Specifics Of CARES Act And Implications For Businesses And Individuals


The Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act or the CARES Act, which was passed by the U.S. Senate on March 25, 2020, and is expected to pass the House soon, includes significant provisions that affect American citizens personally and professionally. Importantly, the CARES Act is a stimulus bill that releases over $330 billion of federal funding to help maintain and/or boost the economy by supporting American institutions, including national businesses, large and small.

Particular highlights of the package include:

TAX PROVISIONS FOR BUSINESSES

Unemployment Benefits

TAX PROVISIONS FOR INDIVIDUALS

Charitable Deductions

Retirement Plan Withdrawals

For more information, please contact the Barnes & Thornburg attorney with whom you work or Randal Kaltenmark at 317-231-7741 or randal.kaltenmark@btlaw.com.

PROVISIONS RELATED TO THE SMALL BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION

The first substantive section of the CARES Act, called the Keeping American Workers Paid and Employed Act, provides for $349 million to be used to guarantee loans to small businesses and other entities that have 500 employees or less. Details include:

The loan program will be administered by the Small Business Administration through its existing Section 7(a) business loan program, which requires applying through an approved SBA lender, but certain requirements associated with typical SBA loans, such as guarantees, collateral, and a “credit available elsewhere” underwriting, have been relaxed or eliminated.

One of the most anticipated provisions of the loan program was the “forgivable” nature of the loan, but these provisions are more limited than people may have been thinking prior to the public release of the legislation. The legislation provides that:

For more information, please contact the Barnes & Thornburg attorney with whom you work or Jason Myers at 817-791-8824 or jmyers@btlaw.com.

PROVISIONS RELATED TO DEBTORS

The Senate Bill amends the 2019 enactment of the Small Business Debtor Reorganization (SBDR) provisions of Title 11 U.S.C. §101 et seq., the Bankruptcy Code, to provide for special expanded bankruptcy protections to many thousands more small businesses. Under the legislation, the Bankruptcy Code would allow:

The SBDR reflects a recent effort to expedite and reduce the cost of bankruptcy for Small Business Debtors to reorganize their businesses, allowing qualifying debtors to elect a process providing greater flexibility in negotiating restructuring plans with creditors under the oversight and with the input of private trustees. 

The bill also provides greater protections to debtors under Chapter 13 of the Bankruptcy Code, applicable to individuals. Chapter 13 generally allows for individual debtors to repay creditors under court supervision over a three –to five-year period. It also provides for:

The proposed legislation adopts some, but not all, recommendations from bankruptcy commentators, rejecting recommendations like a general breathing spell for individuals and businesses due to financial dislocations occasioned by the pandemic and modeled on protections available under the Service members Civil Relief Act of 2003.

For more information, please contact the Barnes & Thornburg attorney with whom you work or Mark Owens at 317-354-7703 or mowens@btlaw.com, or Paul Laurin at 310-629-1962 or plaurin@btlaw.com

PROVISIONS IMPACTING EMPLOYMENT AND LABOR LAWS

Employment Strings Attached to the Treasury’s Exchange Stabilization Fund

One of the largest components of the CARES Act is the Coronavirus Economic Stabilization Act of 2020, which provides for $500 billion in loans, loan guarantees and investments. A portion of this money is reserved for employers with between 500 and 10,000 employees. However, in order to participate in this program, there were a number of strings attached. The ban on stock buy-backs was one provision that gain the most notoriety. However, there are a number of employment obligations, including that: 

The last point, union neutrality, is a point that has received almost no attention and seems little connected to recovery from the coronavirus emergency. Employers should carefully consider if this obligation is one that would be in the best interests of their business.

Confirmation of Families First Leaves Caps

The CARES Act confirms the limitations under the new Families First Coronavirus Response Act. The caps are $200 per day and $10,000 in the aggregate for each employee under the Emergency Paid Family Leave, and $200 per day under the Paid Sick Leave provisions, $2,000 in the aggregate to care for a quarantined individual or child for each employee under this section or $511 per day and $5,110 in the aggregate for the employee’s own absence due to coronavirus quarantine or isolation order or medical direction or for testing. 

There are provisions that permit the Treasury to advance the tax credits built into the Families First Act rather than requiring employers to be reimbursed on the back end. 

The bill also allows the Director of Office Management and Budget (OMB) to exempt certain Executive Branch employees from coverage of the Paid Family Leave and Paid Sick Leave. 

Unemployment Insurance 

The bill has a variety of unemployment insurance provisions that are designed to speed assistance to employees, cover the costs for the states and provide enhanced benefits. 

The most notable and most controversial is a flat $600 per week Pandemic Unemployment Assistance above and beyond the benefit the employee would otherwise receive from the states.  This benefit is available for four months. It is controversial because the assistance is not tied to any particular wage level, leaving the possibility that workers could receive more in unemployment benefits than they would for returning to work.  A similar benefit is provided under the Railroad Unemployment Insurance Act.

The unemployment assistance is also available to workers not usually covered by unemployment insurance who are out of work as a result of the coronavirus pandemic. These workers include the self-employed, independent contractors and workers with limited work history. 

The bill also extends the duration of traditional unemployment insurance by 13 weeks.  \The one-week waiting period is also suspended under CARES. Similar benefits are provided under the Railroad Unemployment Insurance Act.  

There is also a $100 million block grant to the states for the implementation of other “short term compensation” programs.

All of this is being funded by the federal monies. There are also flexibilities written into CARES to allow states flexibility in how to implement these various provisions.  The bill also mandates that, to the extent practicable, workers be allowed to apply for benefits in person, by phone or online. 

For more information, please contact the Barnes & Thornburg attorney with whom you work or Scott Witlin at 310-284-3777 or scott.witlin@btlaw.com, or Mark Keenan at 404-264-4044 or mark.keenan@btlaw.com.

PROVISIONS FOR EDUCATIONAL INSTITUTIONS

The following key provisions in the CARES Act provides newly-available resources which may be of interest to educational institutions:

For more information, please contact the Barnes & Thornburg attorney with whom you work, please contact Chris Bayh at 317-601-1295 or cbayh@btlaw.com, Jacob Bonifield at 317-213-0204 or jbonifield@btlaw.com, or Lauren Box at 317-590-2455 or lbox@btlaw.com 

PROVISIONS FOR HEALTHCARE PROVIDERS

The CARES Act provides both funding and administrative flexibility for healthcare providers and entities providing COVID-19 pandemic relief and services. Most importantly, the act allocates $100 billion to the Public Health and Social Services Emergency Fund for necessary expenses to reimburse eligible health care providers for healthcare-related expenses or lost revenues that are attributable to COVID-19. The act also modifies the Medicare Hospital Inpatient Prospective Payment System and provides a 20 percent add on to the DRG rate for COVID-19 patients. The act assists hospitals and providers by expanding the ability to receive accelerated Medicare payments, waiving the 50 percent rule and site-neutral payment policies for post-acute care, eliminating the planned $4 billion reduction in Medicaid reimbursement for 2020, further reducing what is planned for 2021 from $8 billion to $4 billion, and limiting liability for volunteer healthcare professionals. 

The act also: 

For more information, please contact the Barnes & Thornburg attorney with whom you work or Matthew Agnew at 214-258-4153 or matthew.agnew@btlaw.com.

PROVISIONS FOR LIFE SCIENCES AND BIOTECH COMPANIES

The following key provisions in the CARES Act provides newly-available resources which may be of interest and/or utilized by U.S. life sciences and biotech companies, clients and academic institutions to support their business and employees:

Life sciences and biotech companies, clients, and academic institutions are highly encouraged to submit general or expedited grant proposals to obtain this available federal funding in order to further contribute to the ongoing national effort to combat coronavirus by investing in coronavirus-related innovation, development, and protection during this unprecedented time.  

For more information please contact the Barnes & Thornburg attorney with whom you work or Angela B. Freeman at 317-519-7161 or afreeman@btlaw.com

PROVISIONS FOR NATIVE AMERICAN TRIBES

Congress is expected to allocate approximately $11 billion to assist Indian country in responding to the effects and impacts of COVID-19. Of note, of that $11 billion, the bill creates a Tribal Stabilization Fund in the amount of $8 million made available to tribal governments who certify that the funds will be used to offset expenditures incurred due to the COVID-19 pandemic.  

The bill also provides $1.032 billion in funds specifically for health and human services, both through the Indian Health Service (his) and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), to assist tribes in getting the medical equipment and resources needed to combat the virus and its healthcare impacts. The bill also earmarks $300 million for tribes through HUD to help prevent homelessness due to lost income from the coronavirus, as well as contain the spread of the virus on tribal lands. These programs are intended to be administered by local tribal governments in order to respond to the specific needs of each tribe. 

In addition, tribes are eligible to access an additional approximately $803 billion through other grants and loan guarantee programs. Importantly, tribes and their businesses are eligible for the $454 billion loan guarantee fund through the Treasury as well as the $349 billion loan guarantee program through the SBA. For those tribal business with less than 500 employees, SBA loans will be forgiven subject to employee retention requirements, while guaranteed loans to tribal businesses with more than 500 employees will be provided on traditional lending terms. This is specifically important for tribes with smaller casinos that have been forced to close as a result of COVID-19.  

There added funds specifically and indirectly allocated to tribes and their businesses other than those discussed above.  It is important that in deciding which funds your tribe is eligible, focus on the areas of need that are most critical for your tribe in this time of need.  

Finally, individual tribal members are eligible for the one-time payments of $1,200 per person, or $2,400 per couple, so long as they meet the income requirements. They are also eligible for the $500 per child as well.


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National Law Review, Volume X, Number 87