taylor has been a senior editor for Super Lawyers since 2003, and has won dozens of awards for headline-writing and editing throughout her career. Previously, she was an editor and covered courts for The Orlando Sentinel. She also worked for go2net and KIRO-TV in Seattle, where she wrote for and edited their websites. In addition, Beth edited The Kitsap Business Journal and Media Inc. Beth has written travel books, including Around Seattle With Kids for Fodor’s and Seattle Day By Day for Frommer’s, and online travel guides for Google. Her travel writing has appeared in publications including the Chicago Tribune and the San Francisco Chronicle. Beth has a B.A. in communications/journalism and a master’s degree in political science.
Articles written by Beth Taylor
Nevertheless, She Persisted
Fern Steiner brings her labor law tenacity to two local boardsAfter digesting the works of legal masterminds F. Lee Bailey and Louis Nizer, Fern Steiner decided to follow in their footsteps. She was 8. That resolve wavered only once in her life—when she went to work as a hospital lab technician after college. But the job wound up not only reaffirming her original ambition but also pointing her toward a specific practice area. “It was where I had my first labor dispute,” she explains. “They were assigning the evening and night shifts as a …
Class Action Hastens MLB’s Extension of Safety Netting
Texas attorney Bob Hilliard calls suit ‘the crack in the dam’When the last Major League Baseball teams recently announced that they, too, would extend the safety netting behind the dugouts at their ballparks, no one was happier than Robert Hilliard. The Corpus Christi attorney, who practices class action and consumer law at Hilliard Martinez Gonzales, was representing season-ticket holders in a lawsuit accusing MLB of failing to protect fans. The plaintiffs had seats along the first and third base lines, past the netting. In 2015, MLB recommended that …
(R)IP Address
What happens to our e-pulse after death? Estate planning Anne Coventry is on the caseOnline banking, cloud-based family photos, automated electronic payments: all convenient benefits of the digital age. For the users. Less so for their heirs. “The way we used technology during life to make our lives easier can actually complicate how we wrap up a person’s financial affairs after death,” says Anne Coventry, an estate planning attorney with Pasternak & Fidis in Bethesda. With a dad who spent more than 20 years as a public defender, Coventry eventually found her way …
Tackling an Epidemic
Cleveland’s Stephen Walters focuses on fighting the opioid crisisWhen Stephen E. Walters began hearing—more and more frequently—about the growing crisis of opioid addiction, the managing partner at Reminger in Cleveland, Ohio, decided he couldn’t read another tragic headline without stepping up to help. “Deaths from opioid overdoses nationwide have skyrocketed in the past decade,” notes Walters. “There are so many alarming statistics, it is hard to cite just one study. Most recently I read that at least 4,149 Ohioans died from unintentional drug …
Legal Community Mourns Attorney Who Helped Shape Seattle
Melody McCutcheon’s projects ranged from Safeco Field to the Yesler Terrace housing redevelopmentMelody B. McCutcheon, who passed away unexpectedly on Nov. 14 at age 64, was a key player in shaping much of the landscape in Seattle and environs. “Probably the most well-known one was Safeco Field,” said Gary Fallon, a banking attorney and managing partner at Hillis Clark Martin & Peterson, where McCutcheon practiced land use/zoning and environmental law for 29 years. “The Mariners loved her, and she did all the work associated with getting that permitted and built. She did a lot of …
Robert Hilliard Cries Foul Against Major League Baseball
The Texas attorney is handling a lawsuit that would force ball clubs to do more to protect fansWhen a 1-year-old girl was hit in the face by a 105 mph line drive at Yankee Stadium Sept. 20, news of the incident was sobering—but hardly unexpected—to Robert C. Hilliard. The Corpus Christi attorney is handling a California lawsuit seeking class action status on behalf of season ticket holders who bought seats along first and third base lines, past the netting. The suit accuses the MLB of failing to protect fans. “The purpose of the class action was to compel MLB to change its rules …
Hilarie Bass: Hitting the Ground Running
The new ABA president is tackling issues ranging from gender equity to fake newsTrue to form, Miami business litigator Hilarie Bass has wasted no time getting down to business in her new role as head of the ABA. The co-president of global firm Greenberg Traurig, who began her term as Bar president on Aug. 15, is already addressing issues ranging from gender equity at law firms to homelessness among youth to reforms in legal education to the shrinking access to justice. She’s even taken on fake news. First, gender equity. Bass is launching a nationwide study to find out …
How To Avoid a Fence Dispute in My State: FAQs
Fences can be a good thing for neighborly relations. If you live in a residential area, a fence can identify property boundaries and act as a backdrop to landscaping. Fences also keep outdoor pets and kids safe while keeping wanderers out. If you live in a more rural area, a landowner's fence can provide boundary markers, as well as protect and contain free-range livestock. When you have a boundary fence that runs along the boundary between your property and your neighbor, there are …
Policyholders Accuse Insurer of Underpaying Their Claims
San Francisco insurance-coverage lawyer Ivo Labar is spearheading a class action against The HartfordSome 18,000 policyholders are suing their insurer, The Hartford, in a breach-of-contract class action that accuses the company of systematically underpaying property-damage claims filed by California residents. Ivo Labar, who practices insurance-coverage law at Kerr & Wagstaffe in San Francisco, is the lead attorney in the case, which he is handling along with colleague Michael von Loewenfeldt, an appellate attorney at the same firm. The suit, Labar says, claims that The Hartford is …
'Adopt-a-Nazi' Program Takes on White Supremacists
San Francisco attorney Cody Harris turned to GoFundMe to counteract a planned extremist rallyWhen Cody Harris heard that a rally planned for San Francisco was likely to draw a crowd similar to the neo-Nazi/white supremacist march that ended in tragedy in Charlottesville, Virginia, he wanted to respond in a way that would be both productive and nonviolent. His solution: “Adopt-a-Nazi (Not Really).” “I came across a story regarding a small town in Germany, Wunsiedel, that decided to combat an annual neo-Nazi march through town by donating money to an anti-extremist group for …
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