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Employee Ownership Blog

Corey Rosen

NY Bill Would Examine Certifying Employee-Owned Companies as Minority- and Women-Owned

New York Assembly Bill 5649, authored by Democratic Assembly Member Stefani Zinerman, directs the New York State advisory panel on employee-owned enterprises to evaluate barriers to certification as minority- and women-owned businesses (MWBEs) for employee-owned businesses and recommend strategies for retaining the MWBE status of existing certified business enterprises when they become employee-owned. The commission was established in 2022 to report on how the state could encourage employee ownership but has yet to issue any recommendations. The NCEO has an article on ESOPs and preferred-status certification with background information and recommendations.


Corey Rosen

New Data on ESOP Companies Acquiring Non-ESOP Companies

The NCEO has completed the most comprehensive review to date of publicly available information about ESOP companies purchasing non-ESOP companies. The review is consistent with anecdotal reports that buying other companies has become an important source of growth for closely held ESOP companies.


Corey Rosen

Trump Selects Daniel Aronowitz to Head EBSA

President Donald Trump selected fiduciary insurance company executive Daniel Aronowitz to head the Employee Benefits Security Administration (EBSA). Aronowitz currently is the head of Encore Fiduciary (formerly Euclid Fiduciary). The company provides fiduciary insurance, fidelity bonds, cybersecurity insurance, and fiduciary insurance consulting. He is the author of the Fiduciary Liability Insurance Handbook. The book’s only mention of ESOPs is to say that this kind of fiduciary insurance is more costly than that needed for other retirement plans.

If approved by the Senate, Aronowitz would succeed Lisa M. Gomez and work under Lori Chavez-DeRemer, Trump’s pick for Secretary of Labor, who is also up for Senate approval. Chavez-DeRemer has been an ESOP advocate; Aronowitz does not appear to have taken any public position on ESOPs. 




Corey Rosen

Wisconsin Bill Would Create Employee Ownership Incentives and Outreach Program

Senate Bill 21 (PDF), a bipartisan bill introduced in both the Wisconsin Senate and Assembly, would create a tax credit of up to 70% of the costs of converting to a worker cooperative and 50% of the cost of adopting an ESOP, with a credit cap of $100,000. Up to a total of $5 million in credits could be allocated each year, and any unused allocation could be carried forward.


Loren Rodgers

Employee-Owned Companies and Foreign Aid

The extensive coverage of President Trump’s executive order to halt payments for foreign aid has missed one of the order’s unintended consequences: the impact it will have on the thousands of people who work at U.S.-based employee-owned companies that implement many USAID projects. Companies that have employee stock ownership plans (ESOPs) are heavily represented among the contractors affected by the executive order.



Loren Rodgers

The Rescinded Spending Freeze, the Employee Buyout, and Employee Ownership

On January 29, the Trump administration appears to have rescinded its executive order freezing federal grant funding. A prior order freezing foreign aid is still in effect.  Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt suggested, however, that the freeze might continue in some form in a post on X: “This is NOT a rescission of the federal funding freeze. It is simply a rescission of the OMB memo. Why? To end any confusion created by the court's injunction. The President's EO's on federal funding remain in full force and effect, and will be rigorously implemented.” A separate executive action, still in effect, offers buyouts to over two million federal workers.