Big changes may be coming to small business’ tax bill in 2025. The 199-A deduction is set to expire in 2025, meaning pass-through businesses are in danger of losing their deduction. What does that mean for you? Potentially a larger tax bill. Shareholder Rosemary Becchi will help you make sense of these changes.
Brownstein Hyatt Farber Schreck
Law Practice
Denver, CO 11,581 followers
We’re all in.
About us
For decades, we’ve positioned ourselves at the intersection of law, business and policy to bring a multidisciplinary strategy to every issue. We combine outstanding lawyers, leading authorities on policy and true business acumen to solve your toughest challenges. At Brownstein—we’re all in. For more than 50 years, we’ve been making moves that have placed us at the vanguard of our industry. Born in Denver, we’ve since expanded around the country, with 12 offices, 600 employees and 300 attorneys and policy professionals nationwide.
- Website
-
http://www.bhfs.com
External link for Brownstein Hyatt Farber Schreck
- Industry
- Law Practice
- Company size
- 501-1,000 employees
- Headquarters
- Denver, CO
- Type
- Privately Held
- Founded
- 1968
- Specialties
- Core practices include real estate, litigation, business & corporate, and natural resources and government relations.
Locations
Employees at Brownstein Hyatt Farber Schreck
Updates
-
Shareholder Leah Dempsey, co-chair of the financial services practice, and Policy Advisor Annmarie Conboy-DePasquale played in the inaugural Women’s Congressional Basketball Game, a charity game benefiting the Kay Yow Foundation in its fight against cancer. They were cheered on by members of the firm’s Washington, D.C., office.
-
On June 28, in Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo, the Supreme Court overruled its landmark decision in Chevron v. Natural Resources Defense Council, which gave rise to the Chevron doctrine. The Chevron case, decided in 1984, required judicial deference to a federal administrative agency’s challenged actions if a two-step test was satisfied. The Chevron two-step test has since become foundational precedent for challenges to environmental and natural resources rulemaking and other agency actions.
-
We came together as a firm to hear Founders Norm Brownstein and Frank Schreck Frank Schreck along with Managing Partner Rich Benenson talk about “The Story of Our Firm”—our new legacy book. They shared some of their favorite memories and pivotal moments in the firm’s history highlighted in the book. We also enjoyed hearing from special guests Andrea Hyatt (Founder Jack Hyatt’s widow) and Mark Leonard (the firm’s fourth hire in 1972).
-
As most employers know, the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) adopted a controversial rule earlier this year that will prohibit virtually all noncompete restrictions (the “Non-Compete Rule”) as of its effective date, Sept. 4, 2024. The Non-Compete Rule is currently subject to several legal challenges asserting (among other things) that the FTC lacked authority to promulgate it, an argument foreshadowed by certain FTC commissioners during the April 2024 hearing on the Non-Compete Rule.
The FTC Non-Compete Rule: Current Status and Practical Advice for Employers
bhfs.com
-
Every state has an attorney general who serves as its chief legal officer—by counseling state legislatures and government agencies and by representing the public interest. In many states, the AG also plays a uniquely important role in criminal law enforcement. State attorneys general have in recent years become increasingly influential in driving policy outcomes nationwide—particularly through coalition lawsuits and collaborations with federal investigators.
2024 State Attorney General Election Preview
bhfs.com
-
Congratulations to Norm Brownstein, Marc Lampkin, Al Mottur and Will Moschella for being recognized in the 2024 U.S. edition of The Legal 500. Our Government Relations practice was also ranked. The Legal 500’s U.S. edition recognizes firms who handle high-level, nationally significant work across practice areas and highlights new trends and developments across the jurisdiction’s elite firms. Learn more: https://lnkd.in/gHPzekU7.
-
On July 3, 2024, United States District Court Judge Ada Brown ruled against the Federal Trade Commission and issued a preliminary injunction postponing the implementation of the agency’s controversial rule banning noncompete clauses. The decision, in Ryan vs. Federal Trade Commission, is incredibly narrow, only applying to the named parties in the lawsuit.
Federal Court Partially Halts Noncompete Rule
bhfs.com
-
On Friday, June 28, the Supreme Court overturned the longstanding Chevron doctrine, on a 6-3 vote, which had previously required courts to defer to federal agencies' reasonable interpretations of statutes within an agency’s ambit. The Chevron rationale was simple: agencies are specialists in their field and so should receive deference when courts review agency actions.
Health Care Impacts Following Chevron Decision
bhfs.com
-
In a series of rulings at the end of its term, the Supreme Court fundamentally changed administrative law precedents, including some that have held firm for more than 40 years. The decisions will curtail federal agencies’ ability to interpret laws they administer when a governing statute is silent or ambiguous on an issue, and empower courts to use tools of traditional statutory construction for ambiguous laws. Each decision, as outlined below, will have far-reaching effects for all federal regulations and lawmaking in Congress.
Supreme Court Strikes Down Chevron, Reshapes Administrative Law
bhfs.com