Idaho Contractor Registration: Lessons from the Ward v. Bishop Decision
April 20, 2026 —
Tara Martens Miller - Snell & WilmerThe Idaho Supreme Court’s recent decision in Ward v. Bishop Constr., Ltd. Liab. Co., No. 51118, 2025 Ida. LEXIS 143 (Dec. 31, 2025) offers valuable guidance for contractors and construction attorneys navigating the Idaho Contractor Registration Act (ICRA). The December 2025 ruling clarifies critical questions about when and how defendants may raise contractor registration defenses, the weight of pretrial stipulations, and the consequences of procedural missteps in construction litigation. This article examines the key takeaways from the decision and offers practical actions for consideration by those working in Idaho’s construction industry.
The Facts Behind the Dispute
The case arose from a long-standing working relationship between cousins Joel Ward and Ren Bishop dating to the 1990s. Ward performed general construction work for Bishop Construction, LLC, including building, plumbing, electrical, framing, roofing, and siding work on projects in Idaho, Montana, and Wyoming. Bishop agreed to pay Ward $10 per hour, later increased to $12 per hour, plus one-way travel expenses. Between 2017 and 2019, Ward worked over 1,100 hours but was never paid, totaling $12,443.54 in claimed damages.
Read the full story...Reprinted courtesy of
Tara Martens Miller, Snell & WilmerMs. Miller may be contacted at
tmmiller@swlaw.com
Can Anything Supersede Excel in AEC?
April 27, 2026 —
Aarni Heiskanen - AEC BusinessIf there’s one piece of software that dominates the business world across industries, it’s Microsoft Excel. Can AI finally dethrone the mighty spreadsheet?
Memorable Spreadsheet Moments
Everyone has memorable spreadsheet moments. I have a few. For example, my then-architecture firm was involved in more than a dozen housing developments abroad. I developed an Excel workbook that took the required number of households as input and automatically generated a breakdown of buildings and their apartment types for AutoCAD. This was urban planning and architectural design done with a spreadsheet.
I also developed business software using Excel for project portfolio management. The prototype was later scaled into a commercial SaaS that is now used globally.
Another memorable moment was when a property owner told me their Excel file grew so large that it ran out of rows and columns. That must have been before 2007, when the maximum number of columns on a sheet was still just 256 and the maximum number of rows was 65,536. The current limits are 1,048,576 rows and 16,384 columns, which I hope no one will exceed.
Read the full story...Reprinted courtesy of
Aarni Heiskanen, AEC BusinessMr. Heiskanen may be contacted at
aec-business@aepartners.fi
CEO: Power Isn’t the Only Electrical Challenge for AI Data Centers
April 14, 2026 —
Francesco "Frio" Iorio - Engineering News-RecordEveryone knows that data centers are voracious consumers of electricity. In fact, the U.S. is currently scrambling to meet unprecedented levels of power demand not seen since
the early days of electrification and the widespread adoption of air conditioning.
Read the full story...Reprinted courtesy of
Francesco "Frio" Iorio, Engineering News-RecordENR may be contacted at
enr@enr.com
The Who/What/How of Sealing Plans for Architects and Engineers (Law Note)
March 03, 2026 —
Melissa Dewey Brumback - Construction Law in North CarolinaThe proper use of professional seals in North Carolina is critical. Failure to follow the prescribed requirements can
subject you or your Firm to a Board sanction.
Did you know that the NC Board of Architecture and the NC Engineering Board have jointly prepared a fairly straightforward document that can tell you exactly what you need to know about sealing of plans?
That document,
the “Seal Brochure” (pdf) is available for download. Every state’s regulations are a little different (thank you Federalism!) so it is worth reviewing with your staff at regular intervals, especially if you do work across state lines.
Read the full story...Reprinted courtesy of
Melissa Dewey Brumback, Ragsdale Liggett PLLCMs. Brumback may be contacted at
mbrumback@rl-law.com
Risks of Using an AI Chatbot for Legal Advice: Lessons from United States v. Heppner
April 08, 2026 —
Payne & Fears LLPImagine that you are an executive (who is not a lawyer) and are concerned about what your company plans to do is legal. You could call your lawyer who might bill you for the call. Or, you can ask your AI chatbot, such as Claude or ChatGPT, about the legal risk. The chatbot will likely compliment you on the incisive question, provide you with highly confident answer (that may or may not be right) and will not bill you on an hourly basis.
That is essentially what financial services executive Bradley Heppner did. It did not end well. A federal court recently ruled that Heppner’s chats with the AI tool Claude were not protected by attorney-client privilege or the work-product doctrine. That means that the other side (in this case, the federal government) could get access to his chatbot prompts, uploads and responses, and learn a great deal about, for example, whether Heppner knew what he was doing was illegal.
Read the full story...Reprinted courtesy of
Payne & Fears LLP
How to Properly Fill Out and Use the Unconditional Waiver and Release on Progress Payment Form Used in California Construction
December 22, 2025 —
William L. Porter - Porter Law GroupThis is the Second article in a series of four articles discussing how to properly fill out the four California construction releases described in California Civil Code 8132 – 8138.
Let me start by noting that in addition to practicing construction law for more than 35 years, I chaired the committee of California construction attorneys who revised those sections of the California Civil Code dealing with this release form and many other construction forms as part of Senate Bill 189 in 2010. I also wrote the first version of this release form and made it free to the public well before the new law took effect in 2012. With this background, let me note a few things about the Unconditional Waiver and Release on Progress Payment form to help you avoid mistakes that might prevent you from achieving the intended effect of the form or releasing claim rights to a greater extent than you intend.
Read the full story...Reprinted courtesy of
William L. Porter, Porter Law GroupMr. Porter may be contacted at
bporter@porterlaw.com
Lost in Translation: AEC Tech’s Missing Role
May 12, 2026 —
Aarni Heiskanen - AEC BusinessI once visited a construction site where the contractor’s headquarters had commissioned a tech company to build an on-site quality-inspection application. The developer had admitted to the site engineer that they had never set foot on a construction site before. The engineer showed me what he was actually using: his own phone camera and an Excel sheet. The new app did not map to how work actually happened on site.
This is not an isolated story. The vendor builds something technically coherent but operationally disconnected. The client, somewhere up the chain, had fallen in love with the idea of the solution before anyone had built an honest business case for it.
The result is a tool that gets demonstrated at a board meeting but isn’t used in the field.
Read the full story...Reprinted courtesy of
Aarni Heiskanen, AEC BusinessMr. Heiskanen may be contacted at
aec-business@aepartners.fi
Environmental Due Diligence - What's The Hold Up?
November 18, 2025 —
W. Tyler Lloyd - The Dispute ResolverConstruction projects do not occur overnight. Regardless of project size, projects take anywhere from months to years to design, build, and complete. Perhaps one portion of the construction project that is always subject to criticism, particularly on large infrastructure projects, is environmental review and the applicability of environmental laws, requiring specific environmental thresholds, and the National Environmental Policy Act (“NEPA”). Contractors are well aware of the timeline and potential impacts that NEPA review might have on a project, and many contractors and national groups have expressed a desire to ensure that NEPA does not interfere with or altogether block the deployment of large infrastructure projects.
On federal funded or ass
The Law Clinic Paves Way to the Digitalization of Built Environment ProcessesHousing-Related Spending Made Up Significant Portion of GDP in Fourth Quarter 2013Jury Could Have Found That Scissor Lift Manufacturer Should Have Included “Better” Safety FeaturesWashington Court of Appeals Narrows Arbitrator Authority in Construction DisputeNew Florida Bill Shortens Time for Construction-Defect LawsuitsPushing the Edge: Crews Carve Dam Out of Remote Turkish Mountains<
Surety’s Several Liability Under BondsLewis Brisbois Ranked Tier 1 Nationally for Insurance Law, Mass Tort/Class Actions Defense, Labor & Employment Litigation, and Environmental Law in 2024 Best Law Firms®Constructing a New American DreamContractors Battle Bitter Winters at $11.8B Site C Hydro Project in CanadaNew Safety Standards Issued by ASSE and ANSIPotential Problems with Cases Involving One Owner and Multiple ContractorsRecent Supreme Court Decision Could Have Substantial Impact on BuildersJohn Paulson’s $1 Billion Caribbean Empire Faces BetrayalClaims for Breach of Express Indemnity Clauses Subject to 10-Year Statute of LimitationsIs it the Dawning of the Age of Strict Products Liability for Contractors in California?Homeowners Sued for Failing to Disclose DefectsCalifornia Cracking down on Phony QualifiersBWB&O Partners are Recognized as 2022 AV Preeminent Attorneys by Martindale-Hubbell!The 2023 Term of the Supreme Court: Administrative and Regulatory Law RulingsTraub Lieberman Partner Lisa M. Rolle Wins Summary Judgment in Favor of Third-Party DefendantFirm Seeks to Squash Subpoena in Coverage CD CasePennsylvania Supreme Court Will Not Address Trigger for DEP Environmental Cleanup Action at This Time$24 Million Verdict Against Material Supplier Overturned Where Plaintiff Failed to Prove Supplier’s Negligence or Breach of Contract Caused an SB800 Violation Survey: Workers Lack Awareness of Potentially Hazardous NanomaterialsContractors Should Be Optimistic that the Best Value Tradeoff Process Will Be Employed by Civilian AgenciesAs of July 1, 2024, California Will Require Most Employers to Have a Written Workplace Violence Prevention Program (WVPP) and Training. Is Your Company Compliant?State Audit Questions College Construction Spending in LAPolicyholders' Coverage Checklist in Times of CoronavirusNew World to Demolish Luxury Hong Kong Towers in Major SetbackCoffee Beans, Mars and the 50 States: Civil Code 1542 Waivers and Latent DefectsImpairing Your Insurer’s Subrogation RightsNorristown, PA to Stop Paying Repair Costs for Defect-Ridden CondoSelected Environmental Actions Posted on the Fall 2018 Unified Agenda of Regulatory and Deregulator ActionsInsurer’s Attempt to Shift Cost of Defense to Another Insurer Found Void as to Public PolicyCongratulations 2016 DE, NJ, and PA Super Lawyers and Rising StarsExistence of “Duty” in Negligence Action is Question of LawFort Lauderdale Partner Secures Defense Verdict for Engineering Firm in High-Stakes Negligence CaseHomebuilders See Record Bearish Bets on Shaky RecoveryConstruction Managers, Are You Exposing Yourselves to Labor Law Liability?Governor Signs Permit Extension Bill Extending Permit Deadlines to One YearHousing Starts Plunge by the Most in Four YearsStart-up to Streamline Large-Scale Energy RenovationACEC Research Institute Releases New Engineering Industry ForecastQuick Note: Insurer Must Comply with Florida’s Claims Administration ActEleventh Circuit Finds No “Property Damage” Where Defective Component Failed to Cause Damage to Other Non-Defective ComponentsStop by BHA’s Booth at WCC and Support the Susan G. Komen FoundationConstruction Contract’s Scope of Work Should Be Written With ClarityIllinois Appellate Court Affirms Duty to Defend Construction Defect CaseNew Research Shows Engineering Firms' Impact on Economy, Continued Optimism on Business ClimateBattle of Experts Cannot Be Decided on Summary JudgmentNew York vs. Miami: The $50 Million Penthouse Battle From Zaha HadidRisk-Shifting Tactics for Construction ContractsReal Estate & Construction News Roundup (5/29/24) – Megaprojects on the Rise, Agency Guidance for CRE, and an Upbeat Forecast for Commercial Real Estate InvestmentNegligent Misrepresentation Claim Does Not Allege Property Damage, Barring CoverageWashington Trial Court Narrows Definition of First Party Claimant, Clarifies Available Causes of Action in Commercial Property Loss Context