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Corporate Transparency Act and Healthcare Entities: Reporting Companies, Exemptions, Beneficial Ownership Reporting

Recording of a 90-minute CLE video webinar with Q&A

This program is included with the Strafford CLE Pass. Click for more information.
This program is included with the Strafford All-Access Pass. Click for more information.

Conducted on Tuesday, January 16, 2024

Recorded event now available

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This CLE webinar will guide healthcare counsel on the Corporate Transparency Act (CTA) and what it means for healthcare entities. The panel will provide an overview of the CTA and will discuss how the new CTA requirements apply to physician groups, physician-hospital joint ventures and other joint venture arrangements, and management service organizations (MSOs) co-owned by private equity firms. The panel will offer best practices for meeting CTA requirements.

Description

Beginning Jan. 1, 2024, the CTA requires certain U.S. and foreign entities defined as "reporting companies" to report certain identifying information about themselves, their beneficial owners, and company applicants to FinCEN (the U.S. Dept. of the Treasury's Financial Crimes Enforcement Network) within a certain prescribed time period.

Failure to comply with the new reporting requirements could result in civil and criminal penalties. The CTA imposes a civil penalty of not more than $500 for each day that there is a willful failure to report complete beneficial ownership information or a willful provision of or willful attempt to provide false or fraudulent beneficial ownership information. Further, a person may face a fine of up to $10,000 and imprisonment.

The CTA includes several exemptions, which may mean some larger healthcare entities will not have to meet the reporting requirements. However, smaller healthcare entities are not likely to be exempt. Therefore, they must understand and comply with the new requirements. Smaller healthcare entities are not alone. MSOs that are owned in part by private equity and some joint venture arrangements may be required to report.

Listen as our authoritative panel of healthcare attorneys examines the implications of the CTA for healthcare. The panel will provide an overview of the CTA and will discuss how the new CTA requirements apply to and/or impact physician groups, physician-hospital joint ventures and other joint venture arrangements as reporting companies, and MSOs co-owned by private equity firms. The panel will discuss who needs to be named as a beneficial owner and offer best practices for meeting CTA requirements.

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Outline

  1. CTA overview
  2. Application and analysis of the new CTA to healthcare entities, with examples
    1. Physician groups
    2. Physician-hospital JVs
    3. Other JV arrangements
    4. MSOs co-owned by PE firms
  3. Naming beneficial owners
  4. Best practices for meeting CTA requirements

Benefits

The panel will review these and other important considerations:

  • Which healthcare entities will likely be most affected by the CTA's implementation and why?
  • What exemptions may apply?
  • How will the CTA's reporting requirements affect physician-hospital JVs and other transactions?

Faculty

Greising, Robert
Robert Greising

Partner
Krieg DeVault

Mr. Greising devotes his practice primarily to general corporate and business, corporate finance, technology,...  |  Read More

Paul, Marshall
Marshall B. Paul

Partner
Saul Ewing

Mr. Paul focuses his practice on counseling businesses, healthcare concerns and professionals with respect to limited...  |  Read More

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Strafford will process CLE credit for one person on each recording. All formats include course handouts.

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