What's Happening from Environmental Building News
New Plaintiffs Join Amended LEED Lawsuit
By Tristan Roberts
Harm to non-LEED APs
Instead of seeking to establish a broad class-action lawsuit representing building owners, taxpayers, and professionals harmed by LEED, the amended lawsuit focuses on the latter. It claims that Gifford and other professionals are, in the words of the complaint, “losing customers because USGBC's false advertisements mislead the consumer into believing that obtaining LEED certification incorporates construction techniques that achieve energy-efficiency.” The suit seeks an injunction and damages against USGBC. Instead of seeking to form a class of plaintiffs harmed by LEED, Gifford brought on three other professionals to the complaint: an architect and two engineers. Other defendants named in the original suit, including Rick Fedrizzi, David Gottfried, and Rob Watson, all associated with the founding of LEED, have been removed.A “cleaner” suit
The amended suit is “cleaner,” Stephen Del Percio, a lawyer and author of the blog GreenRealEstateLaw.com, told EBN. “It doesn't have to go through the certification of the class and that sort of hurdle toward getting to the merits,” he said, although he noted that it remained to be seen whether the change would work in the favor of either party. Del Percio noted that the allegations are fundamentally unchanged, as is one of the central legal questions—whether the plaintiff has standing. In other words, regardless of Gifford’s claims that USGBC misrepresented the benefits of LEED, it is unclear whether he and the other plaintiffs have sufficient stake in the question, as they might, for example, if they were mislead into wasting money on LEED certification for a building project. Del Percio and other observers anticipate that USGBC will move to dismiss the case on this basis, but that it could possibly move toward a discovery phase, in which internal communications at USGBC could be made public.Plaintiff comments
Gifford’s critique
As EBN has previously reported, at the heart of the lawsuit is Gifford’s critique of a 2008 study from New Buildings Institute (NBI) and USGBC that is, to date, the most comprehensive look at the actual energy performance of buildings certified under LEED for New Construction and Major Renovations (LEED-NC). While the NBI study makes the case that LEED buildings are, on average, 25%–30% more efficient than the national average, Gifford published his own analysis in 2008 concluding that LEED buildings are, on average, 29% less efficient. Commentary questioning the respective statistical approaches of both the original study and Gifford’s analysis appears in this BuildingGreen.com blog post by Nadav Malin, president of EBN’s publisher BuildingGreen.February 8, 2011
Reader-contributed comments related to New Plaintiffs Join Amended LEED Lawsuit - BuildingGreen.com. Comments are listed with newest at the top.
Leed lawsuit
Posted by
george parker
on Feb 8, 2011, 07:09 PM
It appears the argument has come down to verification by statistics. Statistics have lots of elasticity they can be compiled to strengthen or undermine a position. A water meter or electric meter is going to spit out indisputable facts. Why not operate the building as designed for a period of time before any awards or ratings are given.
It appears the argument has come down to verification by statistics. Statistics have lots of elasticity they can be compiled to strengthen or undermine a position. A water meter or electric meter is going to spit out indisputable facts. Why not operate the building as designed for a period of time before any awards or ratings are given.
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BuildingGreen.com: What's Happening - August 2011
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IMAGE CREDITS:
1. Source: USGBC/NBI
DISCUSSIONS
Eric Johnson
Feb 9, 2011 RELATED ARTICLES
Gifford Lawsuit Against USGBC, LEED Dismissed
BuildingGreen.com: What's Happening - August 2011 |
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More comments
Why not be diligent and do your own research before you sue? Why defame the 155,00 LEED AP's in your lawsuit? See item 19.