Author Archives: Michael Froomkin

Voldemort Sold FL State Planes. But Was It Legal?

Gov. Voldermort decided to emulate Sarah Palin and sell the Florida state planes. Now it turns out there’s some reason to doubt whether the sale was legal. The Buzz reports on a demand by a Florida State Senate budget honcho for Voldermort to name names, show me “legal authority” for state plane sale.

Some state legislators are also questioning whether Voldermort has the authority to unilaterally refuse federal money for the high-speed rail project given that the state legislature approved the project last year.

It remains unclear if Voldermort simply doesn’t understand concept of bicameralism and presentment and thinks that since he is the CEO he can do what he likes, or if instead he has made a calculated (or instinctual) decision that Florida will respond to Peronist rule.

Posted in Florida | Comments Off on Voldemort Sold FL State Planes. But Was It Legal?

Obama’s Rope-a-Dope Strategy

This TalkLeft article articulates something I’ve been worrying about for a while. (See How To Lose An Argument In Order To, Maybe, Win An Election.) The basic idea is that Obama is playing to lose on the budget and the economy, and maybe even social security. The idea is to goad the Republicans into making outrageous demands by signaling preemptive surrender to them.

When the GOP seizes on the red meat being trailed in front of them and enacts their plans, it causes pain.   The plan then is to blame them for all the pain, collect lots of campaign money from Main Street, and get re-elected.

I hope this is wrong, but where is the evidence for that proposition?

The cheerfulish form of this theory is that if you have a weak hand all you can do is get the other side to overplay theirs in order to spark a reaction that will strengthen your hand; i.e. the is just the sort of long game that great n-dimensional chess players engage in.  But it’s not a cheerful process, and in a world of path-dependence lots can go wrong on the way.

Posted in 2012 Election, Econ & Money | 7 Comments

We’ve Hired Susan Bandes

Looks like the cat is out of the bag: Brian Leiter reports, accurately, that leading crimlaw scholar (and Jotwell Criminal Law Section Contributing Editor) Susan Bandes is moving from DePaul to Miami Law. I understand she turned out a chaired offer at another law school in favor of us. Yay!

Here’s Susan Bandes’s bio page.

Posted in Jotwell, U.Miami | Comments Off on We’ve Hired Susan Bandes

Spot the Difference

Headline on front page of Miami Herald, Sunday February 20, 2011

The curse of negative home equity:

Hundreds of thousands of South Floridians are underwater on their mortgages, which could have profound impact on the region’s economic recovery, or lack of.

Headline on front page of Miami Herald, Monday, February 21, 2011:

Miami boat, art shows during Presidents’ Day weekend point to a brighter economy

As thousands pack this weekend’s boat and art shows, and fill hotels and restaurants in South Florida, all signs point to an economy on the upswing.

“[A]ll signs point to an economy on the upswing”???

It’s hard to see the headline on the fluff piece in today’s paper — and its placement as the lead story top of the fold — as anything other than a corrective for yesterday’s serious journalism which was a solid article and a welcome antidote to the Herald’s generally boosterish coverage of the local businesses that advertise in it.

The actual article today is a perfectly standard feature story on the Boat Show. It’s the unwarranted headline and the ridiculous placement on a day when revolutions continue in the Middle East and the US hurtles towards a government shutdown that make me suspect the editors.

Posted in Econ & Money: Mortgage Mess, The Media | 2 Comments

Interesting Things Online Today

Posted in Linkorama | Comments Off on Interesting Things Online Today

The Paperless Office (Like it Or Not)

The Vice Dean has sent round a memo announcing that in aid of forthcoming office construction projects (we’re hiring a lot of people and they do have to sit somewhere) all faculty file cabinets in common areas are to be taken away, and we must empty them forthwith — in the next four weeks or so (one of which I will be away).  According to reports of a meeting I missed because I was in New York, we may keep the files in our office, or the law school will scan them for us, or if we box them up it will transport the boxes to our home or another location of our choice.  Or of course, if we prefer, we may instead dispose of our files, for which purpose the law school has suggestively positioned large gray plastic dumpsters on wheels in highly visible locations, one partly blocking the entrance to my suite of offices.  The law school kindly promises to empty it as often as needed.

I am a professional pack rat, so I have *a lot* of files in cabinets in our storeroom and cabinets in our common areas. At least two large and wide vertical file cabinets, and a handful of small traditional file cabinets too.

I suppose I’ll have to spend a few hours doing triage on it all.  Perhaps a bit can be thrown away.  Perhaps a good fraction can be scanned, although I wonder how they will name the files in a way that makes them easy to use. And no one has said anything about OCR, so I imagine the resulting files will be inefficient.  Some of the older files, are primarily copies of articles or cases, and the main reason for keeping them is that they serve as a reference list.  Those files would be best if they could be converted into lists that hyperlink to the online versions of the material, but that would take trained labor willing to be bored.  I’m not sure we have that around in sufficient quantity; and I already have several other things I want my research assistant to do in the limited time I’m willing to distract her from studying.

But, at present either I’m going to the paperless office or I will have an office so full of paper (in hard-to-access boxes) that no student, and perhaps not even I, will be able to get in there.

Then again, the law school did say they would transport the boxed files to the location of my choice. Perhaps I should suggest the Vice Dean’s office?

Photo Credit: Mrs Magic.

Posted in Law School, U.Miami | 1 Comment