FOX 10: Gov. Hobbs puts pause on water supply certificates; Jordan Rose, Rose Law Group founder and president shares insight

  Arizona Governor Katie Hobbs announced construction around Phoenix will be limited moving forward to protect groundwater supplies. This comes after Arizona was one of three southwestern states to reach a historic agreement to cut millions of gallons of Colorado River water usage over the next four years. FOX 10’s Lindsey Ragas reports. Rose Law Group Founder and President Jordan Rose: “ADWR …

Jordan Rose, founder and president of Rose Law Group, appointed to Phoenix Art Museum’s Board of Trustees

New board members bring vital expertise in law, finance, and business leadership By Phoenix Art Museum PHOENIX (May 12, 2023) –Phoenix Art Museum announces the addition of three new Trustees comprising its governing board. Chaired by Donald C. Opatrny, Jr., a private investor and philanthropist, the Museum’s Board of Trustees serves as fiduciaries of the largest visual-arts organization in the American …

Phoenix Councilman Kevin Robinson visits Rose Law Group

Rose Law Group was happy to host recently elected Phoenix City Councilman Kevin Robinson this morning to enjoy breakfast with our team and clients.  Pictured above from left to right are Councilman Kevin Robinson, Jordan Rose, founder and president of Rose Law Group, and former Mayor of Phoenix Skip Rimsza.

Pinal Partnership Breakfast: County supervisors talk Lucid, mining, roads and more during discussion moderated by Rose Law Group Founder and President Jordan Rose

Photo via Lucid Motors By Mark Cowling | Pinal Central Electric cars are facing skepticism similar to the kind that Henry Ford argued against 100 years ago, Pinal Partnership members and guests heard Friday morning. Mike Cruz, who is beginning a new role as head of government relations for Lucid Motors, commented on the Lucid job cuts announced days previously. “Obviously they’re going through …

Who owns a song created by A.I.? Rose Law Group Founder and President Jordan Rose weighs in

By Ephrat Livni, Lauren Hirsch and Sarah Kessler Artificial intelligence tools that generate text, images and music are moving art into new territory — and that’s raising tricky questions for the business of creativity. For early adopters like Insider, the publication that this week announced an experiment with A.I.-aided articles, the new tools promise more efficient content creation. But for many artists, and the businesses that own their work, generative A.I. is a double threat. These systems can produce …