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Should You Be Paying Employees for Travel Time?

November 25, 2022 by John Ray

Should You Pay Employees for Travel Time?
Advisory Insights Podcast
Should You Be Paying Employees for Travel Time?
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Should You Pay Employees for Travel Time?

Should You Be Paying Employees for Travel Time? (Advisory Insights Podcast, Episode 19)

On this episode of Advisory Insights, Stuart Oberman of the Oberman Law Firm discusses the topic of employee travel time, particularly the 1947 Portal-to-Portal Act and how it addresses job to job travel. He advises employers to have a clear policy in place to avoid costly mistakes, and urges them to keep track of travel-related expenses and policy changes.

Advisory Insights is presented by Oberman Law Firm and produced by the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX®. The series can be found on all the major podcast apps. You can find the complete show archive here.

TRANSCRIPT

Intro: [00:00:02] Broadcasting from the studios of Business RadioX, it’s time for Advisory Insights. Brought to you by Oberman Law Firm, serving clients nationwide with tailored service and exceptional results. Now, here’s your host.

Stuart Oberman: [00:00:20] Welcome everyone to Advisory Insights. Stuart Oberman here. All right, folks, we’re going to drill down on some things that is a topic that, really, we didn’t see much during COVID. But now as everything is starting opening up, we’re going to talk about employees that travel. Today’s topic, Do employers have to pay for employee travel or commute time?

Stuart Oberman: [00:00:43] You’re probably thinking to yourself, “No, I do not.” But the question is you’re probably wrong, depending on your business. And two, do you even have a policy for that? And are you even paying overtime? So, I want to hit a couple of topics going down this particular road that I want everyone to take a look at, because at some point your employees do something somewhere for you, whether they’re traveling from their home, whether they’re going to their office. A lot of our clients go on conventions, how are you paying? How are you paying? Travel, no travel, gas, no gas, overtime, no overtime. So, these are things I want to look at.

Stuart Oberman: [00:01:21] First, I want to take a look at whether an employer has to pay its non-exempt employees overtime. Are they even eligible? That’s your first question. So then, we want to look in today’s podcast looking at work related travel. That will include time spent getting to and from office or job sites. What if you’re a construction company and you have people driving from the office to the job site? What about from home to the job site? What about from job site-home? Do you even have a regulation for that? Are they driving company vehicles? These are things you have to ask.

Stuart Oberman: [00:02:10] So, I want to look at really two fundamental principles. One, actually performing work related tasks regardless, regardless of the day of the week, the time, or location. How is it being paid? Do you have employees that work on Saturdays at their home, Sundays at home, after hours, they’re coming home? How are you paying that? How are you verifying that?

Stuart Oberman: [00:02:33] Principle number two, the cornerstone of all this discussion is the 1947 Portal-to-Portal Act and its amendments to the Fair Labor Standards Act. Folks, that will put you to sleep if you read that. But essentially what it is, it’s employees spending time commuting from their home to the workplace, where do they begin the workday, and how do they end? Are they being paid for it going back home?

Stuart Oberman: [00:03:08] So, for those of you that never heard of the Portal-to-Portal Act and how it is related to the Fair Labor Standards Act, which governs what your employees do and what you pay every day, if you say I have no idea, I would advise you strongly to call someone who knows what that is.

Stuart Oberman: [00:03:31] Now, a couple topics. Do you have a policy for midday travel? Under federal regulations that’s considered all in a day’s work rule. You’re going to go down a road on that one. We’re not even going to go down there today because we’re going to go down for hours on that one.

Stuart Oberman: [00:03:52] So, what is it? It’s travel to the job site to job site during the workday. If you have a person that’s going job to job, site to site traveling salesman, construction foreman, whatever it is, do you have a regulatory item that you’re looking at and what are you guided by?

Stuart Oberman: [00:04:11] Next, I want you to look at multiple worksites. So, what if an employee reports to different sites each morning? Does that render the home to work commute not normal or ordinary? That’s a question you’ve got to ask yourself. And is that time spent on the road – big word – compensable overtime? Are you paying for that? How are you paying for it or why aren’t you paying for it? Are you even tracking that employee’s time?

Stuart Oberman: [00:04:47] Another hot topic, pre-commute activities. We have a lot and a lot of people that do work at their home before they even leave. I know I do. I know I do. My day starts at 5:30, and I’m doing work before I leave the house for the office. So, what if an employee brings some work home at night and then goes to the office, are they working at night? Are they working during the day? How are you tracking that? That is what we call a pre-commute activity. Do you have a regulatory item of review for that?

Stuart Oberman: [00:05:24] The next topic I want you to take a look at – these are all things I want you to understand that, again, are much too detailed for this podcast, but at least you know the topic and what it relates to and how it relates to what you do – same day travel to another city.

Stuart Oberman: [00:05:42] I’m located in Atlanta. Suppose I go to Chattanooga. You know, or I’ve got a company that’s in South Atlanta and they travel to Nashville for the day? That’s what we call special one day assignments. Do you have a policy in place for that or do you even track that? Because I will guarantee you, your employees that leave, folks, they’re tracking that. And you better be aware they are tracking it because otherwise they’re going to track it for you, which is never a good day.

Stuart Oberman: [00:06:14] So, let’s take a look at, also, do you have a policy in place for travel involving an overnight stay? Do you even have overtime travel expenses outlined? Are you paying overtime? How are you paying your people that travel? You know, again, through the COVID, everyone was locked down, no travel. And now, folks, it is wide open. If you look at the papers, you listen to the news, travel, it explodes. The airlines can’t keep up with it. Hotels are doing real well, You know, rush hour traffic going to and from on holidays, I mean, it’s amazing. So, how do you have overnight travel? How do you handle that?

Stuart Oberman: [00:06:58] Also, travel from a hotel to a worksite or worksite to hotel. Again, where are your salespeople going? Are they spending the night? How are they spending the night with their time? Are they working on their laptop when they’re at the hotel? How are you tracking that? You better believe they’re tracking that. Are they working at the hotel before they leave? That can be overtime. How are you tracking your job site issues? Is that going to be O.T.?

Stuart Oberman: [00:07:27] Now, question, what if driving is part of the job? You know, the FLSA, it outlines an employee who drives a bus, a car, automobile, boat, plane as part of their job. Do you have anything in place that outlines that, “Hey, we’re not paying you overtime, Mr. Employee or Ms. Employee, because it’s outlined here we’re not doing that.”

Stuart Oberman: [00:07:54] Now, the wonderful world of COVID, remote, flexible, agile – the keyword of today – agile work conditions. What if you have an employee that’s hoteling working remote, flexible hours? A agile working arrangement where they come into some particular place two or three times a week. Or what about two or three times a month? What’s the regulatory matter? Are you requiring them to come into the office? Are you requiring them to come into their location, whether it’s remote, not remote?

Stuart Oberman: [00:08:35] Now, I want to ask you this question, so do you have or do you even know the consequences of compensable travel time? Are you tracking those? Do you know when you must pay the employees? Do you have a process in place to track the time? First and foremost, how are you tracking time? “Well, my employees have logs.” I will tell you, employers are not keeping track of their logs.

Stuart Oberman: [00:09:02] I would venture to say that if you have an employee company car and you say,”Hey, Mr. Employee, Ms. Employee. I want you to produce your logs. I want to see how up to date they are.” I’m going to go out on a limb, I’m going to say at least 80 to 90 percent are not even up to date maybe in a day or two, some even months. So, I think you got to have a process in place of how much you’re paying them. Are they overtime hours? Are they not overtime hours? And what’s the threshold? Do your hours start at 42 hours O.T.? Do your hours start at 46 O.T.?

Stuart Oberman: [00:09:40] Next question is, how are you paying for travel? How much is compensable travel? Folks, you got people on the road and you got guys going to job, to job, to job, to job. You’ve got to ask yourself all these topics we went through today, how am I paying these people? And then, does paying for travel make it hours worked? How are you calculating these things?

Stuart Oberman: [00:10:06] So, employees often wonder, you know, what’s hours worked considered? Do I even have a definition of hours worked? Chances are probably not. I would venture to say that all the topics we listed today, 90 percent that have employees that travel have no guidelines whatsoever regarding this. I’ll go out on a limb and I’ll say 70 to 80 percent don’t even have a policy employee manual. Without a manual, you got no regulatory guidance on these things. So, you’re going to lose. You’re going to lose.

Stuart Oberman: [00:10:37] I want you to keep track of these things. I want you to listen on the topics. If you don’t have an agenda, if you don’t have a bullet point items that you’re looking at, I urge you to find counsel that understands this. Make sure your H.R. people are trained.

Stuart Oberman: [00:10:55] Folks, that’s going to conclude today’s podcast, Advisory Insights, Stuart Oberman. If you need to reach us, please feel free to call at 770-886-2400 or email stuart, S-T-U-A-R-T, @obermanlaw.com. Folks, thanks a lot. Have a fantastic day and we’ll look forward to more podcasts.

Outro: [00:11:19] Thank you for joining us on Advisory Insights. This show is brought to you by Oberman Law Firm, a business-centric law firm representing local, regional, and national clients in a wide range of practice areas, including health care, mergers and acquisitions, corporate transactions, and regulatory compliance.

About Advisory Insights Podcast

Presented by Oberman Law Firm, Advisory Insights Podcast covers legal, business, HR, and other topics of vital concern to healthcare practices and other business owners. This show series can be found here as well as on all the major podcast apps.

Stuart Oberman, Oberman Law Firm

Oberman Law Firm

Stuart Oberman is the founder and President of Oberman Law Firm. Mr. Oberman graduated from Urbana University and received his law degree from John Marshall Law School. Mr. Oberman has been practicing law for over 25 years, and before going into private practice, Mr. Oberman was in-house counsel for a Fortune 500 Company. Mr. Oberman is widely regarded as the go-to attorney in the area of Dental Law, which includes DSO formation, corporate business structures, mergers and acquisitions, regulatory compliance, advertising regulations, HIPAA, Compliance, and employment law regulations that affect dental practices.

In addition, Mr. Oberman’s expertise in the healthcare industry includes advising clients in the complex regulatory landscape as it relates to telehealth and telemedicine, including compliance of corporate structures, third-party reimbursement, contract negotiations, technology, health care fraud, and abuse law (Anti-Kickback Statute and the State Law), professional liability risk management, federal and state regulations.

As the long-term care industry evolves, Mr. Oberman has the knowledge and experience to guide clients in the long-term care sector with respect to corporate and regulatory matters, assisted living facilities, continuing care retirement communities (CCRCs). In addition, Mr. Oberman’s practice also focuses on health care facility acquisitions and other changes of ownership, as well as related licensure and Medicare/Medicaid certification matters, CCRC registrations, long-term care/skilled nursing facility management, operating agreements, assisted living licensure matters, and health care joint ventures.

In addition to his expertise in the health care industry, Mr. Oberman has a nationwide practice that focuses on all facets of contractual disputes, including corporate governance, fiduciary duty, trade secrets, unfair competition, covenants not to compete, trademark and copyright infringement, fraud, and deceptive trade practices, and other business-related matters. Mr. Oberman also represents clients throughout the United States in a wide range of practice areas, including mergers & acquisitions, partnership agreements, commercial real estate, entity formation, employment law, commercial leasing, intellectual property, and HIPAA/OSHA compliance.

Mr. Oberman is a national lecturer and has published articles in the U.S. and Canada.

LinkedIn

Oberman Law Firm

Oberman Law Firm has a long history of civic service, noted national, regional, and local clients, and stands among the Southeast’s eminent and fast-growing full-service law firms. Oberman Law Firm’s areas of practice include Business Planning, Commercial & Technology Transactions, Corporate, Employment & Labor, Estate Planning, Health Care, Intellectual Property, Litigation, Privacy & Data Security, and Real Estate.

By meeting their client’s goals and becoming a trusted partner and advocate for our clients, their attorneys are recognized as legal go-getters who provide value-added service. Their attorneys understand that in a rapidly changing legal market, clients have new expectations, constantly evolving choices, and operate in an environment of heightened reputational and commercial risk.

Oberman Law Firm’s strength is its ability to solve complex legal problems by collaborating across borders and practice areas.

Connect with Oberman Law Firm:

Company website | LinkedIn | Twitter

Tagged With: Advisory Insights, Advisory Insights Podcast, dental practices, employee travel time, employment law, Oberman Law, Oberman Law Firm, Stuart Oberman, Travel Time

Tax Consequences of a Practice Sale

September 30, 2022 by John Ray

Advisory Insights Podcast
Advisory Insights Podcast
Tax Consequences of a Practice Sale
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Tax Consequences of a Practice Sale

Tax Consequences of a Practice Sale (Advisory Insights Podcast, Episode 11)

On this episode of Advisory Insights, Stuart Oberman talked with Danielle McBride, Partner at Oberman Law Firm, on corporate sales transactions. She emphasized the importance of involving a CPA early in the transaction to ensure that the proper documentation is in place to avoid double taxation.

Advisory Insights is presented by Oberman Law Firm and produced by the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX®. The series can be found on all the major podcast apps. You can find the complete show archive here.

Danielle McBride, Partner, Oberman Law Firm

Danielle McBride
Danielle McBride, Partner, Oberman Law Firm

Danielle McBride has been practicing law for over 21 years, and her primary focus is representing healthcare clients on a local, regional, and national basis. Ms. McBride regularly consults with clients regarding simple to complex healthcare transitions, including mergers and acquisitions, employment law, governmental compliance, tax strategies, practice valuations, DSO formation and structures, employee compensation, associate and partnership contracts, joint ventures, and partnership buy-in/buy-outs.

In addition, Ms. McBride brings a wealth of knowledge and experience preparing practice valuations for clients, as well as formulating simple to complex tax strategies, and entity formations.

Ms. McBride holds a Bachelor of Arts in Sociology/Criminology from The Ohio State University, a Juris Doctor (J.D.) from Ohio Northern University Pettit College of Law, and a Master of Laws (LL.M.) in Taxation from Case Western Reserve University.

LinkedIn

TRANSCRIPT

Intro: [00:00:01] Broadcasting from the studios of Business RadioX, it’s time for Advisory Insights. Brought to you by Oberman Law Firm, serving clients nationwide with tailored service and exceptional results. Now, here’s your host.

Stuart Oberman: [00:00:19] Welcome everyone to Advisory Insights. This is Stuart Oberman, Oberman Law Firm. Well, we have a fantastic guest with us today on our podcast, Danielle McBride, who is a partner in Oberman Law Firm, and who does an enormous amount of health care transactions on a national basis.

Stuart Oberman: [00:00:40] For those who are not familiar with our firm, we are very, very health care centered. Last year, we did 135 transactions, and I believe the number was, maybe, about 350 million was total of the transactions. So, through this craze that we’re in, mergers and acquisitions, the tax consequences are so under viewed that they got to get out in the forefront of these issues.

Stuart Oberman: [00:01:14] And Danielle McBride, who does a fabulous job with the firm, and who is our resident tax guru, if you will, and has a master’s in tax is really going to walk us through some things. And I got some questions along the way that she’ll answer, hopefully. And this is such an ongoing topic. We can talk about tax consequences for a day and not even cover everything on a merger and acquisition. So, Danielle, welcome to the show again.

Danielle McBride: [00:01:44] Thanks, Stuart. Good to be here and happy to put some information out there so our buyers and sellers can be a little more educated on these topics.

Stuart Oberman: [00:01:51] Yeah, it’s amazing. It is amazing how many questions you receive and we all receive on these deals and how uninformed some advisors are. And I want you to touch on that later on during the podcast. But, you know, I want to talk about some of the things you run into on the sales tax side, you’ve got goodwill, you’ve got personal versus corporate, you’ve got C versus S corporations, you’ve got reporting issues. I know, again, it’s a long, long, long conversation we can have on this. And I know you’ll drill it down to the basics, which will not cover all the details. So, tell us, I want to know what you’re running into on some of these sales.

Danielle McBride: [00:02:39] Sure. So, you know, basic tax consequences, I think a lot of that information is out there. You’ve got a sale of tangible assets, a sale of goodwill, capital gain on goodwill, tax treatment is ordinary income on the sale of tangible assets. But it gets much more complicated and there can be a lot more detail involved depending on the type of entity that someone has.

Danielle McBride: [00:03:03] So, if your seller is, say, a C Corporation versus an S Corporation or an LLC, a C Corporation has an entity level tax. It’s not a pass through entity, which means that there is a tax on the sale of any assets from the corporation first. And then, you’ve got your shareholders receiving distributions of the balance of that. And so, there could be a goodwill double taxation issue if your corporation owns the goodwill and sells it. So, that’s where personal goodwill is kind of a key component.

Danielle McBride: [00:03:42] And most important in these C Corporation sales, and we still have a lot of older C Corporations that are out there in the health care world, so you want to make sure that you’re looking at that. Not only C Corporations but S Corporations. If a C Corporation elected S Corporation status, they have a five year window during which they still get treated if they sell assets like they’re a C Corporation. They call it a built-in gains tax.

Danielle McBride: [00:04:14] So, you’ve got to be aware if you’re a C Corporation or a C that elected S status and you haven’t met your five year built-in gains tax window, personal goodwill in those cases is just key because you’re going to avoid a double taxation issue if you set up the transaction properly using personal goodwill instead of having the corporation own and sell all of the assets.

Stuart Oberman: [00:04:39] That’s a good point.

Danielle McBride: [00:04:39] So, it could be a huge tax difference here. And so, that’s something you got to talk to your advisors about, make sure that it’s being structured properly, make sure your contracts have those things specifically listed in it, and the sellers are listed as both personal seller selling personal goodwill and corporations selling the assets.

Danielle McBride: [00:05:03] And then, that even goes down to payments as well. Make sure if you’re getting personal goodwill and it’s a key component in this C Corporation or what we call sort of a non-ripe S Corporation. You know, the payment and all of the documentation needs to track in order to protect that personal goodwill concept and keep you from paying twice on the goodwill.

Stuart Oberman: [00:05:28] A non-write election corporation?

Danielle McBride: [00:05:32] Non-ripe.

Stuart Oberman: [00:05:33] Ripe. Okay.

Danielle McBride: [00:05:34] We call it a non-ripe S election when you’ve elected S Corporation status and you have that five year building gains tax window that you have to meet.

Stuart Oberman: [00:05:44] You just mentioned a couple of things. Do you write in cases where the CPAs, one, don’t understand transactions, or, two, they don’t get involved early enough?

Danielle McBride: [00:05:57] Yeah, absolutely. And the latter is what I see most often. The clients are hesitant to get their accountants involved early in the transaction, and I think that’s one of the biggest mistakes that I see made is not involving that CPA. And there are lots of good CPAs out there that understand and work in these dental transactions. And they just need to be looped in and they need to help talk about personal versus corporate goodwill. If there are tax attributes that the corporation could use some things allocated to corporate goodwill versus personal goodwill, because they’ve got corporate tax attributes to use up.

Danielle McBride: [00:06:44] I mean, the CPA is in a position to know these things, and they’re also the first line of defense if a transaction gets audited. So, they need to be involved from the beginning. And everybody needs to be on the same page. So, I always say, practice transitions, practice sales, business sales, they’re a team sport. And you need to have all your team players on the field when you’re trying to work through these things.

Stuart Oberman: [00:07:12] I don’t know, some transactions are a blood sport. I don’t know about a team sport.

Danielle McBride: [00:07:18] That’s when we get the corporate transactions involved and it gets more complicated because –

Stuart Oberman: [00:07:22] And I know you run into this, when everyone is ready to quit the deal, I mean, everyone’s like, “I’m done with this. I can’t do this anymore. I’m sick of this. I’m done. We’re about one day away from finalizing the deal, aren’t we?” It’s just gets to that stage.

Stuart Oberman: [00:07:37] Now, you also mentioned a couple of things. You mentioned, you know, at the end of the transaction, there’s got to be a true up of allocations that have to be reported to the IRS. How important is that and what form is that?

Danielle McBride: [00:07:51] That is very important, and it’s often overlooked, and most clients don’t understand this, and don’t know anything about it as well. It’s a Form 8594. So, in a sale transaction, you have to report the transaction to the IRS. That gets done on a Form 8594. That should be prepared by the accountants. Another reason accountants need looped into this, because they’re the ones that ultimately prepare that Form 8594 to submit to the IRS.

Danielle McBride: [00:08:21] So, in the documents, it’s important to have the price allocation spelled out so that the accountants can properly report this, because it’s the same as if you accidentally forget to report that you got a 1099 or a W-2 from an employer, you’re going to wind up audited because the IRS gets reporting from both sides of a transaction. So, if you don’t submit an 8594 or you submit one that’s different than the other party, it’s going to flag you for an audit.

Stuart Oberman: [00:08:54] Now, I got one question that we’ve run into on occasion. What happens if the buyer wants to set a floating sales price that is spread out through the years where, let’s say, they say if you hit this target, this is a sale price. And that may go on for two or three years. How complex is that and how problematic is that for the seller who doesn’t know what in the world to do with this taxes?

Danielle McBride: [00:09:21] Yeah. So, that is also a reason to have your accountant involved because there are certain ways that you can report that. And that may get reported as an installment sale. And those numbers, you don’t want to report it on that initial tax form that goes in because you may or may not receive those amounts. Those amounts could be treated as an installment sale, and you don’t get taxed until you actually receive the funds.

Stuart Oberman: [00:09:45] Oh, wow. Okay. So, that sounds like another podcast. I mean, it truly is amazing. You know, in this brief, brief segment that you’ve touched on, you’ve touched on corporate goodwill, personal versus corporate, C versus S Corporation, reporting 8594, and you’ve touched on installment sales. I mean, it is truly amazing what has to be done on a tax side from a sale, whether it is a small sale or $44 million sale, which we’ve handled on a transaction.

Stuart Oberman: [00:10:27] I say we could talk seven days on topics. But in closing, is there anything you’d want to add advice that we can give our listeners on what they want to do before they start getting into the meat of this transaction or a transaction?

Danielle McBride: [00:10:49] Well, make sure you reach out to your advisors. If you’ve got letters of intent, make sure you show those to your advisors and go through those. Make sure you’re thinking about the structure and the tax allocations. And make sure you understand the terms of the deal, you know, things like personal versus corporate goodwill. Another thing we didn’t even touch on that I see as a big issue is accounts receivable and how that’s going to be handled.

Stuart Oberman: [00:11:17] There’s another podcast. You’re making a career out of this.

Danielle McBride: [00:11:20] Yeah. You’re going to keep me on this.

Stuart Oberman: [00:11:24] We’re going to have the Danielle McBride show here in a minute. They’re going to give me the hook. You’ve already teed up seven episodes here. It’s like a version of a Game of Thrones, geez. Well, again, it is amazing and you’ve done an amazing job since joining the firm. We’re so happy to have you. You bring so much gravitas to the table. Again, we’re definitely going to have you back on this show.

Stuart Oberman: [00:11:53] So, in parting, if you need to reach Danielle, please feel free to email her at danielle, D-A-N-I-E-L-L-E, @obermannlaw.com. The phone number 770-886-2400. Folks, it’s been an absolute pleasure and we hope that you’ve at least taken away one golden nugget of this. And if so, we’ll consider this podcast an absolute success. Danielle, thank you again. I know you’ve got a convention to go to. And we appreciate your time. Thanks a lot. Ladies and gentlemen, thanks and have a fantastic day.

Outro: [00:12:30] Thank you for joining us on Advisory Insights. This show is brought to you by Oberman Law Firm, a business-centric law firm representing local, regional, and national clients in a wide range of practice areas, including health care, mergers and acquisitions, corporate transactions, and regulatory compliance.

About Advisory Insights Podcast

Presented by Oberman Law Firm, Advisory Insights Podcast covers legal, business, HR, and other topics of vital concern to healthcare practices and other business owners. This show series can be found here as well as on all the major podcast apps.

Stuart Oberman, Oberman Law Firm

Oberman Law Firm

Stuart Oberman, Founder, Oberman Law Firm

Stuart Oberman is the founder and President of Oberman Law Firm. Mr. Oberman graduated from Urbana University and received his law degree from John Marshall Law School. Mr. Oberman has been practicing law for over 25 years, and before going into private practice, Mr. Oberman was in-house counsel for a Fortune 500 Company. Mr. Oberman is widely regarded as the go-to attorney in the area of Dental Law, which includes DSO formation, corporate business structures, mergers and acquisitions, regulatory compliance, advertising regulations, HIPAA, Compliance, and employment law regulations that affect dental practices.

In addition, Mr. Oberman’s expertise in the healthcare industry includes advising clients in the complex regulatory landscape as it relates to telehealth and telemedicine, including compliance of corporate structures, third-party reimbursement, contract negotiations, technology, health care fraud, and abuse law (Anti-Kickback Statute and the State Law), professional liability risk management, federal and state regulations.

As the long-term care industry evolves, Mr. Oberman has the knowledge and experience to guide clients in the long-term care sector with respect to corporate and regulatory matters, assisted living facilities, continuing care retirement communities (CCRCs). In addition, Mr. Oberman’s practice also focuses on health care facility acquisitions and other changes of ownership, as well as related licensure and Medicare/Medicaid certification matters, CCRC registrations, long-term care/skilled nursing facility management, operating agreements, assisted living licensure matters, and health care joint ventures.

In addition to his expertise in the health care industry, Mr. Oberman has a nationwide practice that focuses on all facets of contractual disputes, including corporate governance, fiduciary duty, trade secrets, unfair competition, covenants not to compete, trademark and copyright infringement, fraud, and deceptive trade practices, and other business-related matters. Mr. Oberman also represents clients throughout the United States in a wide range of practice areas, including mergers & acquisitions, partnership agreements, commercial real estate, entity formation, employment law, commercial leasing, intellectual property, and HIPAA/OSHA compliance.

Mr. Oberman is a national lecturer and has published articles in the U.S. and Canada.

LinkedIn

Oberman Law Firm

Oberman Law Firm has a long history of civic service, noted national, regional, and local clients, and stands among the Southeast’s eminent and fast-growing full-service law firms. Oberman Law Firm’s areas of practice include Business Planning, Commercial & Technology Transactions, Corporate, Employment & Labor, Estate Planning, Health Care, Intellectual Property, Litigation, Privacy & Data Security, and Real Estate.

By meeting their client’s goals and becoming a trusted partner and advocate for our clients, their attorneys are recognized as legal go-getters who provide value-added service. Their attorneys understand that in a rapidly changing legal market, clients have new expectations, constantly evolving choices, and operate in an environment of heightened reputational and commercial risk.

Oberman Law Firm’s strength is its ability to solve complex legal problems by collaborating across borders and practice areas.

Connect with Oberman Law Firm:

Company website | LinkedIn | Twitter

Tagged With: Advisory Insights, Advisory Insights Podcast, dental practices, employees, Oberman Law, Oberman Law Firm, Practice Sale, Stuart Oberman, Tax Consequences, Taxes

Tax Implications of a Practice Sale

September 23, 2022 by John Ray

Tax Implications of a Practice Sale
Advisory Insights Podcast
Tax Implications of a Practice Sale
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Tax Implications of a Practice Sale

Tax Implications of a Practice Sale (Advisory Insights Podcast, Episode 10)

On this episode of Advisory Insights, Stuart Oberman talked with Danielle McBride and Lauren Mansour, both Partners at Oberman Law Firm, on the tax implications of a practice sale. They covered letters of intent and what key provisions should be in them, common tax pitfalls, different classes of shares common with DSO acquirors, how to limit the tax consequences of Class C shares, and more.

Advisory Insights is presented by Oberman Law Firm and produced by the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX®. The series can be found on all the major podcast apps. You can find the complete show archive here.

Danielle McBride, Partner, Oberman Law Firm

Danielle McBride
Danielle McBride, Partner, Oberman Law Firm

Danielle McBride has been practicing law for over 21 years, and her primary focus is representing healthcare clients on a local, regional, and national basis. Ms. McBride regularly consults with clients regarding simple to complex healthcare transitions, including mergers and acquisitions, employment law, governmental compliance, tax strategies, practice valuations, DSO formation and structures, employee compensation, associate and partnership contracts, joint ventures, and partnership buy-in/buy-outs.

In addition, Ms. McBride brings a wealth of knowledge and experience preparing practice valuations for clients, as well as formulating simple to complex tax strategies, and entity formations.

Ms. McBride holds a Bachelor of Arts in Sociology/Criminology from The Ohio State University, a Juris Doctor (J.D.) from Ohio Northern University Pettit College of Law, and a Master of Laws (LL.M.) in Taxation from Case Western Reserve University.

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Lauren Mansour, Partner, Oberman Law Firm

Lauren Mansour, Partner, Oberman Law Firm

Lauren A. Mansour, Esq.’s practice is devoted to the representation of health care providers in various corporate and regulatory compliance matters. Lauren handles transactional matters for her clients, representing healthcare providers in joint ventures, mergers, and acquisitions. Ms. Mansour regularly counsels her clients on a range of compliance and regulatory matters, including anti-kickback and stark issues, fraud and abuse laws, state corporate practice of medicine doctrines, and state licensure laws.

Ms. Mansour’s expertise in the health care industry includes compliance of corporate structures, third-party reimbursement, contract negotiations, partnership agreements, commercial leasing, technology, health care fraud and abuse, professional liability risk management, federal and state regulations. Ms. Mansour has experience representing startups, seasoned professionals, and dental service organizations, and enjoys advising clients at every stage of practice ownership.

A graduate of the University of Georgia School of Law, Ms. Mansour joined Oberman Law Firm in 2010 and is licensed to practice law in Georgia and South Carolina.

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TRANSCRIPT

 Intro: [00:00:01] Broadcasting from the studios of Business RadioX, it’s time for Advisory Insights. Brought to you by Oberman Law Firm, serving clients nationwide with tailored service and exceptional results. Now, here’s your host.

Stuart Oberman: [00:00:20] Hello everyone and welcome to Advisory Insights Podcast. Well, today, we’ve got two special guests with us. There is a lot going on in the health care field for the mergers and acquisitions, whether it’s dental, vets, eye, it is all over the place. So, I got two of our great, great partners at the Oberman Law Firm today, and I want to introduce them, Lauren Mansour and Danielle McBride. Both of them do a tremendous job on mergers and acquisitions.

Stuart Oberman: [00:00:51] And I want to talk to Lauren a little bit first. And the key thing is letters of intent. I know if you’re an attorney, you do transactions, you always get, it seems, a signed letter of intent before you really, really have a chance to drill down on it. So, Lauren’s going to talk a little bit about letters of intent. And then, Danielle is going to talk about tax items that are really, really critical in a health care transition, whether it’s a private equity company or it is a private sale.

Stuart Oberman: [00:01:25] So, let’s start off, Lauren, tell you what, I want you to take me through some steps that our listeners need to know regarding LOIs. I mean, we’ve got stuff on holdbacks, real estate matters. I want you to drill down a little bit. Before I start, last year we did as a firm about 135 transactions totaling about 350 million. So, we’ve seen a lot of stuff come under the bridge, if you will, last year. And I think we saw a lot of things we don’t want to see happen again. So, Lauren, tell you what, talk to the audience, tell me a little bit about letters of intent, what you run into and your problems. And, hopefully, our listeners can pick up a couple of pointers.

Lauren Mansour: [00:02:12] Of course, happy to jump into this topic. So, a letter of intent kind of varies. Sometimes we see letters of intent that are a paragraph long, maybe half-a-page max, and sometimes they’re ten pages. And so, there’s definitely a lot of variance depending on the transaction.

Lauren Mansour: [00:02:31] I would say I was speaking with a buyer yesterday, even for just a simpler doctor to doctor transaction, I think it’s important to have a little bit more than half-of-a-page because you do want to flash out certain important concepts and just make sure that you and the seller or you and the buyer are on the same page, and you’re not both spending money on attorneys and bankers and CPAs, and spending time going through this process of negotiating a transaction, and you are never really on the same page to begin with.

Lauren Mansour: [00:03:08] So, I think that we don’t necessarily have to spend a whole lot of time on the letter of intent. But I think it’s important to make sure certain key items like, obviously, the purchase price, possibly even purchase price allocations, what does any post sale employment look like for the seller restrictive covenants, can we agree on those at the LOI stage, is there any real estate involved, and have terms been agreed upon. And if so, let’s include that.

Lauren Mansour: [00:03:39] For a buyer, it’s very important to have exclusivity language in the letter of intent, because you do want to make sure. Again, you’re kind of investing your time and money into the process and you want to make sure that the seller is not continuing to speak with other interested parties. And then, you also want to make sure there’s language that is clear that this document is not binding. I think most letters of intent will say that. But we have had clients in the past sign an LOI before we reviewed, and it was binding. And when they decided after diligence they wanted to walk away, they were facing legal action.

Lauren Mansour: [00:04:20] So, some important tips, I think that in larger transactions, so when our clients are selling, especially to a large group, these letters of intent can be very complex. And I was just looking at one the other day for a client that’s selling a group of practices, and she was looking at restrictive covenants that were not just around her practices, but statewide for any practice that the buyer group owned in any state, that entire state was wiped out for her.

Lauren Mansour: [00:04:56] And so, I think it’s important to kind of go through and make sure that you’re comfortable and you’re aware of the terms kind of before you move forward. Because with sellers, and if they’re talking with big group practices, you’re often courting several buyers. And so, if you can kind of flash out a lot of these concepts and make sure that you understand them, it’s more than just the purchase price. There’s now holdbacks and earnouts and equity involved.

Lauren Mansour: [00:05:31] And so, what do these holdbacks look like? So, sometimes we’ll have a very large transaction and it will briefly mention a holdback or the earnout, and what does that mean? Or the equity won’t be clearly spelled out, and so we have to ask questions. And it’s my opinion, better on the frontend to say, are there going to be any ties to any of this? Is the equity subject to forfeiture if employment terminates before a certain period? Or the earnout, what is it tied to? Do we have to just be employed or do we have to have certain collection levels that we have?

Stuart Oberman: [00:06:08] Can you explain, so you just hit really on a couple of points. One, have you seen a request on a national non-compete? Two, take our listeners through the process of what exactly is an earnout and a holdback.

Lauren Mansour: [00:06:26] I don’t know that I’ve seen a national non-compete. These are usually groups that are in several states that they’ll kind of limit to a region, but it definitely can be several states, and a lot of times it’s tied to equity. So, if you invest with the buyer group, they’ll tie you to think, “Okay. You need to be loyal to this group. Right now you’re invested with us, and so now, because of the equity, you have to not compete with us, not only around your practices, but around any practices we own. We don’t want you to work there.”

Lauren Mansour: [00:07:02] And so, sometimes there’s circles around every practice they own and sometimes there’s just statewide restrictions. If we own in this state, you cannot operate there. Which is sometimes not problematic when our clients are looking to retire. But other times it is, our clients are younger, they still want to work, there’s never any guarantees. And I think we have to look at things from the worst case scenario, just planning it. And so, it can be problematic.

Lauren Mansour: [00:07:32] With respect to your question on holdbacks or earnouts, in some occasions, a purchase price, let’s say, 80 percent of the purchase price is paid at closing, maybe there’s 20 percent that’s paid in an earnout. And that could be part of a purchase agreement or it could be part of an employment agreement.

Lauren Mansour: [00:07:53] But the earnout means, let’s say, it’s 100,000 a year for three years. And each year, in order to get $100,000, your practice has to continue to collect a certain level or it has to grow by a certain percent. And so, in order to get your 100,000 for the first year, your practice has to be at a certain collection level. And if it’s not, you do not receive that amount. Sometimes those earnouts are only tied to continued employment. So, as long as you’re working there, you would receive it. And we will try to negotiate things like, “Okay. Well, what if there’s death or disability? Would we get it in those events?” But that’s what the earnout looks like.

Lauren Mansour: [00:08:35] And then, holdbacks are similar. Sometimes holdbacks are just based on operating liability expenses to make sure that the seller didn’t leave anything unpaid that the buyer has to pay for. Other times they’re longer term holdbacks, they’re tied to either employment or some revenue metric, and you would receive that amount as long as the goal is met.

Stuart Oberman: [00:09:01] So, you mentioned a couple of things. One, invest in a group, is that where, let’s say, we’re talking about $100,000 deal, doctors will take $200 and invest that back into the private equity company?

Lauren Mansour: [00:09:21] Correct.

Stuart Oberman: [00:09:21] Let’s put that on $1,000,000 scale. So, the doctors are going to take $800,000 to put it in their pocket, and they are percentage. And the equity companies want to have the investment back into groups that are doctors putting in, essentially, $200,000 back into their pockets, if you will, whether it’s what? A or C shares you’re seeing, A or B share stock?

Lauren Mansour: [00:09:51] Right. So, there’s a portion of the purchase price that instead of you receiving that in cash at closing, you will invest it in an entity. And a lot of times with these groups, it may not be the actual buying entity. It may be a group that they formed where all of the doctors are investing into that specific entity. There’ll be an operating agreement. You’re governed by the terms of the existing agreements in place. There’s never any guarantees. Sometimes there’s discussion on the frontend.

Lauren Mansour: [00:10:22] I’ve actually seen it a couple of times recently and spoke with some of my colleagues about how it was actually in writing from a buyer that they expected it to be X amount. But, usually, they may tell you how much you may receive on a return or what they’re expecting. But, again, never any guarantee. The buyers will usually give you some timeframe that they are expecting to roll, so it may be, “We’re expecting within the next year or in two years. That’s when we’re going to do our equity event and you’ll be able to see some of this investment back.” But it’s generally variable, economy and what’s going on in terms of what the buyer pool will look like.

Stuart Oberman: [00:11:04] I mean, just great information. So, literally in 15 minutes, you’ve hit on some amazing topics, purchase price, holdbacks, earnouts, length of terms of employment contracts, real estate, restrictive covenants, equity earnouts, real estate exclusivity binding. I mean, this is a seven day conversation that we’re putting in to, like, 15 minutes. So, you did an enormous, enormous job outlining everything. Is there anything else you want to add that may be of importance to buyers or sellers on any kind of transaction regarding an LOI until we jump into our tax side of the sale?

Lauren Mansour: [00:11:49] I mean, I just think overall, regardless if you’re the buyer and you’re looking at terminating employment, maybe even before you sign a purchase agreement, which I think you need to be cautious about, I think it’s very important for a buyer to have a LOI that’s clearly spelled out so that you know both parties are on the same page with respect to most of the major terms.

Lauren Mansour: [00:12:11] And then, a seller, especially with these very complex group LOIs, I think it’s also important, one, just to understand everything and sometimes to flash things out a little more fully than they even are in that group. LOI, just because, again, I feel like at times you have more negotiation power at the LOI stage. So, once you’ve signed something, if you didn’t understand it or we think, “Oh, this isn’t really market, let’s see if we can change it,” it sometimes becomes more difficult.

Lauren Mansour: [00:12:41] And so, I think it’s a good idea to have that letter of intent reviewed and to fully negotiate it at that stage while the buyer is basically courting you versus after you’ve already signed. So, I think that would be my advice is definitely to pay attention, not to disregard the LOI and to make sure that you’re comfortable with all of the terms.

Stuart Oberman: [00:13:01] Yeah. That’s just great information. Like I said, this is a seven day conversation and we’re trying to boil it down into a relatively short period of time, if you will. Lauren, thank you very much on that.

Stuart Oberman: [00:13:12] And now I want to jump over to Danielle McBride, who does an enormous amount of transactions as does Lauren on a national basis. And Danielle is our resident tax attorney, also extraordinaire, she’s got a master’s in tax. And I know that this could be a 75 day conversation on tax, but there’s so many things that can really go sideways regarding tax issues in a merger and acquisition. And, Danielle, I want you to touch on a few of those sort of landmines, if you will.

Stuart Oberman: [00:13:49] And then, Lauren said to two things. I want to know the tax consequences on earnout and what that looks like. And, again, I know there’s so much information you can provide. But I want you to to discuss some of the tax issues that you run into through your training and experience. And you’ve been on both sides of the fence. You also done state planning for tax issues. So, you’ve got a well-versed bullpen, if you will. So, Danielle, take it away. I want to hear some things that our listeners want to hear about.

Danielle McBride: [00:14:27] Sure. I would just start off by saying I completely agree with Lauren, though, about consulting with your advisors on the letter of intent on some of these concepts, because if you don’t get them flashed out, you don’t understand them. And then, especially with a corporate sale, it becomes sometimes impossible to negotiate off of those things that are in the letter of intent with them.

Danielle McBride: [00:14:51] So, I do agree with her. It’s really important to look. Just because people tell you letters of intent are nonbinding, don’t skip that step in having it reviewed by your advisor because it makes the our job a lot more difficult and it could really change some of the tax consequences for you.

Danielle McBride: [00:15:10] So, as far as tax implications, there’s sort of some basic tax implications on these deals, whether it’s a private party or a corporate sale. You know, it gets more complex when you’ve got the corporate sales and the DSOs that are buying these, and you’ve got the rollover equity, and earnouts, and holdbacks, and those sorts of things. So, your basic tax consequences, you’re got a sale of assets, tangible assets, your fixed assets, and you’ve got your goodwill.

Danielle McBride: [00:15:43] The goodwill can be a big deal and there can be some tax traps there as far as is this professional personal goodwill, is it corporate owned goodwill, and how is that allocated. You know, there can also sometimes be some negotiation as to how much is allocated on the side of the goodwill versus the tangible assets. And there are a few differences between those tax implications and whether buyers and sellers, whether it’s private party or a corporate sale, how much are you going to allocate to either transaction.

Danielle McBride: [00:16:23] So, the complexity comes from the corporate sales and when you’ve got these holdbacks and rollover equity. So, a private party is pretty much going to pay you cash at closing. So, you’re going to have your tangible assets and your goodwill allocation. You’re going to have a portion that’s taxed at ordinary rates. You’re going to have a portion that’s taxed at capital gains rates. Usually, the bulk of that is capital gains for your goodwill allocation.

Danielle McBride: [00:16:48] But on a corporate deal, you’re not getting all cash at closing. You’re usually getting maybe 70 to 80 percent as cash at closing. And the rest is in these earnouts, holdbacks, and rollover equity, like Lauren mentioned.

Danielle McBride: [00:17:02] So, that rollover equity piece, earnouts, and holdbacks, those are usually taxed. They’re usually tied to compensation, performance triggers, and things like that. They’re paid over time. And a lot of times those are paid as compensation, and you get taxed at compensation rates, at ordinary income rates for those.

Danielle McBride: [00:17:22] Your rollover equity, though, you can get tax deferral on that rollover equity. So, you’re investing in a parent company or a holding company that one of these corporate buyers has. And so, you’re contributing assets in exchange for goodwill often. And so, you’re getting a tax deferral on this rollover equity under Section 721. And you don’t recognize any tax on that until you sell it later, until that company has what they call a liquidity event, or they bring in a new private equity buyer, or they sell the entire company.

Danielle McBride: [00:18:09] Some of these are scaling up and then they sell the entire business to someone new. That’s when you would wind up with your taxable event and recognize capital gains tax, usually, because your contribution of assets is typically goodwill contribute in exchange for that rollover equity.

Stuart Oberman: [00:18:32] I have one question for you. So, on the capital gains side, you mentioned 721. Now, you’ve got another podcast coming up where we’re actually going to touch even more on 721s, which are critical to the tax consequences. But one thing I want to know is, is investment in shares – our clients get letters of intent and it’s A shares, C shares – what is the difference on the tax consequences, if any, on those particular A shares or B shares or C shares?

Lauren Mansour: [00:19:07] Sure. Well, in most cases with a seller, they’re receiving A or B shares, typically it’s B shares. The A shares will be held by the members who created the entity. Those owners, the directors, the managers of that business, they may hold the A shares, which may mean that they have more authority, more management power. That’s usually the big difference between class A, class B shares. Class A shares can sometimes have a preferred return where money is paid out to those Class A shareholders first before the Class B shareholders, which are usually all your doctors.

Danielle McBride: [00:19:43] You can also have Class C shares where you don’t have a typical equity, but maybe you have an associate. Seller has an associate who they want to keep on board. Buyer wants them to stay on board so they offer some Class C shares that are really a profits interest in the business. And those can be subject to vesting requirements, and continued employment, hitting performance triggers, things like that, and they won’t get a return on those until they hit the four years that they have to work with them.

Danielle McBride: [00:20:21] So, those Class C shares, usually, they don’t share in the existing value of the practice. It’s usually just a go forward thing. So, once those shares vest, they will have a piece of the pie in any growth in the business, not in the existing value of the business, and those can get complicated.

Danielle McBride: [00:20:46] And, now, there’s something called an 83B Election that can come in, so you’re not getting taxed, so you can limit your tax consequences and get a substantial portion of this growth in capital gains versus ordinary income tax like compensation on these amounts. It can get very complicated.

Stuart Oberman: [00:21:06] 83B sounds like another podcast.

Danielle McBride: [00:21:09] Yes.

Stuart Oberman: [00:21:09] I think you just teed yourself up to another at bat here. I got you. I got you. Well, you know, the funny thing, I’m listening to you talking all this information, and it’s amazing to me how many -and I hate to say this – CPAs and financial advisors don’t understand this when they get into these transactions. And then, it becomes very complex when someone like you understands the absolute tax side of this has a financial adviser on the other side and doesn’t explain or can’t explain to the seller why it is so beneficial, yet risky to a certain extent, in the long run.

Stuart Oberman: [00:21:53] So, I’m sitting here listening to all this and these are the questions that our CPAs are asking us – they’re asking you, they’re not asking me.

Danielle McBride: [00:22:05] Yeah. Yeah. Definitely. They’re asking me in.

Stuart Oberman: [00:22:08] They ask me these questions, I’m getting you on speed dial, so we’re good with that. We’re good with that.

Danielle McBride: [00:22:12] Yeah. Yeah.

Stuart Oberman: [00:22:13] I tell you, like I say, we got another podcast coming up with you and I know we’re going to cover 721 and 83Bs. But, Danielle, thank you so much for this information. I think the information that you gave was just enough to let our clients know, our listeners know, or maybe they’re not even doing business with us but, yet, they’re going to get their financial advisors, their CPAs, and their lawyers involved. But, Danielle, extraordinary job. I look forward to our next podcast. And I know Lauren’s going to have some further input later on down the road on some of these podcasts.

Stuart Oberman: [00:22:54] But, folks, we are about to conclude the Advisory Insights podcast. My name has been Stuart Oberman, Oberman Law Firm. So, if you want to reach out to Lauren, please feel free to email Lauren at lauren, L-A-U-R-E-N, @obermanlaw.com. And danielle, D-A-N-I-E-L-L-E, @obermannlaw.com. A phone number for the firm is 770-886-2400.

Stuart Oberman: [00:23:23] Folks, thanks so much for listening in. Danielle, Lauren, thank you so much for your time. And I know it’s invaluable, invaluable information. Ladies and gentlemen, thanks a lot. Have a fantastic day.

Outro: [00:23:37] Thank you for joining us on Advisory Insights. This show is brought to you by Oberman Law Firm, a business-centric law firm representing local, regional, and national clients in a wide range of practice areas, including health care, mergers and acquisitions, corporate transactions, and regulatory compliance.

 

About Advisory Insights Podcast

Presented by Oberman Law Firm, Advisory Insights Podcast covers legal, business, HR, and other topics of vital concern to healthcare practices and other business owners. This show series can be found here as well as on all the major podcast apps.

Stuart Oberman, Oberman Law Firm

Oberman Law Firm

Stuart Oberman, Founder, Oberman Law Firm

Stuart Oberman is the founder and President of Oberman Law Firm. Mr. Oberman graduated from Urbana University and received his law degree from John Marshall Law School. Mr. Oberman has been practicing law for over 25 years, and before going into private practice, Mr. Oberman was in-house counsel for a Fortune 500 Company. Mr. Oberman is widely regarded as the go-to attorney in the area of Dental Law, which includes DSO formation, corporate business structures, mergers and acquisitions, regulatory compliance, advertising regulations, HIPAA, Compliance, and employment law regulations that affect dental practices.

In addition, Mr. Oberman’s expertise in the healthcare industry includes advising clients in the complex regulatory landscape as it relates to telehealth and telemedicine, including compliance of corporate structures, third-party reimbursement, contract negotiations, technology, health care fraud, and abuse law (Anti-Kickback Statute and the State Law), professional liability risk management, federal and state regulations.

As the long-term care industry evolves, Mr. Oberman has the knowledge and experience to guide clients in the long-term care sector with respect to corporate and regulatory matters, assisted living facilities, continuing care retirement communities (CCRCs). In addition, Mr. Oberman’s practice also focuses on health care facility acquisitions and other changes of ownership, as well as related licensure and Medicare/Medicaid certification matters, CCRC registrations, long-term care/skilled nursing facility management, operating agreements, assisted living licensure matters, and health care joint ventures.

In addition to his expertise in the health care industry, Mr. Oberman has a nationwide practice that focuses on all facets of contractual disputes, including corporate governance, fiduciary duty, trade secrets, unfair competition, covenants not to compete, trademark and copyright infringement, fraud, and deceptive trade practices, and other business-related matters. Mr. Oberman also represents clients throughout the United States in a wide range of practice areas, including mergers & acquisitions, partnership agreements, commercial real estate, entity formation, employment law, commercial leasing, intellectual property, and HIPAA/OSHA compliance.

Mr. Oberman is a national lecturer and has published articles in the U.S. and Canada.

LinkedIn

Oberman Law Firm

Oberman Law Firm has a long history of civic service, noted national, regional, and local clients, and stands among the Southeast’s eminent and fast-growing full-service law firms. Oberman Law Firm’s areas of practice include Business Planning, Commercial & Technology Transactions, Corporate, Employment & Labor, Estate Planning, Health Care, Intellectual Property, Litigation, Privacy & Data Security, and Real Estate.

By meeting their client’s goals and becoming a trusted partner and advocate for our clients, their attorneys are recognized as legal go-getters who provide value-added service. Their attorneys understand that in a rapidly changing legal market, clients have new expectations, constantly evolving choices, and operate in an environment of heightened reputational and commercial risk.

Oberman Law Firm’s strength is its ability to solve complex legal problems by collaborating across borders and practice areas.

Connect with Oberman Law Firm:

Company website | LinkedIn | Twitter

Tagged With: Advisory Insights, Advisory Insights Podcast, dental practices, employees, Oberman Law, Oberman Law Firm, Practice Sale, Stuart Oberman, Tax Implications, Taxes

Overview of Pregnancy Accommodations

September 16, 2022 by John Ray

Overview of Pregnancy Accommodations
Advisory Insights Podcast
Overview of Pregnancy Accommodations
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Overview of Pregnancy Accommodations

Overview of Pregnancy Accommodations (Advisory Insights Podcast, Episode 9)

Are you an employer who needs to accommodate a pregnant employee? Then this episode of Advisory Insights is for you! Stuart Oberman from Oberman Law Firm shared relevant laws, such as the Pregnancy Discrimination Act, the Family Medical Leave Act, and the Americans with Disabilities Act. Stuart also discussed EEOC guidelines on how to treat employees who are temporarily unable to perform their duties due to pregnancy or other medical conditions, and he shared a reminder that employers cannot discriminate against an employee who is pregnant.

Advisory Insights is presented by Oberman Law Firm and produced by the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX®. The series can be found on all the major podcast apps. You can find the complete show archive here.

TRANSCRIPT

Intro: [00:00:01] Broadcasting from the studios of Business RadioX, it’s time for Advisory Insights. Brought to you by Oberman Law Firm, serving clients nationwide with tailored service and exceptional results. Now, here’s your host.

Stuart Oberman: [00:00:20] And welcome everyone. Stuart Oberman here. Welcome to Advisory Insights. I want to talk about an issue that we run into a lot of questions on, whether it is through our webinars, whether through our podcasts, whether it’s through our speaking, or just on our clients on a national basis. So, for those that have listened before, we have clients in about 35 to 40 states and we represent small, medium, large global companies, small company startups.

Stuart Oberman: [00:00:54] And there’s a resounding question of this particular topic, which is regarding pregnancy accommodations. “What do I do? How do I handle this? I’ve got a great employee. I want to make sure that I’m doing this right. I respect them. I want to make every accommodation possible, but I don’t know what to do.”

Stuart Oberman: [00:01:17] Well, let me give you a little bit of background here and some information. Keep in mind that every situation is different. Every employment situation is different, whether you are in a business environment, whether you are working remote, whether you are working in a health care office, one of our dental offices, one of our veterinary offices for our clients. So, every situation is different. I’ll give you a little bit of 10,000 foot view. And then, again, at the end, if you have any questions, we’ll relay how to get a hold of us.

Stuart Oberman: [00:01:57] So, you know, what do you do when you have an employee that is pregnant? And we frequently get this from H.R. professionals, how do we handle accommodation requests? Well, first and foremost, they are covered depending on the circumstances. For employees that are pregnant, there is a Federal Law, the Pregnancy Discrimination Act, you’ve got the Family Medical Leave Act, and American with Disabilities Act.

Stuart Oberman: [00:02:26] So, first and foremost, when you get those questions, you have to go immediately and review those particular laws, again, the Pregnancy Discrimination Act, the Family Medical Leave Act, and Americans with Disabilities Act. That’s your starting point.

Stuart Oberman: [00:02:42] If you don’t know the answer right off hand, right off the bat, I would urge you, urge you, urge you get advice on counsel because you’re potentially playing with fire. And one area we need to take a look at is there’s been a lot of guidance from the EEOC, and they’ve come up with a whole diatribe of different things you can do and and how you treat employees who are temporarily unable to perform the functions while they’re pregnant or medical conditions. So, you got some guidance from the EEOC.

Stuart Oberman: [00:03:17] But let me give you this bullet point, the silver bullet, bottom line, bottom line is, employers, you cannot discriminate against an employee who is pregnant, period, bottom line. So, you have to take a look at if an employee meets the Family Medical Leave requirements eligibility. There are some cases where that particular employee may very well be entitled to 12 weeks of unpaid leave in a 12 month period, whether it’s full or part-time.

Stuart Oberman: [00:03:50] So, the one particular note is the Family Medical Leave Act does not require you as an employer to provide an employee with light duty work. So, again, you have to look at the circumstances. You have to look at the accommodations. You have to look at the job description. What is that employee doing?

Stuart Oberman: [00:04:14] So, one thing that we also want to take a look at under the ADA, American with Disabilities Act, is that the employee must have or, in some cases, regarded as having a physical or mental impairment that substantially limits one or more of the “life activities”. So, that is so broad that I would urge you not to self-interpret that, but take a look at the facts and circumstances and make sure that you are under proper guidance.

Stuart Oberman: [00:04:52] And I would document everything. If you have an employee who is pregnant and needs – I’ll use the words – special assistance, accommodations, curtailments, please have, please, please have a written procedure for this, a written request for the accommodation.

Stuart Oberman: [00:05:14] Now, I will tell you that there are some cases, not every employee is going to apply under state or federal local law. So, if you say, “Well, look. I don’t have to do anything. I don’t have any disregard for the federal, state, or local law. I’m not under any compliance. I’m going to do what I want.” Yes, that is true to a certain extent. But you’ve got to take a look at the whole picture. Is it a good employee? Do you want them back? Are you going to discharge them? Are you having trouble with that employee period even before they became pregnant and expecting? So, now you got a whole nother set of issues to document. I would always say that no matter what the employee is doing, the condition, skill level, you’ve got to document everything.

Stuart Oberman: [00:06:08] So, again, if the employee does not fall within the guidelines under state, federal, local law, and he may not, you, as employer, have the determination as to what extent you want to accommodate that employee. But I would urge you to seek guidance on that.

Stuart Oberman: [00:06:24] Now, remember, if you have an employee who’s expecting, it is not necessary that they use the word “accommodation we’re making a request to you.” They could say “I need” or “I want help with” or “I desire” or “because of my pregnancy, I can’t do this”. Just because they say, “You know what? you didn’t use the word accommodation.” It doesn’t matter. There’s different ways to ask for assistance on different things and you’ve got to be cognizant of that.

Stuart Oberman: [00:06:59] So, encourage your employees to be interactive with their expectations on you. Determine what they need, how they need it, what they need it, is it going to cost you a fortune or is it going to cost you a little for that accommodation, that request, that desire from the employee.

Stuart Oberman: [00:07:15] So, again, document it, put it in writing, have that request up to date, and always review everything you do on a daily basis, especially with employees that are asking for reasonable accommodations.

Stuart Oberman: [00:07:31] Folks, it’s a very, very complex question. I know we’re only covering this topic in a couple of minutes. I could speak probably three hours on this particular topic. But, again, top of mind, if you have these matters, look at them, address them, be smart what you do, seek counsel and guidance. Do not just fly off the handle and say no as soon as the request comes in.

Stuart Oberman: [00:07:55] So, folks, thank you for joining Advisory Insights. Stuart Oberman here as your host. If you want to get a hold of us, please give us a call, 770-886-2400 or email me at stuart, S-T-U-A-R-T, @obermanlaw.com. Folks, thank you for joining us. Hopefully, you took one or two things away from this particular topic. And we’ll look forward to seeing you on other podcasts of Advisory Insights. Have a great day.

Outro: [00:08:22] Thank you for joining us on Advisory Insights. This show is brought to you by Oberman Law Firm, a business-centric law firm representing local, regional, and national clients in a wide range of practice areas, including health care, mergers and acquisitions, corporate transactions, and regulatory compliance.

 

About Advisory Insights Podcast

Presented by Oberman Law Firm, Advisory Insights Podcast covers legal, business, HR, and other topics of vital concern to healthcare practices and other business owners. This show series can be found here as well as on all the major podcast apps.

Stuart Oberman, Oberman Law Firm

Oberman Law Firm
Stuart Oberman, Founder, Oberman Law Firm

Stuart Oberman is the founder and President of Oberman Law Firm. Mr. Oberman graduated from Urbana University and received his law degree from John Marshall Law School. Mr. Oberman has been practicing law for over 25 years, and before going into private practice, Mr. Oberman was in-house counsel for a Fortune 500 Company. Mr. Oberman is widely regarded as the go-to attorney in the area of Dental Law, which includes DSO formation, corporate business structures, mergers and acquisitions, regulatory compliance, advertising regulations, HIPAA, Compliance, and employment law regulations that affect dental practices.

In addition, Mr. Oberman’s expertise in the healthcare industry includes advising clients in the complex regulatory landscape as it relates to telehealth and telemedicine, including compliance of corporate structures, third-party reimbursement, contract negotiations, technology, health care fraud, and abuse law (Anti-Kickback Statute and the State Law), professional liability risk management, federal and state regulations.

As the long-term care industry evolves, Mr. Oberman has the knowledge and experience to guide clients in the long-term care sector with respect to corporate and regulatory matters, assisted living facilities, continuing care retirement communities (CCRCs). In addition, Mr. Oberman’s practice also focuses on health care facility acquisitions and other changes of ownership, as well as related licensure and Medicare/Medicaid certification matters, CCRC registrations, long-term care/skilled nursing facility management, operating agreements, assisted living licensure matters, and health care joint ventures.

In addition to his expertise in the health care industry, Mr. Oberman has a nationwide practice that focuses on all facets of contractual disputes, including corporate governance, fiduciary duty, trade secrets, unfair competition, covenants not to compete, trademark and copyright infringement, fraud, and deceptive trade practices, and other business-related matters. Mr. Oberman also represents clients throughout the United States in a wide range of practice areas, including mergers & acquisitions, partnership agreements, commercial real estate, entity formation, employment law, commercial leasing, intellectual property, and HIPAA/OSHA compliance.

Mr. Oberman is a national lecturer and has published articles in the U.S. and Canada.

LinkedIn

Oberman Law Firm

Oberman Law Firm has a long history of civic service, noted national, regional, and local clients, and stands among the Southeast’s eminent and fast-growing full-service law firms. Oberman Law Firm’s areas of practice include Business Planning, Commercial & Technology Transactions, Corporate, Employment & Labor, Estate Planning, Health Care, Intellectual Property, Litigation, Privacy & Data Security, and Real Estate.

By meeting their client’s goals and becoming a trusted partner and advocate for our clients, their attorneys are recognized as legal go-getters who provide value-added service. Their attorneys understand that in a rapidly changing legal market, clients have new expectations, constantly evolving choices, and operate in an environment of heightened reputational and commercial risk.

Oberman Law Firm’s strength is its ability to solve complex legal problems by collaborating across borders and practice areas.

Connect with Oberman Law Firm:

Company website | LinkedIn | Twitter

Tagged With: Advisory Insights, Advisory Insights Podcast, dental practices, employees, Oberman Law, Oberman Law Firm, pregnancy accommodations, Stuart Oberman

Dental Law Radio Rebrands and Relaunches as Advisory Insights Podcast

August 1, 2022 by John Ray

Dental Law Radio Rebrands and Relaunches as the Advisory Insights Podcast
Dental Law Radio
Dental Law Radio Rebrands and Relaunches as Advisory Insights Podcast
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Dental Law Radio Rebrands and Relaunches as the Advisory Insights Podcast

Dental Law Radio Rebrands and Relaunches as Advisory Insights Podcast (Dental Law Radio, Episode 32)

Over the past year, Oberman Law Firm has grown significantly, adding attorneys with various areas of expertise which extend well beyond the firm’s highly regarded and well-known work with dental practices. Consequently, the firm is rebranding and relaunching Dental Law Radio as Advisory Insights Podcast. Advisory Insights will cover the same legal, business, HR, and other topics addressed in Dental Law Radio, and will do so aimed at other healthcare practices and business owners as well.

Advisory Insights is underwritten and presented by Oberman Law Firm and produced by the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX®. The show series can be found here as well as on all the major podcast apps.

 

Stuart Oberman, Oberman Law Firm

Oberman Law Firm
Stuart Oberman, host of “Dental Law Radio”

Stuart Oberman is the founder and President of Oberman Law Firm. Mr. Oberman graduated from Urbana University and received his law degree from John Marshall Law School. Mr. Oberman has been practicing law for over 25 years, and before going into private practice, Mr. Oberman was in-house counsel for a Fortune 500 Company. Mr. Oberman is widely regarded as the go-to attorney in the area of Dental Law, which includes DSO formation, corporate business structures, mergers and acquisitions, regulatory compliance, advertising regulations, HIPAA, Compliance, and employment law regulations that affect dental practices.

In addition, Mr. Oberman’s expertise in the health care industry includes advising clients in the complex regulatory landscape as it relates to telehealth and telemedicine, including compliance of corporate structures, third-party reimbursement, contract negotiations, technology, health care fraud and abuse law (Anti-Kickback Statute and the State Law), professional liability risk management, federal and state regulations.

As the long-term care industry evolves, Mr. Oberman has the knowledge and experience to guide clients in the long-term care sector with respect to corporate and regulatory matters, assisted living facilities, continuing care retirement communities (CCRCs). In addition, Mr. Oberman’s practice also focuses on health care facility acquisitions and other changes of ownership, as well as related licensure and Medicare/Medicaid certification matters, CCRC registrations, long-term care/skilled nursing facility management, operating agreements, assisted living licensure matters, and health care joint ventures.

In addition to his expertise in the health care industry, Mr. Oberman has a nationwide practice that focuses on all facets of contractual disputes, including corporate governance, fiduciary duty, trade secrets, unfair competition, covenants not to compete, trademark and copyright infringement, fraud, and deceptive trade practices, and other business-related matters. Mr. Oberman also represents clients throughout the United States in a wide range of practice areas, including mergers & acquisitions, partnership agreements, commercial real estate, entity formation, employment law, commercial leasing, intellectual property, and HIPAA/OSHA compliance.

Mr. Oberman is a national lecturer and has published articles in the U.S. and Canada.

LinkedIn

Oberman Law Firm

Oberman Law Firm has a long history of civic service, noted national, regional, and local clients, and stands among the Southeast’s eminent and fast-growing full-service law firms. Oberman Law Firm’s areas of practice include Business Planning, Commercial & Technology Transactions, Corporate, Employment & Labor, Estate Planning, Health Care, Intellectual Property, Litigation, Privacy & Data Security, and Real Estate.

By meeting their client’s goals and becoming a trusted partner and advocate for our clients, their attorneys are recognized as legal go-getters who provide value-added service. Their attorneys understand that in a rapidly changing legal market, clients have new expectations, constantly evolving choices, and operate in an environment of heightened reputational and commercial risk.

Oberman Law Firm’s strength is its ability to solve complex legal problems by collaborating across borders and practice areas.

Connect with Oberman Law Firm:

Company website | LinkedIn | Twitter

 

Tagged With: Advisory Insights, Advisory Insights Podcast, dental, Dental Law Radio, dental practices, healthcare practices, HR, Oberman Law Firm, Stuart Oberman

Stuart Oberman, Oberman Law Firm and the Advisory Insights Podcast

July 26, 2022 by John Ray

Advisory Insights
Advisory Insights Podcast
Stuart Oberman, Oberman Law Firm and the Advisory Insights Podcast
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Stuart Oberman, Oberman Law Firm and the Advisory Insights Podcast (North Fulton Business Radio, Episode 477)

Over the past year, Oberman Law Firm has grown significantly, adding attorneys with various areas of expertise which extend well beyond the firm’s highly regarded and well-known work with dental practices. Stuart Oberman joined host John Ray to discuss this growth, the firm’s work with other healthcare practices and even international clients, and the rebranding and relaunch of Dental Law Radio into the Advisory Insights Podcast.

North Fulton Business Radio is broadcast from the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX® inside Renasant Bank in Alpharetta.

Oberman Law Firm

Oberman Law Firm has a long history of civic service, noted national, regional, and local clients, and stands among the Southeast’s eminent and fast-growing full-service law firms. Oberman Law Firm’s areas of practice include Business Planning, Commercial & Technology Transactions, Corporate, Employment & Labor, Estate Planning, Health Care, Intellectual Property, Litigation, Privacy & Data Security, and Real Estate.

By meeting their client’s goals and becoming a trusted partner and advocate for our clients, their attorneys are recognized as legal go-getters who provide value-added service. Their attorneys understand that in a rapidly changing legal market, clients have new expectations, constantly evolving choices, and operate in an environment of heightened reputational and commercial risk.

Oberman Law Firm’s strength is its ability to solve complex legal problems by collaborating across borders and practice areas.

Company website | LinkedIn | Facebook | Twitter

Stuart Oberman, Founder and President, Oberman Law Firm

Oberman Law Firm
Stuart Oberman, Founder and President, Oberman Law Firm

Stuart J. Oberman is the founder and President of Oberman Law Firm. Mr. Oberman graduated from Urbana University and received his law degree from John Marshall Law School. Mr. Oberman has been practicing law for over 25 years, and before going into private practice, Mr. Oberman was in-house counsel for a Fortune 500 Company.

Mr. Oberman is widely regarded as the go-to attorney in the area of Dental Law, which includes DSO formation, corporate business structures, mergers and acquisitions, regulatory compliance, advertising regulations, HIPAA, Compliance, and employment law regulations that affect dental practices.

In addition, Mr. Oberman’s expertise in the healthcare industry includes advising clients in the complex regulatory landscape as it relates to telehealth and telemedicine, including compliance of corporate structures, third-party reimbursement, contract negotiations, technology, health care fraud, and abuse law (Anti-Kickback Statute and the State Law), professional liability risk management, federal and state regulations.

As the long-term care industry evolves, Mr. Oberman has the knowledge and experience to guide clients in the long-term care sector with respect to corporate and regulatory matters, assisted living facilities, and continuing care retirement communities (CCRCs). In addition, Mr. Oberman’s practice also focuses on health care facility acquisitions and other changes of ownership, as well as related licensure and Medicare/Medicaid certification matters, CCRC registrations, long-term care/skilled nursing facility management, operating agreements, assisted living licensure matters, and health care joint ventures.

In addition to his expertise in the health care industry, Mr. Oberman has a nationwide practice that focuses on all facets of contractual disputes, including corporate governance, fiduciary duty, trade secrets, unfair competition, covenants not to compete, trademark and copyright infringement, fraud and deceptive trade practices, and other business-related matters.

Mr. Oberman also represents clients throughout the U.S. in a wide range of practice areas, including mergers & acquisitions, partnership agreements, commercial real estate, entity formation, employment law, commercial leasing, intellectual property, and HIPAA/OSHA compliance.

Mr. Oberman is a national lecturer and has published articles in the U.S. and Canada. In addition, Mr. Oberman has received the Martindale-Hubbell Client Distinction Award, which is based on client review ratings of communications ability, responsiveness, and quality of service.

LinkedIn

Questions and Topics in this Interview:

  • What is new at Oberman Law Firm?
  • How has the firm expanded?
  • Tell us about your new podcast, Advisory Insights Podcast
  • The Advisory Insights newsletter

North Fulton Business Radio is hosted by John Ray and broadcast and produced from the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX® inside Renasant Bank in Alpharetta. You can find the full archive of shows by following this link. The show is available on all the major podcast apps, including Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google, Amazon, iHeart Radio, Stitcher, TuneIn, and others.

RenasantBank

 

Renasant Bank has humble roots, starting in 1904 as a $100,000 bank in a Lee County, Mississippi, bakery. Since then, Renasant has grown to become one of the Southeast’s strongest financial institutions with over $13 billion in assets and more than 190 banking, lending, wealth management and financial services offices in Mississippi, Alabama, Tennessee, Georgia and Florida. All of Renasant’s success stems from each of their banker’s commitment to investing in their communities as a way of better understanding the people they serve. At Renasant Bank, they understand you because they work and live alongside you every day.

 

Special thanks to A&S Culinary Concepts for their support of this edition of North Fulton Business Radio. A&S Culinary Concepts, based in Johns Creek, is an award-winning culinary studio, celebrated for corporate catering, corporate team building, Big Green Egg Boot Camps, and private group events. They also provide oven-ready, cooked-from-scratch meals to go they call “Let Us Cook for You.” To see their menus and events, go to their website or call 678-336-9196.

Tagged With: A&S Culinary Concepts, Advisory Insights, Dental Law Radio, healthcare law, North Fulton Business Radio, Oberman Law Firm, renasant bank, Stuart Oberman

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