Government
Best Practices Training Course:
Alternative Dispute
Resolution Workshop:
Using ADR to Resolve Contract
& Workplace Disputes
June
9-10, 2005
NRECA Executive Conference Center
Lobby Level - Conference Room CC2
4301 Wilson Boulevard
Arlington, Virginia 22203
**Please note that online
registration for this event is now closed. However, we have a few spots
left open. Simply bring your payment and the completed attached registration
form with you to the registration desk.
Registration:
7:30 AM (Day One Only)
Program
Starts: 8:30 AM
Wrap-up:
4:30 PM
Course
materials, continental breakfast, refreshments included.
About
This Course
Just as the
general process of Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR) is now a well-established
fixture—a dependable and efficient alternative to costly and time-consuming
traditional litigation—ADR is also recognized for its unique ability
to resolve contract and workplace disputes. This intensive, two-day course
will present attendees with both a comprehensive overview of the ADR process
and a detailed analysis of the specific ADR procedures that have proven
so successful in quickly and easily settling contract and employment disagreements.
Attendees
of the Alternative Dispute Resolution Workshop
will
first be introduced to the two main ADR mechanisms, mediation and arbitration,
as well as to the several hybrid procedures that the parties may consider
using. The mechanics of any successful ADR proceeding—choosing a
winning ADR team, selecting the best neutral for your particular situation,
preparing proper settlement agreements—all of these topics and many
more, will be thoroughly discussed, analyzed and then brought to life
in hands-on case studies based upon real (and imagined) contract and workplace
controversies.
Next, detailed
instruction will focus on two of the areas where ADR has proven itself
to be especially effective -- contract and workplace disputes. The attendees
will be thoroughly briefed on the impact of key statutes, including the
Administrative Dispute Resolution Act, the Federal Arbitration Act, and
the ADR provisions of federal employment discrimination statutes. Additionally,
each of the potential forums available for the conduct of ADR proceedings
will be identified, described and evaluated. And, attendees will be given
a copy of Alternative Dispute Resolution for Government Contracts
as well as copies of the relevant regulations and directives dealing with
the use of ADR in the employment setting.
The instruction
method will encourage attendee participation. Role-play, case studies
and frequent Q&A sessions, will all insure that each attendee will
have many opportunities to experience and understand the duties and responsibilities
required of each of the participants in an ADR proceeding.

Course
Syllabus
Overview
-- A conceptual
look at ADR and its advantages
-- An initial review of contract and workplace disputes
-- An introductory case study
Mediation
-- Selecting
the right mediator
-- Are co-mediators necessary?
-- Describing the several forms of mediation and their significance
-- Contrasting facilitative and evaluative mediation techniques
--Structuring a mediation proceeding that meets your specific needs
- Achieving satisfactory closure
-- Importance of confidentiality
-- Drafting a proper Settlement Agreement
Arbitration
-- Selecting
the right arbitrator
-- Structuring and controlling the proceeding
-- Reviewing arbitration procedures
-- Distinguishing arbitration and mediation
-- Enforceability of agreements to arbitrate employment discrimination
disputes
--Specifying the type of award
-- Analyzing the concept of finality
Hybrid Processes
-- Review
of the several regularly used mediation techniques
-- Binding and non-binding arbitration
-- Hazards of Med/Arb.
The
Neutrals
-- The diverse
duties and obligations of mediators and arbitrators
-- Qualification requirements
-- Conflicts of interest and disclosure requirements
-- Immunity of Neutrals
-- Ethical Questions
Forming
an Effective ADR Team
-- The designated
representative
-- ADR counsel
-- Other team members and their responsibilities
ADR
Documentation
-- Contract
clauses
-- ADR agreements
-- Mediation settlements and arbitration awards
A
Case Study
--Using the
Postal Service’s REDRESS Program
Day Two
Workplace
Disputes
-- The legal
framework
-- Choosing the “right” forum
-- The EEOC’s National Mediation Program
-- ADR in the federal sector
A
Case Study
-- Sexual
harassment in the workplace
Government
Contract Disputes
-- Statutory
and regulatory bases
-- Key Executive Orders
-- ADR at the departments and agencies
-- ADR at the Boards of Contract Appeals, the Court of Federal Claims
and the Government Accountability Office.
A
Case Study
-- A Government
contract dispute

Who
Should Attend
- Contracting
Officers and contract administrators & their private sector counterparts
- Other
individuals involved in the procurement process
- Private
sector and Government lawyers
- Human
resources personnel
- All those
involved in the employee selection process
- Individuals
concerned with personnel evaluations
- Operating
executives
- All those
interested in honing their ADR skills
A
List of Early Registrants Include:
- Court Services & Offender Supervision Agency, Assistant
General Counsel
- SSA, Staff Assistant
- Federal Labor Relations Auth., General Attorney
- USA Information Tech Agency, Contracts & Acquisition
Admin.
- Committee for Purchase, Business Management Specialist
- Telos Contract, Program Manager
- Telos, Budget Analyst
- Comptroller of the Currency Special Emphasis Program
Coordinator
- Pension Benefit Guaranty Corp., Attorney
- City of Memphis, EEO Labor Relations Manager
- Nevada Division of Child & Family Services, Social
Services Chief
- GSA, Assistant General Counsel
- DOC, Management Analyst

About
Your Instructors
Steven
Kahn has been a labor and employment attorney for more than 30
years. He is an expert in preventing or reducing the risks of employment-related
litigation and developing personnel policies to facilitate compliance
with equal employment opportunity laws.
Steve has
litigated a wide range of labor and employment disputes before the National
Labor Relations Board, the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, the
Department of Labor, and in state and federal courts throughout the country.
As a neutral, he has participated since 1990 in the mediation program
of the United States District Court for the District of Columbia, serving
as a mediator in numerous employment cases, particularly in the federal
sector. He also has served as a labor arbitrator in resolving disputes
arising under collective bargaining agreements and nonunion employment
agreements. Finally, Steve has served in the public sector as a fact-finder
and interest arbitrator.
Steve is co-author
of the Legal Guide To Human Resources, published by the West Group. The
Guide contains practical discussion of every major federal labor statute,
as well as important state laws, relevant to the broad range of labor
relations problems from recruitment to termination. This comprehensive
Guide is recognized as the leading work of its kind available to human
resource professionals and corporate managers in the United States.
Steve has
lectured frequently at national seminars, at public forums, and at universities
on a variety of employment topics. He attended Yale University as an undergraduate
and earned his law degree from the University of Pennsylvania.
Don
Arnavas combines many years of experience as a judge, law school
professor and practicing mediator and arbitrator and brings students instruction
that is—at the same time—informative, authoritative and readily
understandable. Don’s extensive experience both as a neutral and
as counsel to the parties permits him to share the practical insights
and advice that can lead to a satisfactory resolution of contracts disputes
-- one that is both cost and time efficient.
Don is a graduate
of Georgetown University Law Center and a member of the District of Columbia
and Virginia Bars. He served for three years as a council member of the
American Bar Association’s Public Contract Law Section and as a
panel member of ACI, a London based ADR provider. Don is the author of
Alternative Dispute Resolution for Government Contracts, the text used
in this course and of the Government Contract Guidebook, which is in its
3rd Edition and continues to be widely used in colleges and law schools
throughout the world. He is listed in the Guide to the World’s leading
Experts in Commercial Arbitration–2004. Don has served as an Adjunct
Professor at Penn State/Dickinson School of Law since 1983 and lectures
extensively at other colleges and universities. He is also a visiting
lecturer at the Army Judge Advocate General’s School.

Contact
Us
- For registration
information, contact Stacy
Dellinger, (703) 807-2753
- For speaker
or agenda information, please contact Laura
Johnson, (703) 807-2747

Registration
Fee
- Government
attendees: $645 per person
- Industry:
$845 per person
**Course
fee includes continental breakfast on both days, refreshments throughout
the course, a copy of Alternative Dispute Resolution for Government
Contracts as well as copies of the relevant regulations
and directives dealing with the use of ADR in the employment setting!
**Please
note that online registration for this event is now closed. However, we
have a few spots left open. Simply bring your payment and the completed
attached registration
form with you to the registration desk.

CANCELLATION POLICY: You may designate
a substitute in writing any time before the conference. If you need to
cancel your registration, you must send your notice in writing and will
be subject to a $50 processing fee. No refunds are given for cancellations
received 3 business days prior to the event start date or later.

Location
Information
This workshop will be held at the NRECA (National Rural Electric Coop
Assn) Headquarters Building, Executive Conference Center (Main Floor)
at 4301 Wilson Boulevard, Arlington, Virginia 22203
Map and directions to the conference location
Ballston Metro stop information
Do
you need a place to stay while you're attending the course? Here are some
nearby hotels.

On-Site
Training
Have
a Large Staff to Train? Can't Make These Dates? Tight Travel Budget?
Market*Access
can provide ADR training, wherever and whenever
you need, including on-site at your facility. Our staff will cost-effectively
implement training customized to your needs. If you have group of attendees
(usually 15 or more), we can bring this course to you and help save you
time, travel costs, and more!
To
request a proposal and schedule training, e-mail Laura
Johnson, Director of Conferences & Strategic Planning, at ljohnson@marketaccess.org
or call (703) 807-2747.
Marketing,
Conference Management and Production by:
Market*Access
International, Inc.
4301 Wilson Boulevard
Suite 1003
Arlington, VA 22203
(703) 807-2755

|