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PPP Loan Forgiveness Application Details

Client Alert

As PPP loan recipients start to take stock of how they’ve used funds over the eight-week period, many businesses are eager to move ahead with the forgiveness portion of the program. How much of the loan will be forgiven is determined by the Small Business Administration (“SBA”), as provided in the CARES Act.[1] Over the weekend, the Department of Treasury released details on the forgiveness application, which can be found here.

Fund Usage

If the PPP funds are used to make payments on (1) payroll costs, (2) interest on mortgage obligations, (3) rent/lease payments for real and personal property, and (4) utility payments, those funds will be forgiven. However, a borrower’s use of PPP funds may only be forgiven if payroll costs account for 75% or more of the payments. That means only 25% of the payments forgiven can be for used for interest on mortgage obligations, rent, and utility payments.

Note that this is the first time that rent/lease payments from personal property have been indicated under the PPP forgiveness program. 

Payroll Cost Details

Eligible payroll costs are considered paid on the date payroll checks are distributed. The payroll costs are considered “incurred” on the day the employee’s pay is earned. Payroll costs incurred but not paid during the borrower’s last pay period of the covered period are eligible for forgiveness if paid on or before the next regular payroll date. Recall that the covered period as specified in the CARES Act begins at the time of receipt of the PPP funds. This may cause difficulty for many borrowers that use bi-weekly (or more frequent) pay periods if the receipt of the loan proceeds didn’t line up with the first day of their specific pay period. Under the guidance indicated in the Forgiveness Application, borrowers may elect to use an Alternative Payroll Covered Period which would begin on the first day of the first pay period occurring after their receipt of the PPP loan funds.

The Other 25%

Payments on mortgage interest, rent, and utility payments must be paid or incurred during the covered period and paid by the next regular billing date (even if payments occur after the covered period).  Utility payments include electricity, gas, water, transportation, telephone, or internet access. 

Forgiveness Formula

Any amounts forgiven under the PPP will be considered “canceled indebtedness” by the SBA. Such canceled indebtedness will not be taxed by the federal government.

The amount forgiven cannot exceed the principal amount of the financing originally made from the SBA. Additionally, the amount forgiven will be decreased proportionately based on the reduction in the number of employees on a borrower’s payroll. This reduction will only occur if the borrower does not maintain the same number of employees the borrower listed in its’ application. There is, however, an exception: if a borrower lays off an employee, offers to rehire the employee, and the employee refuses, the reduction in the number of employees of borrower will not penalize the borrower for loan forgiveness purposes. Further, the amount forgiven will be decreased proportionately based on the reduction in the salary of employees on a borrower’s payroll, if that salary decrease is greater than 25% of employee’s original salary. 

Application & Forgiveness Approval Protocol

A borrower seeking loan forgiveness must submit a forgiveness application to its SBA lender. The lender’s application must include documentation that:

  • Verifies the number of full-time equivalent employees,
  • Includes pay rates (IRS payroll taxes, state income, payroll, and unemployment insurance filings),
  • Verifies payments on mortgage interest, rent, or utilities, and
  • Certifies the use of funds is true, correct, and complies with the CARES Act.

The verification of full-time equivalents may be calculated, at the election of the borrower, on either of the following time frames: 02/15/2019 – 06/30/2019 or 01/01/2020 – 02/29/2020. The verification of pay rates will be calculated by the employee’s most recent full quarter during which the employee was employed before the covered period. All of this documentation must be maintained for at least 6 years by the borrower.

The lender must issue the borrower a decision on the amount of the loan forgiven within 60 days after the borrower files the loan forgiveness application. All loans in excess of $2 million will be reviewed by the Department of Treasury when a loan forgiveness application is received.

[1] CARE Act Section 1106: Loan Forgiveness.


Florida's Recent Ruling on Arbitration Clauses

Florida’s recent ruling on arbitration clauses provides a crucial distinction in determining whether such clauses are void as against public policy and providers may have the opportunity to include arbitration clauses in their patient consent forms. On March 6, 2024, Florida’s Fourth District Court of Appeals reversed and remanded Florida’s Fifteenth Circuit Court ruling of Piero Palacios v. Sharnice Lawson. The Court of Appeals ruled that the parties’ arbitration agreement did not contradict the Legislature’s intent of Florida’s Medical Malpractice Act (the “MMA”), but rather reflects the parties’ choice to arbitrate claims entirely outside of the MMA’s framework. Therefore, the Court found that the agreement was not void as against public policy.

Corporate Transparency Act Update 3/14/24

On March 1, 2024, a federal district court in the Northern District of Alabama concluded that the Corporate Transparency Act (“CTA”) exceeded Congressional powers and enjoined the Department of the Treasury from enforcing the CTA against the plaintiffs. National Small Business United v. Yellen, No. 5:22-cv-01448 (N.D. Ala.). On March 11, 2024, the U.S. Department of Justice appealed the district court’s decision to the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals.

The Ohio State University Launches Its Accelerated Bachelor of Science in Nursing Program

In response to Ohio’s nursing shortage, The Ohio State University College of Nursing is accepting applications for its new Accelerated Bachelor of Science in Nursing program (aBSN). Created for students with a bachelor’s degree in non-nursing fields, the aBSN allows such students to obtain their nursing degree within 18 months. All aBSN students will participate in high-quality coursework and gain valuable clinical experience. Upon completion of the program, graduates will be eligible to take the State Board, National Council of Licensure Exam for Registered Nursing (NCLEX-RN).

Another Transparency Obligation: The FinCEN Beneficial Ownership Information Reporting Requirements

Many physician practices and healthcare businesses are facing a new set of federal transparency requirements that require action now. The U.S. Department of Treasury Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (“FinCEN”) Beneficial Ownership Information Reporting Requirements (the “Rule”), which was promulgated pursuant to the 2021 bipartisan Corporate Transparency Act, is intended to help curb illegal finance and other impermissible activity in the United States.

“In for a Penny, in for a Pound” is No Longer the Case for Florida Lawyers

On April 1, 2024, newly adopted Rule 1.041 to the Florida Rules of Civil Procedures goes into effect which creates a procedure for an attorney to appear in a limited manner in civil proceedings.  Currently, when a Florida attorney appears in a civil proceeding, he or she is reasonable for handling all aspects of the case for their client.  This new rule authorizes an attorney to file a notice limiting the attorney’s appearance to particular proceedings or specified matters prior to any appearance before the court.  For example, an attorney can now appear for the limited purpose of filing and arguing a motion to dismiss.  Once the motion to dismiss is heard by the court, the attorney may file a notice of termination of limited appearance and will have no further obligations in the case.