Answers to commonly asked questions from small business tenants and lessors about support for retail and commercial landlords.
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Answers to commonly asked questions from small business tenants and lessors about support for retail and commercial landlords.
Yes, the tenant’s turnover from online sales should be considered when calculating the level of decline in turnover.
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The Regulation ensures that the economic impact of COVID-19 is shared by property owners and tenants. The protections in the Regulation, combined with the land tax concessions and the newly established Commercial Landlord Hardship Fund, will help limit the long- economic damage of COVID-19 and maximise the number of businesses that can resume normal operation when public health orders are lifted.
Selling or purchasing a business can feel both exciting and daunting at the same time. At Crosby Law our lawyers will help guide you through the process to make the transition of ownership seamless.
If you have any questions about the laws and processes around selling or purchasing a business in the Auckland, Pukekohe or Waiuku feel free to get in touch and ask a lawyer at Crosby Law. more
How we will help:
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Whether you are a small business owner who has had someone breach their contract, a business owner who has been cheated by a partner or a White Collar employee whose employer has breached an employment agreement, our New York City and Westchester County business litigation lawyers will fight for you and get you the money that you are owed. Our Westchester and N.Y.C. commercial litigation attorneys have been representing clients with commercial and business needs all over New York State, including Manhattan, the Bronx, Westchester, Rockland, Brooklyn and Queens. more
One of the proposed measures, titled the Ending Platform Monopolies Act, seeks to require structural separation of Amazon and other big technology companies to break up their businesses. It would make it unlawful for a covered online platform to own a business that “utilizes the covered platform for the sale or provision of products or services” or that sells services as a condition for access to the platform. The platform company also couldn’t own businesses that create conflicts of interest, such as by creating the “incentive and ability” for the platform to advantage its own products over competitors.
If the bills become law—a prospect that faces significant hurdles—they could substantially alter the most richly valued companies in America and reshape an industry that has extended its impact into nearly every facet of work and life. [links]
The bills, announced Friday, amount to the biggest congressional broadside yet on a handful of technology companies—including Alphabet Inc.’s Google, Apple Inc. and Facebook Inc. as well as Amazon —whose size and power have drawn growing scrutiny from lawmakers and regulators in the U.S. and Europe. here
House lawmakers proposed a raft of bipartisan legislation aimed at reining in the country’s biggest tech companies, including a bill that seeks to make Amazon.com Inc. and other large corporations effectively split in two or shed their private-label products.
A separate bill takes a different approach to target platforms’ self-preferencing. It would bar platforms from conduct that “advantages the covered platform operator’s own products, services, or lines of business over those of another business user,” or that excludes or disadvantages other businesses. [links]