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Corporate Counsel Connect collection

April 2014 edition

Whistleblower compliance for private companies, cybersecurity standards, final rules on employer mandate

Whistleblower compliance for private companies

Non-reporting companies that provide services to SEC reporting companies must revisit their internal compliance policies and procedures given a recent US Supreme Court ruling extending the whistleblower protections under the Sarbanes-Oxley Act (SOX) to certain non-reporting company employees.

In Lawson v. FMR LLC, the Supreme Court held that the whistleblower and anti-retaliation provisions of SOX extend to the employees of a private contractor or private subcontractor to a public company. As a result, employees of a private company who claim they were retaliated against for reporting potential fraud at a public company client of their employer can bring claims against their employer for violations of SOX Section 806.

Non-reporting companies that provide services to reporting company clients should review their compliance policies and procedures and consider adopting additional policies and procedures that reflect whistleblower best practices already implemented by public companies. Specifically, these companies should consider:

  • Requiring employees to report internally any known or suspected violations of law.
  • Prohibiting retaliation against whistleblowers, regardless of whether they report to their employer, the public company client or a governmental authority.
  • Promoting internal mechanisms for reporting concerns and alleged violations, such as whistleblower hotlines.
  • Adopting codes of conduct similar to those implemented by public companies under SOX.
  • Reviewing their employment-related practices concerning reporting, retaliation and investigation.

As a best practice, reporting companies should consider reviewing whether their non-reporting contractors and subcontractors have anti-retaliation policies and whistleblower hotlines. Among other things, this may help a reporting company avoid any negative publicity that could arise from retaining a contractor later found to have lacked appropriate whistleblower protections.

For more on this case from an employment law perspective, see Labor & Employment: SOX Whistleblower Coverage.

For a sample code of ethics and business conduct, see Standard Document, Model Code of Ethics and Business Conduct for a Public Company.

Cybersecurity standards

Following the recently issued final Framework for Improving Critical Infrastructure Cybersecurity (Framework) by the National Institute of Standards and Technology, counsel should confer with executive management, including, where applicable, their organization's chief information officer or an independent information technology consultant, to:

  • Map the Framework's standards against the organization's current practices to determine and remedy any cybersecurity deficiencies.
  • Maintain written records concerning the organization's practices and remedial efforts, if any.

Although the Framework's standards are voluntary, they pose the risk that private litigants and regulators will use (or misuse) them as a benchmark of the minimum measures organizations must take to run an acceptable cybersecurity program.

The Framework, which was issued in response to a 2013 presidential executive order, seeks to:

  • Address commercial and other organizations' need to adopt appropriate cyber defense strategies.
  • Facilitate the effective and efficient implementation of these cyber defense strategies.

The Framework's application is broad. Contrary to the common understanding of "critical infrastructure," it incorporates the US Department of Homeland Security's 16 critical infrastructure sectors, which include a variety of operations such as sports leagues, hotels, casinos and retailers. Because of its broad application, the Framework may be most useful:

  • As a guide for small or mid-sized organizations that have not yet fully developed their own cybersecurity policies.
  • For organizations in less critical industry sectors than true critical infrastructure organizations, which are likely to have already adopted the Framework's recommendations.

For more information on cybersecurity, see Practice Note, Cyber Attacks: Prevention and Proactive Responses.

Final rules on employer mandate

Employers with fewer than 100 employees have important transition relief available under final regulations (which are part of a series of final rules) implementing health care reform's employer mandate.

The employer mandate generally applies to large employers, defined as employers who employed on average at least 50 full-time employees, including full-time equivalent employees, on business days during the prior year. Under the transition relief, for employers with fewer than 100 employees, employer mandate penalties will not apply for any month during 2015 or the portion of a 2015 plan year that falls in 2016. The final regulations also make several clarifications, including to rules addressing an employer's first year as a large employer subject to the employer mandate.

In a related development, the IRS has issued final regulations implementing information reporting rules for large employers and insurers, along with related employee statements. These rules, which require employers with at least 50 full-time employees to inform the IRS about the health coverage they offer to employees, are necessary to administering the employer mandate. The final rules provide for:

  • A single, consolidated form for reporting to the government.
  • Transition relief under which the first information returns will be due in 2016 for 2015 plan years.

The information reporting rules also require employers to provide statements to employees for use in determining whether an employee may claim a premium tax credit under health care reform.

For more information on the employer mandate and related requirements, see Practice Note, Employer Mandate under Health Care Reform: Overview.

About Practical Law

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