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Legislative Highlights Apr 2000

Journal Issue
  • At press time, House and Senate conferees have not yet been named to the
    bankruptcy reform conference. Pending is the Senate's resolution on separating the
    minimum wage and business tax provisions from S. 625. These non-germane
    provisions were added by floor amendment and passed by the Senate in February. The
    House has passed its own version on minimum wage and business taxes. The Senate's
    action to strike the provisions would allow a clean conference on bankruptcy issues
    alone. An attempt to strike was made on March 22, but failed when Democrats
    objected. Resolution of this issue is a condition precedent to moving forward with
    the bankruptcy conference. Staffers continue to work on some of the differences.
  • The U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) memo dealing with some of the key issues in the S.
    625/H.R. 833 conference objects to permitting family farmers to allow some or all of the tax liability
    arising from sales in chapter 12 to be discharged as unsecured debt. "It would be undesirable to begin
    creating exceptions for special interest groups," wrote the DOJ. Bill sponsor Sen. Charles E. Grassley
    (R-IA) attacked the characterization of family farmers as special interests. He pointed out that sales of
    property are typical in farm cases and that to saddle farmers with heavy tax liability would undermine
    bankruptcy's promised fresh start.
  • ABI member Janet M. Nesse (Morrison & Hecker; Washington) recently participated in a
    briefing for House and Senate staff. A commercial bankruptcy practitioner and trained bankruptcy
    mediator, Nesse was invited by the staff to assist in the negotiations between retailers, banks and
    shopping center interests over proposed changes to leases under §365, which sharply limit the ability
    of debtors to delay the decision to accept or reject.
Journal Date