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REPORT FROM COUNSEL
FEDERAL TAX RELIEF
On June 7, the President signed
into law a $1.3 trillion tax-cut bill. The Economic Growth and
Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2001 is the largest tax
reduction in the last 20 years, although it will not do much
for the cause of tax simplification. Taxpayers should bear in
mind two time-related characteristics of the Act. First, the
tax cuts are phased in over a period of years, with some of
the most significant reductions occurring closer to 2010 than
2001. Second, due to arcane federal budget rules, the tax-cut
provisions in the Act are set to expire on December 31, 2010,
unless Congress takes action before then. The effect of the
Act's many provisions on individuals and small businesses
will have to be sorted out with the help of professional tax
advisors, but the following are some of the key components.
Individual Income Tax
The Act phases in a reduction
in tax rates, eventually lowering the 28%, 31%, 36%, and 39.6%
brackets to 25%, 28%, 33%, and 35%. The existing 15% bracket
will be split into 10% and 15% brackets. The creation of the
new 10% bracket has generated the retroactive relief that will
come to taxpayers this year in amounts ranging from $300 for
singles to $600 for married couples.
Before the new law, married
couples whose income was split more evenly than 70% to 30%
were likely to pay more in taxes than if they were not
married. Relief from this "marriage penalty" will
come in the form of an increased standard deduction for joint
filers to twice that of singles and a widening of the 15% tax
bracket for joint filers to twice that of singles.
The child tax credit gradually
will be increased from its current level of $500 to $1,000 in
the year 2010. The child credit will continue to phase out
above $75,000 for single individuals and those filing as head
of a household, and above $110,000 for married couples filing
jointly.
Education provisions in the Act
are intended to help both families and individuals through
direct tax and savings incentives. For example, the exclusion
from gross income for employer-provided educational
assistance, which would have expired after 2001, has been
extended permanently. Contribution limits for individual
retirement accounts for education have been increased from
$500 to $2,000. There is a new deduction for qualified higher
education expenses, but taxpayers may not take this deduction
and the Hope or Lifetime Learning credits in the same year
with respect to the same student. The deduction of student
loan interest has been expanded beyond the first 60 months in
which interest payments are required.
Estate Tax
Like many other aspects of the
Act, the reduction and eventual repeal of the estate tax is
phased in over a period of years. The top estate tax rates
drop slowly from 55% to 45%, while during the same period the
exemption jumps from the current $675,000 to $3.5 million.
Eventual repeal of the federal estate tax suggests that estate
planning will also eventually be simpler, but until that day
arrives planning could actually be more complicated. For the
rest of this decade the estate tax will be changing virtually
every year.
| Calendar
Year |
Estate
Tax Exemption |
| 2002 |
$1 million |
| 2003 |
$1 million |
| 2004 |
$1.5 million |
| 2005 |
$1.5 million |
| 2006 |
$2 million |
| 2007 |
$2 million |
| 2008 |
$2 million |
| 2009 |
$3.5million |
| 2010 |
Repeal ed |
| 2011 |
???? |
Retirement SavingsThe Act makes changes affecting
both individual participants in retirement plans and employers
that sponsor such plans. For individuals, the benefits are
increased limits on contributions to plans, greater security
for funds in the plans, and more flexibility concerning
withdrawals, rollovers, and continuation of plans. As for
businesses, the Act encourages the establishment of retirement
plans, increases the deductibility of contributions, and
generally makes the administration of plans more streamlined.
Similar changes are in the Act for plans overseen by state and
local governments, tax-exempt organizations, and colleges and
universities.
Businesses
The Act could well have been
called the Economic Growth and Individual Tax Relief
Reconciliation Act, because 99% of the benefits from the Act
will go to individuals. There are, however, a few provisions
that will directly affect businesses. As noted above, the Act
should simplify pension law, and it makes permanent the
exclusion from gross income for employer-provided educational
assistance, while expanding it to cover graduate studies.
Employers can receive a tax credit equal to 25% of qualified
expenses for employee child care (such as facility costs) and
a credit equal to 10% of qualified expenses for child-care
resource and referral services. Finally, the Act delays the
due date for certain corporate estimated tax payments.
CASE BY
CASE
Overtime Pay for On-Call
Duties
Three utility workers
responsible for monitoring security systems in the utility's
buildings were essentially on the job 24 hours a day, 7 days a
week. When they were not working their regular shifts, they
had to be ready to receive and respond to alarms, using
computers at their homes. If they did not respond to an alarm
within 15 minutes, they could be disciplined. The utility paid
overtime for the time spent actually responding to an alarm,
but not for the rest of the on-call time, which consumed all
of the employees'' waking (and sleeping) hours.
The employees were successful
when they sued under federal law for around-the-clock overtime
for everything beyond 40 hours per week. On-call time usually
does not qualify as compensable overtime, but the issue is
highly dependent on the facts of each case. Key factors
include any agreements between the parties, the nature and
extent of the restrictions, the relationship between the
services rendered and the on-call time, and, perhaps most
importantly, the degree to which being on call interferes with
the employee's personal pursuits.
In this case, the employees on
average were required to respond to three to five emergency
calls per on-call period. They generally did not have to
report to the plant when called, but the requirement that they
take some action by computer within 15 minutes of a call made
the on-call commitment more burdensome. For the court, this
was all the more reason to award overtime pay for the workers
who were on call during all of their off-premises time.
Guidance Counselor
Liability
In his senior year in high
school, Bruce was a star on the basketball court who caught
the attention of college coaches. He was on-track
academically, having registered for courses that would allow
him to satisfy core eligibility requirements established by
the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA). Bruce
became dissatisfied with an NCAA-approved English literature
class. With the help of a guidance counselor, he drop ped that
class and replaced it with another English class. According
to Bruce, the counselor told him that the new course was also
approved by the NCAA.
Late in his senior year, Bruce
accepted a full basketball scholarship from a university.
After graduation, the bottom fell out of his plans when the
NCAA informed Bruce that the English class he completed did
not satisfy its core requirements because it had not been
submitted by the school for approval. This left him short of
the minimum NCAA requirements and caused the university to
revoke his scholarship.
Bruce sued the school district
on a theory of negligent misrepresentation by the guidance
counselor. The state supreme court allowed Bruce's lawsuit to
continue. Unlike most educational malpractice claims, the
majority of which fail, Bruce's claim did not challenge
classroom methodology or theories of education. The claim was
more akin to those brought for misrepresentation by clients
against professionals who have been sought out for their
expertise. While the claim of negligent misrepresentation
usually arises in a commercial context, the court saw no
reason not to extend it to anyone, including a high school
counselor, who is in the business or profession of supplying
information to others.
TO COMPETE
OR NOT TO COMPETE
It is nothing new for employers
to require employees to sign noncompetition agreements, but
such agreements are now more commonly used by all types of
employers and for a broader range of employees. They are
especially popular among high-tech and Internet businesses,
where the risks of being at a competitive disadvantage are
most significant when a departing employee exploits the former
employer's "trade secrets." In these fields, the
traditional criteria used by the courts in judging the
reasonableness of an agreement--the geographic and time limits
of the restrictions--may have reduced relevance. As a result,
the strategies used by employers to protect their interests,
and by employees to protect theirs, are still evolving.
Employers can enhance the
prospects for court approval of a noncompetition agreement by
customizing it to fit the particular business and job in
question. The agreement should restrict the former employee no
more than is necessary to protect the employer's legitimate
business interests. Requiring noncompetition agreements only
of employees with access to sensitive information may also
improve their enforceability. Given the variation in the
states'' treatment of such agreements, employers with a
presence in more than one state should draft agreements very
carefully.
The scope of a noncompetition
agreement generally depends on its terms. Courts in some
states, however, have accepted the argument that, even if an
employee is not barred from working for a competitor by the
language in the agreement, such competition should be
prohibited on the ground that the employee inevitably will
make use of a trade secret of the former employer. Other
courts have been less willing to make that assumption. For
example, in one case a court held that an agreement did not
apply to a departed employee because the new employer was not
a "competitor" as defined in the agreement. Finding
no prohibition against the former employee's new job in the
noncompetition agreement itself, the court refused to rewrite
the agreement or to let the former employer "make an
end-run" around the agreement in the guise of preventing
the disclosure of trade secrets.
From an employee's
perspective, the argument can often be made that a
noncompetition agreement should be enforced for a shorter time
period than used to be considered reasonable. This is
especially true in information technology, where the
technology itself and the competitive dynamics change rapidly
. As for the secrets that the employer may be attempting to
protect by enforcing the agreement, the employee sometimes can
counter that the information is already in the public domain,
giving the former employer no right to prevent the former
employee from using it in a new job.
BEWARE OF
IDENTITY THEFT
Intent on taking a free ride on
the good name and reputation of others, identity thieves
obtain personal information and then essentially impersonate
their victims as they open credit-card accounts, make
purchases, or take out loans. It can take a while for the
victim to know that he has been wronged, and even longer to
sort out and to clean up the damage. In the meantime, the
innocent party may be denied financial and employment
opportunities.
While there is no way to have
complete protection against identity theft, these common-sense
measures can decrease the odds of becoming a victim:
* Jealously guard personal
information like your Social Security number and account
numbers and passwords, divulging it only in a communication
that you initiate. Use this information sparingly online and
only if it will be encrypted.
* Keep your wallet from
becoming a gold mine for potential thieves by carrying the
minimum in checks, credit cards, or other bank items, and do
not keep your Social Security number there.
* Retrieve your mail promptly
and do not leave outgoing mail in your doorway or home
mailbox.
* Tear up private papers like
bank statements, receipts, and credit-card applications before
throwing them away. It is not just archaeologists who sift
through old garbage in search of valuable information.
* Store valuable financial
information at home in a place that is not available to prying
eyes.
* Review bank account and
credit card records regularly, as well as your own credit
report prepared by a credit bureau, so that you can pick up
the first signs of trouble, such as a missing payment or an
unauthorized withdrawal.
TOWNS VS.
TOWERS
When it passed the
Telecommunications Act of 1996, Congress intended to expand
wireless services and increase competition among providers by
reducing the regulatory burden. At the local level, this meant
limiting the traditionally broad powers of local governments
to restrict land use through the zoning power. Under the Act,
local governments retain some control over the placement of
"personal wireless service facilities," the most
controversial of which are tall telecommunications towers for
cell phone service. However, Congress placed limits on that
authority. For example, local authorities may not unreasonably
discriminate among providers of similar services, nor prohibit
personal wireless services in their localities. They must
respond with reasonable speed to any request to build
facilities. If an application is denied, the denial must be in
writing and must be supported by substantial evidence in a
written record.
When a provider of wireless
telecommunications services was denied permission by a town
zoning board to build a 150-foot-high telecommunications
tower, it sued the town in federal court. The provider argued
that the town exceeded its authority under the Act by basing
its decision on citizens'' statements of general opposition to
cell towers, not "substantial evidence." The court
ruled in favor of the town, allowing it to prohibit the tower
even though the decision was based largely on an aesthetic
judgment.
The tower stirred opposition
because of its location. It was to be built on top of a
50-foot hill in the middle of a cleared field, in the
geographic center of the small town. Visible during all
seasons, the tower would be seen daily by about one quarter of
the town's population. It was close to three schools and two
residential subdivisions.
The telecommunications provider
argued to no avail that the town could not deny the
application without showing that there was a suitable
alternative site with less visual impact. However, the unmet
burden had been on the provider to prove the absence of any
other feasible site in the town, in which case the provider
might have been able to win by showing that the town's denial
effectively prohibited personal wireless services in the area.
(OVER)REGULATION
OF WETLANDS
The federal Clean Water Act
authorizes the Army Corps of Engineers to require permits for
the discharge of dredged or fill material into "navigable
waters." Under the "migratory bird rule," the
Corps asserted its jurisdiction over even isolated intrastate
waters if they provided a habitat for migratory birds.
A consortium of municipalities
mounted a challenge to the legality of the migratory bird rule
when it posed a hurdle for the consortium's plan to use an
abandoned sand and gravel pit for a solid waste disposal site.
The site was far from any navigable waterway, but migratory
birds used some trenches that had evolved into permanent and
seasonal ponds. The U.S. Supreme Court ruled that the Corps
had overstepped the limits of its regulatory authority. No
longer may the Corps regulate the development of isolated
wetlands and waters that are not adjacent to navigable
waterways. By some estimates, such isolated wetlands
constitute 20% of all wetlands in the country, and thousands
of applications pending before the Corps could be affected by
the ruling.
Landowners and developers with
isolated wetlands on their lands should pause, however, before
firing up the bulldozers. Questions remain about whether the
Corps retains jurisdiction over smaller streams, creeks, and
tributaries that do not empty directly into a navigable
waterway. In addition, the Supreme Court ruling was confined
to federal law, and some states and local governments have
their own restrictions on development of wetlands.
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