Administrative Litigation
The Lansing administrative litigation attorneys at Fahey Schultz Burzych Rhodes are thoroughly familiar with and prepared to assist you if your legal issue involves an administrative agency, administrative or regulatory laws or administrative litigation. Representing municipalities, utilities, statutory authorities, and drain commissioners, our Okemos lawyers have encountered a number of state and federal law matters that require familiarity and cooperation with these state and federal agencies including appellate law.
We have been involved with or represented clients before the following agencies, among others:
- Federal Communications Commission
- Federal Elections Commission
- Federal Energy Regulatory Commission
- Federal Trade Commission
- Michigan Boundary Commission
- Michigan Department of Civil Rights
- Michigan Department of Community Health
- Michigan Department of Licensing & Regulatory Affairs
- Board of Accountancy
- Board of Architects
- Board of Professional Engineers
- Board of Real Estate Appraisers
- Board of Real Estate Brokers and Salespersons
- Board of Residential Builders
- Bureau of Commercial Services
- Bureau of Health Professionals
- Bureau of Health Services
- Corporation Division
- Office of Financial and Insurance Regulation
- Unemployment Insurance Agency
- Michigan Department of Natural Resources
- Michigan Department of Transportation
- Michigan Department of Treasury
- Michigan Employment Relations Commission
- Michigan Public Service Commission
- Michigan Tax Tribunal
- National Labor Relations Board
- State Tax Commission
- United States Equal Employment Opportunity Commission
- United States Patent and Trademark Office
Because of this depth of experience, our litigation attorneys are well prepared to handle a myriad of distinctive cases at both the initial and appellate stages of administrative law, such as: utility rate litigation; energy plan optimization; renewable energy plan cases; customer or citizen complaint cases; contract cases; employer wage and hour representation; employer representation in all stages of labor law, from the hiring and labor organizing through termination, collective bargaining, grievance, mediation, fact finding, arbitration hearings and unfair labor practice charges; creation and enforcement of trademarks; acquisition or transfer of liquor licensing; professional licensing; and all stages of property tax appeals, just to name a few.