Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Tax goof may hurt #MeToo victims

GOP weighs a fix to new law over deductions in harassment payouts

- By Jeff Green and Sahil Kapur Bloomberg News

Republican­s are considerin­g a fix to a provision in their new tax law that they acknowledg­e could inadverten­tly penalize victims of sexual harassment in the workplace.

But congressio­nal gridlock before midterm elections in November means there’s no guarantee that the problem will be corrected quickly, if at all.

President Donald Trump’s tax overhaul eliminates the deduction companies used to be able to take when they settled sexual harassment cases and included nondisclos­ure agreements, which generally keep details secret as a condition of the payout.

A misplaced word by Republican tax writers may mean that victims of accused sexual predators like Hollywood producer Harvey Weinstein also lose the ability to deduct their legal expenses.

A senior House Republican aide who works on tax policy acknowledg­ed the provision has unintended outcomes and is being discussed as a so-called technical correction to the tax law. A senior Senate Republican aide said lawmakers are examining the issue.

Both aides were granted anonymity to discuss private conversati­ons.

In the meantime, plaintiffs attorneys are buzzing about how the law’s ambiguity is worrying their clients, who fear that coming forward about sexual harassment could come at a greater cost.

“There’s this concern that because of the 2017 tax act that somehow we’re going to get back to that original system which obviously penalizes, to an extraordin­ary extent, against the victim,” said Genie Harrison, who represents one of Weinstein’s formal personal assistants in a sexual harassment lawsuit.

That’s not what the was supposed to do.

GOP lawmakers on the Senate Finance Committee agreed in mid-November to include an amendment from Sen. Bob Menendez, D-N.J., to help make the use of nondisclos­ure agreements, or NDAs, less attractive following a flurry of sexual misconduct allegation­s.

The backlash against NDAs has been fueled by examples such as Weinstein and former Fox News anchor Bill O’Reilly, where the contracts helped hide ongoing harassment.

Alaska, California and Washington state are among more than a dozen states considerin­g laws that prohibit confidenti­al settlement­s entirely or add new limits.

About 300 executives and other high-profile leaders, mostly men, have been accused of sexual harassment or other improper behavior related to the #MeToo movement, according to New York crisis counseling company Temin & Co., based on an ongoing count of actions pulled from media coverage and other public informatio­n. That doesn’t include actions taken that weren’t made public, according to Temin.

The original provision made clear that the deduction change only applied to the company, not the victim, according to Steven Sandberg, a spokesman for Menendez.

Republican tax writers used the word “chapter” rather than “section” in the amendment, which could be interprete­d as broadly applying the eliminatio­n to victims.

Senate Finance law Chairman — Genie Harrison, attorney

Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, is continuing to meet with members to address any concerns with the new law and examine potential correction­s, should they be needed, said Julia Lawless, a spokeswoma­n for the panel.

Menendez is trying to get an amendment through the finance committee or a new law passed to make that clear, Sandberg said in an email.

The proposed bill to clarify that victims’ write-offs are exempt is called the “Repeal the Trump Tax Hike on Victims of Sexual Harassment Act of 2018.”

With the midterm elections looming, the prospects of a technical revision to the tax law — passed without a single Democratic vote — are far from certain. The Republican­s control 51 seats in the Senate, and 60 votes would be required for a bill to correct any errors.

Democrats have signaled they’re reluctant to approve any legislatio­n that would fix a tax bill they never signed on for — much like Republican­s did after Democrats tried to modify the Affordable Care Act. Or they may ask for something in return that Republican­s are unwilling to provide.

Another option may be tacking a fix onto the government funding bill that has to pass by the end of September to avert a government shutdown.

The previous funding bill, which Trump signed in March, included a correction to a measure in the tax law affecting farmers — the only other time Republican­s have highlighte­d a specific provision in need of a change. Some Democrats agreed to back the spending bill since it included other changes viewed as policy victories for both parties.

If the rule isn’t clarified soon, there’s a risk future victims will stay silent, said Harrison, who practices in Los Angeles. There’s less incentive if winning the case means an untenable tax burden, she added.

For example, in a $100,000 settlement, costs and fees might take $45,000 with $55,000 going to the victim. Without the deduction, the victim would pay taxes on the entire $100,000, which may mean a tax bill equal to or larger than their payout, she said.

Defendants this year have said they aren’t willing to add additional money to compensate for the potential added tax penalty, she said.

It’s also unclear what happens in cases that include both sexual harassment and other claims, such as pay bias or gender discrimina­tion, said Bruce Schwartz, a benefits and tax law attorney at Jackson Lewis in White Plains, N.Y.

Legal costs associated with settlement­s for other forms of bias should still be tax deductible, but the ratio may be unclear, he said.

Trying to change behavior through tax law isn’t a new idea, nor is it usually effective, Schwartz said.

When voters were upset about the high salaries paid to chief executive officers, lawmakers limited the deductibil­ity of CEO pay to the first $1 million. Companies then just shifted more of the compensati­on away from salary, he said.

“It’s what I would call Congress legislatin­g in response to newspaper headlines and using the internal revenue code to enforce social policy,” Schwartz said. “To use the internal revenue code to do that is useless.”

Even if the nondisclos­ure ambiguity is fixed by Congress, the broader rule could still keep many victims quiet. That’s because it will be more expensive for a company to keep the details of the case confidenti­al — an option some victims may actually prefer, said Elisa Lintemuth, an employment lawyer at Dykema Gossett in Grand Rapids, Mich., who represents companies in cases.

“I do think it will change how cases are litigated and settled,” said Lintemuth, who discussed uncertaint­y on a recent conference call with company clients. “If a company can no longer deduct its settlement and attorney fees, they might be more likely to roll the dice and proceed with litigation even if attorney fees will be more expensive. They can have the option of being vindicated in court and deduct all their fees.”

 ?? STEVEN HIRSCH/NEW YORK POST ?? Film mogul Harvey Weinstein, seated, listens as his attorney confers with a court officer in New York. The GOP tax law stops victims and companies from deducting legal expenses.
STEVEN HIRSCH/NEW YORK POST Film mogul Harvey Weinstein, seated, listens as his attorney confers with a court officer in New York. The GOP tax law stops victims and companies from deducting legal expenses.

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