C-Course Brochure Mockup

Cosponsored by Smithsonian Institution

Legal Issues in Museum Administration 2022

In-Person Course | Webcast

DATE

Washington

CLE

Total 60-minute hours: 15 including 1.0 ethics
credit and 1.0 elimination of bias*

Total 50-minute hours: 18 credits, including
1.2 ethics credit and 1.2 elimination of
bias*

*depending on state requirements in MCLE jurisdictions.


(See CLE/CPE Credit below for state CLE and/or CPE credit details.)


This program is cosponsored by:
Smithsonian

Why You Should Attend

We’re
back!  After a two year in-person hiatus, we invite you to reunite with
your colleagues at this unique educational experience – a conference known
for its collegial environment and industry-shaping guidance.

 

Museums, libraries, and cultural institutions of all sizes face significant
institutional demands and novel issues in light of the changing public health
landscape, including how best to adapt to an increasing digital world, address labor
and workforce changes, and engage in meaningful diversity, equity, and inclusion
efforts.  With esteemed faculty that includes museum in-house counsel, outside
counsel with specialized expertise, and museum directors, attendees will gain
knowledge from which to draw upon for years.  For the past 50 years, the Legal
Issues in Museum Administration conference has been the annual event to
attend for focused instruction on the core legal and business issues facing the
museum, library, and cultural institution community.

 

So join us in 2022 – in person or on the web.  Your attendance,
regardless of format, will be a significant investment in your professional
work for years to come!

 

What You Will Learn

Celebrating its 50th
anniversary, this year’s Legal Issues in Museum Administration conference will both
reflect on how museum lawyering has evolved and look to its future.  Featured
sessions include instruction on this year’s most important legal issues, including:

 

    Cryptocurrency and NFTs

    Recent developments in restitution and repatriation

    Digital collections

    Donor advised funds and other hot topics in philanthropy

    Remote work arrangements

    Virtual museum programming

    Fair use updates for museum professionals

    Visitor policies: COVID-19 specific policies, managing unruly
    visitors, and more!
     

    In-person attendees can tailor their learning experience by selecting break-out
    sessions on the second day of programming.

     

Bring a colleague and SAVE!
Register for the in-person course at full price, and the second registrant for this
course saves 40%. Or register as a group for the webcast and save up to 35% (click here for more
details). Click “Register as a Group” to register at these savings. (Valid on new
registrations only; discounts may not be combined.)

 

Health and Safety: Your health
and safety matter to ALI CLE.  Working with the venues for our programs, we
will comply with all federal, state, and local public regulations and guidelines
regarding public safety for our in-person attendees.  In-person attendees will
be required to upload proof of full vaccination in advance of this course and wear a
mask during meeting events.  Click here for more
information about ALI CLE’s health and safety guidelines for in-person programs.

Study Materials

Course materials will be available in electronic format for download the week
before and during the course. Print materials will not be distributed. All
registrants are advised to bring portable devices to the course to view the
course materials, including updates.

 

SCHOLARSHIP ASSISTANCE

A limited number of full tuition scholarships for the in-person course and
webcast are available to those who cannot attend without financial support.
Persons needing scholarship assistance should submit a statement justifying
their scholarship request and a resume to Museums Scholarships at
limaschol@ali-cle.org. Scholarships are awarded based on professional relevance
and financial need. Applications must be received by January 31, 2022.





For sponsorship inquiries, please contact Dara
Lovitz
.

Schedule


  • All
    times Eastern

     

    WEDNESDAY, MARCH 23, 2022

    8:00 am   Registration and Continental Breakfast

    8:50 am   Administrative Remarks – ALI CLE Staff

     

    WEBCAST SEGMENT A

    8:55 am   Introductory Remarks Smithsonian
    Office of General Counsel

     

    9:10 am   50 Years of Legal Issues in Museum
    Administration
    Meghan Berroya, Sharon Cott, Lauryn
    Guttenplan, and Marsha Shaines

    A brief history of the conference and the evolution of museum lawyering.

     

    9:45 am    Keynote – The Future of Museums,
    Libraries, and Collecting Institutions
    Kevin Young

     

    10:15 am   Refreshment Break

     

    10:30 am   Cryptocurrencies, Non-Fungible Tokens
    (NFTs) and the Blockchain: What are They and Why Should Museums
    Care?
    Jeffrey Blair, Sarah Odenkirk, and Yayoi
    Shionoiri

    This panel will provide an overview of the continually evolving
    landscape of NFTs and their underlying blockchain technology, and the
    myriad legal issues raised by proposed donations of NFTs and
    cryptocurrency, investments in digital assets, accessioning NFTs into
    collections and anticipating other applications of blockchain technology
    to the work of museums.

     

    11:30 am    Providing Precious Pixels: Managing
    Museum Digital Collections
    – Greg Cram, Eryn Starun,
    and Adine Varah

    Digital technologies are not only transforming the way museums share
    works with the public, they are also expanding the types of works that
    museums acquire. From expanding access to cutting edge accessions,
    digital collections create new opportunities as well as new challenges.
    This panel will cover both legal and practical issues relating to
    dissemination, use, storage, and collection of digital works.

     

    12:30 pm   Box Lunch Event

     

    WEBCAST SEGMENT B

    1:45 pm   Litigation Update for Museum
    Professionals
    – Stephen Clark

    Discussion and analysis of recent litigation of interest to the museum
    community, including intellectual property, artists’ rights, donor
    issues, authenticity, ownership/restitution/repatriation, First
    Amendment and tax matters.

     

    2:45 pm   Virtual Museum
    Programming 
    – Michael Costanzo, Larry Dubinski,
    and Terry Vento

    Legal and practical
    considerations involving hybrid events; digital programming across a
    variety of platforms; and ADA compliance considerations, illustrated
    with a case study discussion

    Virtual events: Public,
    private, live-streamed, or recorded, and the implications for
    performers and speakers, licensed content and music

    The pandemic’s impact on
    virtual programing for museums, including the challenges, the
    concerns of return on investment (ROI) and the opportunity of
    broader engagement

     

    3:45 pm Refreshment Break

     

    4:00 pm Remote Work Arrangements – Danee Gaines
    Adams, Jaye Calhoun, and Sarah Ebel

    Remote work arrangement
    trends emerging from the pandemic

    Tax and business
    registration implications of having employees in other states and
    abroad

    Privacy and information
    security considerations in a remote work environment

    Drafting remote work
    policies that address legal issues and employee concerns

     

    5:00 pm   Adjournment for the day

     

    6:00 pm   Reception – To be announced.

     

    THURSDAY, MARCH 24, 2022

    7:45 am   Continental Breakfast

     

    WEBCAST SEGMENT C

    8:30 am   Fair Use Laws: Legal and Practical
    Implications
    Greg Cram, Simon Frankel, and Lauryn
    Guttenplan

    Overview of recent fair use
    cases and their implications for museums

    Fair use in an increasingly
    digital world

    Best practices for museums
    in using and licensing protected material

     

    9:30 am   What’s New in Restitution and
    Repatriation
    – Meghan Delaney Berroya, L. Eden Burgess,
    Kevin Gover, and Channah Norman

    Museums and other collecting institutions are increasingly wrestling
    with questions of ethical returns and repatriation, including cases
    decided by the Supreme Court, questions related to the return of
    African-American human remains, the widening trend of returning Benin
    Bronzes to Nigeria, repatriation efforts by Native American tribes, and
    issues related to the Army’s significant artifact collection.

     

    10:30 am  Refreshment Break

     

    10:45 am   Donor Advised Funds and Other Hot Topics in
    Philanthropy
    Carlos Byrne, Michael Cooney, and H.
    Sujin Kim

    Creative uses of DAFs and
    practical tips

    Proposed DAF regulatory
    efforts at the state level

    The pending ACE Act Recent
    litigation How to address donors seeking to obtain benefits in
    exchange for DAF grants

     

    11:45 am Lunch on your own

     

    WEBCAST SEGMENT D

    1:00 pm   Employment Update: Mandates, AI, and More,
    Oh My
    – Jocelyn Cuttino and Dave Larson

    Vaccine litigation update,
    including religious accommodations

    Use of artificial
    intelligence in hiring

    Non-COVID-related employment
    law updates

     

    2:00 pm   Refreshment Break

     

    2:15 pm   Breakout Sessions

     

    Surprise! Managing Unexpected Bequests**– H. Sujin
    Kim, Stephen K. Urice, and George Karibjanian

    Considerations in accepting
    or declining unexpected testamentary gifts

    Navigating estate and trust
    distributions

    Working with trustees,
    executors, and a decedent’s family

     

    Visitor Policies: Guidance for Protecting Visitors, Staff, and
    Collections
    Pam Chen, Laurie Kosanovich, and Jessica
    Sanet

    COVID-19 specific policies

    Other policies (slip and
    falls, unruly visitors, child protection, image restrictions, etc.)

    Effectively implementing
    visitor policies through staff training and enforcement

     

    **Recorded and broadcasted to the webcast audience.

     

    3:15 pm Refreshment Break

     

    3:30 pm   Breakout Sessions

     

    Get Smart! Educating the PreK-12 Set **– 
    Sarah Ebel and Eryn Starun

    Educators have long recognized the value of a museum field trip for its
    potential to spark student engagement and active search for knowledge.
    So as the pandemic interrupted this tradition, virtual PREK-12 museum
    programming has been in demand, bringing the museum into classrooms and
    homes in new and different ways. This panel will cover practical
    approaches to common legal issues kindled by children interacting with
    your museum online and in person, like mandatory reporting, regulations
    including child or student privacy, and other barriers to growing your
    child-focused programs.

     

    No Lawyers Allowed: A Survival Guide for Non-Lawyers
    Jeffrey Blair and Danielle Fisher

    This panel will provide guidance to non-lawyers in managing legal risks
    including a discussion of problematic contract provisions, public
    programming and visitor engagement policies and accident documentation.

     

    **Recorded and broadcasted to the webcast audience.

     

    4:30 pm  Refreshment Break

     

    4:45 pm   Cultural Institutions and Labor Dynamics
    Derek Barella and Michael Stevens

     

    5:45 pm   Adjournment for the day

     

    FRIDAY, MARCH  25, 2022

    7:45 am   Continental Breakfast

     

    WEBCAST SEGMENT E

    8:30 am   Ethics and the Lawyer’s Many Hats
    – Kimberly Wong and Amelia L.B. Sargent

    This panel will cover the application of different ethical rules to the
    many roles a lawyer plays both inside an organization and out. Topics
    will include the Lawyer-as-Counselor, Lawyer-as-Advocate,
    Lawyer-as-Negotiator, and the Lawyer-as-Nonlawyer. We will discuss the
    lawyer’s ethical obligations to their client, both in an advocacy and a
    non-advocacy role, and to nonclients, as well as the scope of the
    attorney-client privilege in each situation.

     

    Model Rules covered will include duty of confidentiality to current,
    former, and future clients, Rules 1.6, 1.13, 1.18, the Lawyer as
    Counselor/Advisor, Rule 2.1, Lawyer as Advocate Rules 3.1, 3.3, 3.4,
    Transactions with Persons Other than Clients, Rules 4.1-4.4, and Public
    Service, Rule 6.1.

     

    9:30 am   The Art of Bias: Disrupting Cultures that
    Perpetuate Inequality
    Mikka Conway and George
    Fatheree

    The existence of implicit bias in the “elite” fields of law and the
    museum profession, and why the effects of bias are particularly
    pronounced in these fields The need to foster more diverse, inclusive,
    and equitable institutions in order to serve a changing nation,
    audience, and client base How the principles of equality underlying
    anti-discrimination law are in tension with principles of equity
    Strategies for addressing structural and individual biases in the legal
    and museum fields.

     

    10:30 am    Refreshment Break

     

    10:45 am     GovernanceHow Good is
    Good Enough?
    – Sharon Cott, Judith Leonard, John Sare,
    and Adine Varah

    Museums must not only protect their collections, they must also protect
    the public’s trust in the museum’s high ethical and professional
    standards. This panel focuses on the key pillars of good governance and
    the rules, policies, and practices that help ensure the integrity of the
    museum’s decision-making processes. Join us in taking a closer look at
    the museum board’s role in addressing a variety of critical areas
    including conflicts of interest, ethics, reputational harm, and
    diversity, equity, and inclusion

     

    11:45 am   ALI CLE Closing Remarks and Adjournment

  • Total 60-minute hours of
    instruction: 15 including
    1.0
    ethics credit and 1.0 elimination
    of bias*

    Total 50-minute hours: 18 credits, including
    1.2 ethics credit and 1.2
    elimination of bias*

    *depending on state requirements in MCLE jurisdictions.

  • Suggested Prerequisite:
    Limited
    experience in legal practice in subject matter or completion of
    basic CLE course in subject matter
  • Educational Objective:
    Acquisition of knowledge and skills to develop
    proficiency as a practitioner;
    Maintenance of professional competence as a practitioner; Provision
    of information on recent legal developments.
  • Level of
    Instruction: Advanced
  • Time Zone: Eastern
  • Program:

Faculty


Planning Chairs

Meghan
Delaney Berroya,
Assistant General Counsel,
Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C.

Jessica
Sanet
,
Assistant General Counsel, Smithsonian
Institution, Washington, D.C.

 

Steering Committee

Pam Chen, General Counsel, Museum of Science and
Industry, Chicago, IL

Laurie Kosanovich,
General Counsel, Rock and Roll Hall of Fame + Museum, Cleveland, OH

Channah F. Norman, Chief Counsel, Center of Military
History, Department of the Army, Washington, D.C.

Kimberly Wong, Associate General Counsel, The J.
Paul Getty Trust, Los Angeles, CA

 

Keynote

Kevin Young, Andrew W. Mellon,
Director, National Museum of African American History and Culture,
Washington, D.C.

 

Program Faculty

Danee Gaines Adams, Privacy Officer, Smithsonian
Institution, Washington, D.C.

Derek Barella, Schiff Hardin
LLP, Chicago, IL

Jeffrey Blair, General Counsel and Assistant Secretary,
Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Los Angeles, CA

L. Eden Burgess, Cultural Heritage
Partners, PLLC, Washington, D.C.

Carlos S. Byrne, CAP®, National
Director, Donor Advised Fund Services, BNY Mellon Wealth Management,
Boston, MA

Jaye Calhoun, Kean Miller LLP, New
Orleans, LA

Stephen W. Clark, Vice President,
General Counsel and Secretary, The J. Paul Getty Trust, Los Angeles, CA

Mikka Gee Conway, Chief Diversity, Inclusion, and
Belonging Officer and EEO Director, National Gallery of Art, Washington,
D.C.

Michael J. Cooney, Nixon
Peabody LLP, Washington, D.C.

Michael Costanzo, General Counsel and Director of
Security, California Academy of Sciences, San Francisco, CA

Sharon Cott, General Counsel, The Metropolitan Museum of
Art, New York

Greg Cram, Director – Copyright,
Permissions and Information Policy, The New York Public Library, New
York, NY

Jocelyn R. Cuttino, Morgan,
Lewis & Bockius LLP, Washington, D.C.

Larry Dubinski, President and
CEO, Franklin Institute, Philadelphia

Sarah Ebel, Associate General
Counsel, The Field Museum, Chicago, IL

George C. Fatheree,
III
, Sidley Austin LLP, Los Angeles, CA

Danielle
Fisher,
Assistant General Counsel, Smithsonian
Institution, Washington, D.C.

Simon J. Frankel, Covington &
Burling LLP, San Francisco, CA

Kevin Gover, Under Secretary for
Museums and Culture, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C.

Lauryn
Guttenplan,
Deputy General Counsel, Smithsonian
Institution, Washington, D.C.

George
Karibjanian,
 Franklin Karibjanian & Law
PLLC, Boca Raton, FL

H. Sujin Kim, Associate General Counsel, The
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, NY

David
Larson,
Assistant General Counsel, Smithsonian
Institution, Washington, D.C.

Judith
Leonard,
General Counsel, Smithsonian Institution,
Washington, D.C.

Sarah Odenkirk, Cowan DeBaets
Abrahams & Sheppard LLP, Beverly Hills, CA

John
Sare
,
Patterson Belknap Webb & Tyler LLP, New
York, NY

Amelia L.B. Sargent, Willenken LLP,
Los Angeles, CA

Marsha Shaines, Former Deputy General Counsel,
Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C.

Yayoi
Shionoiri
,
Executive Director for the Chris Burden
Estate and the Nancy Rubins Studio, U.S. Alliance Partner to City Lights
Law, New York, NY

Eryn
Starun,
Assistant General Counsel, Smithsonian
Institution, Washington, D.C.

Michael Stevens,
Labor and Employment,  Arent
Fox, Washington, D.C.

Adine Varah, General Counsel, San Francisco Museum of
Modern Art, San Francisco, CA

Stephen K. Urice, Professor of
Law and Dean’s Distinguished Scholar, University of Miami School of Law,
Miami, FL

M. Thérèse Vento, General Counsel, Pérez Art Museum,
Miami, FL

 

Details will be
available closer to the scheduled date of this course. Please check back
later.

Format/Venue

This course is available in two live formats:

In person at The Washington Hilton, 1919
Connecticut Avenue, NW, Washington, DC 20009. A special room rate has
been arranged with the hotel of $309 per night, single or double
occupancy. This rate will be made available, unless exhausted, until
March 3, 2022. Registrants must make their own hotel
reservations and request the LIMA 50th Anniversary room block to qualify
for the reduced rate. Reservations may be made by calling hotel at
202-483-3000 and referring to group code: ALI or by clicking here

Via video webcast for registrants who
prefer to attend remotely. ALI CLE webcasts can be viewed on a desktop,
laptop, or iPad/notebook, and are supported on Safari, Firefox, Chrome,
and Edge browsers. To ensure a smooth webcast experience, do not view on
a smartphone or use Internet Explorer. For more detailed system
requirements, click here.



Sponsors


ALI
CLE would like to thank our sponsors for their generosity and support:



CLE/CPE
Credit



ALI CLE programs are generally accredited in all MCLE jurisdictions.
Credit in ID, LA and RI is available upon request. Click here for more information about CLE state
requirements or CPE for accountants/NASBA,
or email TeamMCLE@ali-cle.org.

Cyber Monday 2021

Cyber Monday Sale

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Health and Safety Guidance

Health and Safety Guidance for ALI CLE In-Person Courses

Last updated: August 1, 2022

As ALI CLE welcomes attendees back to in-person courses, your safety, and the safety of our speakers and staff, remain of utmost importance. Working with the venues for our programs, ALI CLE will comply with all federal, state, and local regulations and guidelines regarding public safety for our in-person attendees. All ALI CLE in-person courses will also be made available by live streaming webcast for those who prefer to attend the program remotely. Indeed, we have provided our in-person courses in a hybrid format for many years, so we have the expertise to bring you our national programming in a high-quality format that best suits your interests and needs.

In-Person Course Guidelines

Our goal is to ensure all attendees’ safety and enjoyment at our in-person courses. To do so, ALI CLE will comply with the health and safety standards of our host venues and all applicable government guidelines. Our current on-site safety policies, which may be updated over time as health and safety conditions and related advisories change, are listed below.

  • ALI CLE strongly recommends that all in-person attendees, faculty, guests, and staff be fully vaccinated as defined by the CDC (two or more vaccine doses) against COVID-19, with the final dose administered at least two weeks before the start of the course.
  • ALI CLE strongly recommends that attendees who are not fully vaccinated or who are immunocompromised attend the live webcast only.
  • All in-person attendees, regardless of vaccine status, are encouraged to wear a mask that covers their nose and mouth while in the meeting space and registration areas. All meeting and food and beverage functions will comply with applicable federal, state, and local requirements and hotel protocols, which may be more restrictive than those listed here.
  • All meeting and food and beverage functions will comply with applicable federal, state, and local requirements and hotel protocols, which may be more restrictive than those listed here.
  • All course materials will be digital. Attendees should download the materials in advance and bring laptops or tablets to the programs for access to the materials during the program.

As stated above, ALI CLE will comply with the health and safety standards of our host venues and all applicable government guidelines, and our own guidelines may be more restrictive. Nevertheless, with travel to and participation in a group setting, no risk can be completely eliminated, and by attending the course in-person, you agree to assume any potential risk of exposure.

ALI CLE will notify registrants and update the website should plans for an event change due to health and safety limitations.

Conditions for Attending

You should not attend an ALI CLE course in-person if at the time of the course or within the 14 days preceding the program:

  • You have experienced any COVID-19 (or COVID-19-like) symptoms.
  • You have traveled from an area under a travel health advisory.
  • You have provided care for or had close contact with any person testing positive for or reasonably suspected of having COVID-19, or with any person who traveled outside of your home country or to an area under a travel health advisory.
  • You have been advised by any health authority, government agency, or regulation to self-isolate due to possible exposure to COVID-19.

By attending one of our in-person courses, you agree to the guidelines and conditions outlined above. If you have any one of the conditions listed above, or suspect that you might, contact ALI CLE Customer Service at custserv@ali-cle.org at any time leading up to the in-person program and we will change your registration to the webcast. If at any time during the in-person course you begin to experience COVID-19 symptoms, or come into contact with someone testing positive for COVID-19 or experiencing symptoms, for the safety of others you will be required to leave the on-site program immediately and may either transfer to the webcast or receive a refund of your registration fee.

Please check back to this page before traveling to your course to review our latest guidelines and conditions. If you have any questions about our safety measures, please email ALI CLE Customer Service at custserv@ali-cle.org or call 800-253-6397 (800-CLE-NEWS).

We look forward to welcoming you back to our nationally recognized in-person programming in a safe, enjoyable, and productive environment.

LawPass: Unlimited Online CLE Access – Group Discounts | ALI CLE

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Did you know that when five or more people from the same firm or organization choose to fulfill their CLE requirements using ALI CLE’s LawPass group subscription, they unlock a discount?

We offer you the same unlimited access and unmatched convenience of our LawPass subscription, but at a discounted price.

What’s included?

SUBSCRIPTION BENEFITS LawPass Standard LawPass Premium
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