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Waller | February 2015

Two companion bills introduced in the Tennessee legislature on February  2, 2015—Senate Bill 324 and House Bill 213 filed by Tennessee Senate Majority Leader Mark Norris and Tennessee House Majority Leader Gerald McCormick respectively—seek to change Tennessee’s method of apportioning income and net worth of multi-state businesses (including corporations and limited liability companies) operating in Tennessee ...

Waller | February 2015

During his State of the State address delivered on February 9, 2015, Tennessee Governor Bill Haslam discussed the sharp decline in tax collections from business that the state experienced in 2014. Gov. Haslam stated that the drop in revenue collections was partly due to a disparity between the taxes paid by “companies outside of Tennessee that do business in Tennessee,” and those “that our in state and homegrown companies” are required to pay ...

Waller | May 2020

Restaurants and other establishments that serve a menu of food were allowed to open in Tennessee beginning April 27. Memphis and Nashville remain closed. We have been fielding questions about what else customers are allowed to do besides eat, including playing cornhole or ping-pong or being entertained by a live comedian ...

Waller | April 2020

The Governor’s Economic Recovery Group issued Tennessee Pledge, "a plan to help Tennesseans return to work in a safe environment, restore their livelihoods and reboot our state’s economy." Restaurants are expected to follow the guidelines in the pledge. The pledge is mandatory for limited service restaurants, as specified in Executive Order 30. Here is a copy of the Tennessee Pledge Guidelines for Restaurants This is our summary of the guidelines for re-opening: 1 ...

Waller | November 2021

After convening for a special legislative session to address COVID-19 countermeasures, the Tennessee General Assembly passed sweeping legislation in the early hours of Saturday morning that limits the authority of public schools, local health departments, government entities, and private businesses to implement COVID-19 related restrictions ...

Waller | March 2019

Earlier this week, Tennessee Governor Bill Lee delivered his first State of the State, which included a number of proposals that could impact healthcare in Tennessee: Healthcare Modernization Task Force–Gov ...

Waller | March 2020

On March 30, 2020, Tennessee Governor Bill Lee issued Executive Order No. 21, an order amending Executive Order No. 17 to further mitigate the spread of COVID-19 by limiting non-essential services and gatherings. The order expands the list of businesses and venues that perform close-contact personal services that are required to close to the public. The Order also amends the effective date in Executive Order No ...

Waller | April 2020

Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee extended the executive order allowing drive-through, carryout and delivery of beer, wine and spirits for restaurants. Read Executive Order 30 here. Restaurants, limited-service restaurants and wine-only restaurants can continue to sell carryout and deliver alcoholic beverages and beer. There is no additional license or permission needed to deliver. We urge folks to keep hustling during these difficult times and checkLast Callfor updates ...

Waller | December 2020

Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee has extended the executive order allowing carryout and delivery of beer, wine and spirits for restaurants. Restaurants, limited-service restaurants and wine-only restaurants can continue to sell carryout and deliver alcoholic beverages and beer. There is no additional license or permission needed to deliver. Lee extended the privilege through to 11:59 pm February 27, which brings welcome certainty to an industry battered by the pandemic ...

Waller | June 2020

Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee has extended the executive order allowing drive-through, carryout and delivery of beer, wine and spirits for restaurants. Read Executive Order 50 here. Restaurants, limited-service restaurants and wine-only restaurants can continue to sell carryout and deliver alcoholic beverages and beer. There is no additional license or permission needed to deliver ...

Waller | August 2020

Tennessee Governor Bill Lee has signed into law the Tennessee COVID-19 Recovery Act which provides liability protection from claims related to the COVID-19 pandemic. The Waller Government Relations team worked closely with the Tennessee Chamber of Commerce and Industry and various stakeholders in recent months to achieve passage of the Tennessee COVID-19 Recovery Act ...

Waller | June 2015

Much has been made of a recent amendment to the Tennessee Business Corporation Act and its impact on the financial liability of corporate directors. Newly added Section 48-24-109 of the Tennessee Code Annotated provides that, in the event a corporation is dissolved, “[d]irectors shall cause a dissolved corporation to discharge or make reasonable provision for the payment of claims and make distributions of assets to shareholders after payment or provision for claims ...

Waller | March 2018

Tennessee has become one of the first states in the country to approve the use of “smart contracts,” which are made through the use of blockchain technology. In essence, the law gives blockchain contracts and electronic signatures submitted through blockchain as having equal standing to more traditional forms of contracts ...

Waller | May 2015

The Tennessee General Assembly recently passed the Revenue Modernization Act (the “Act”), which imposes broad, sweeping changes by adopting revised nexus standards for Tennessee business tax, franchise and excise tax, and sales and use tax purposes; revising Tennessee apportionment for business tax and franchise and excise tax purposes; and imposing sales tax upon remotely accessed video games as well as online software access ...

Waller | January 2021

As part of the new omnibus stimulus bill, Congress passed, and President Trump signed into law, the “Economic Aid to Hard-Hit Small Businesses, Nonprofits, and Venues Act” (the “Act”) which makes substantial changes to the popular Paycheck Protection Program ...

Waller | January 2022

Today, the Supreme Court issued decisions in the COVID mandate cases that have had employers across the country on the edge of their seats. In aper curiam6-3 decision, the Court stayed the OSHA Emergency Temporary Standard that required all employers with 100 or more employees to require COVID vaccination or weekly testing ...

Waller | June 2014

The United States Supreme Court ruling in Clark v. Rameker could have an impact on what are sometimes an individual’s most significant legacy assets: individual retirement accounts, or “IRAs.” A participant’s IRA is generally afforded protection in bankruptcy proceedings ...

Waller | November 2017

Strategic partnerships between investor-owned companies and nonprofit hospitals or health systems are an unmistakable trend in the health care industry today. Such strategic partnerships can consist of a myriad of structures and variations thereof. The most common transaction structures include affiliations, management arrangements, joint operating arrangements, joint ventures, asset leases, and asset sales/acquisitions ...

Waller | June 2018

It goes without saying that a lender must work to maximize its recovery when a borrower is in default and has no reasonably realistic or meaningful way to cure the default. This scenario far too often forces a lender to determine the most efficient and effective method to sell its collateral ...

Waller | April 2016

On April 27, 2016, Waller hosted the Middle Tennessee InfraGard Members Alliance’s Incident Response Briefing. The presenters highlighted increasing cybersecurity risks and the need for a proactive, coordinated approach to limit the impact of cybersecurity compromises. InfraGard is a partnership between the FBI and the private sector dedicated to sharing information and intelligence to prevent hostile acts against the United States ...

Waller | March 2020

More and more states, counties and municipalities are issuing “stay-at-home” orders or directives recommending, and sometimes requiring: non-essential travel be limited; non-essential businesses temporarily close; or people generally remain at home ...

Waller | August 2017

Bunge argues that the section 7805(b) limitation on retroactive regulations was meant to apply to all regulations issued after July 30, 1996, regardless of when the underlying statute was enacted. A. Retroactive Treasury Regulations Generally Many legal systems discourage or disallow retroactive laws in various contexts.1 The U.S ...

Waller | November 2018

We suspect that thousands of Tennessee restaurants, hotels, bars and other hospitality businesses gather personal information from their customers for marketing purposes.   It’s just a birthdate, address, anniversary, spouse’s name – good stuff to know, right? That’s all fine and dandy until some hacker steals the information ...

Waller | January 2021

The most recent changes to the Stark Physician Self-Referral Law (Stark) and the Anti-Kickback Statute (AKS), described previously here, create a new lexicon and framework to guide healthcare providers from payment for volume-based services to payment for value-based healthcare. These value-based rules go into effect on January 19, 2021 ...

Waller | June 2011

Yesterday a three-judge panel from the United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit became the first appellate court to uphold the constitutionality of the minimum coverage provision of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (the “Act”), requiring that Americans obtain health insurance. Opinions are expected from the Fourth and Eleventh Circuits later this summer ...

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