A couple of years ago I set out to write a Legal Guide to Starting a Business in Iowa. Unfortunately trying to work, write a blog, coach baseball and write the guidebook didn’t quite work for me. I started the guidebook but never came close to finishing it.

So this year I have decided to blog

A couple of years ago I touched on how wage and hour lawsuits were on the rise. Since then Iowa’s own Casey’s General Stores got tagged for $11.7 million in a settlement.  But not even I could have predicted the potential $1,000,000,000 liability that AT&T allegedly faces for failure to pay overtime.

An article in Barron’s supports, in a big way, the importance of keeping good business records. The article details how the IRS disputed a $75,000 repayment of a loan for a business owner named Henry resulting instead in a $68,000 dividend, on which Henry owed tax. 

Joseph Gelband, a tax attorney from Larchmont, New York

I had the pleasure of sitting down for an interview with Michael Libbie yesterday. We talked blogging, discrimination cases, franchising and other issues.

If you didn’t catch it live you can watch the podcast here. (The interview begins at about the 30 minute mark).

If you haven’t heard about Des Moines Local Live

Need capital for your business? Looking for an investor? If so, you should take the opportunity to attend a seminar from the Business Innovation Zone of Central Iowa (BIZ) on how to get your business into shape and attract an investor’s eye.

Adam Claypool of DeWaay Investment Banking is the speaker. I have worked

Megan Erickson of the Dickinson Law Firm has started Erickson’s Blog on Social Networking and the Law.  Now that’s a blog that will have a never ending flow of posts.  She already has an interesting array of posts including one where a business owner got slapped with a $2 million libel lawsuit for Facebook and

You’ve probably seen them in your contracts. Miscellaneous provisions such as choice of law, litigation venue, successors and assigns provisions, no waiver, entire understanding, or supersede clauses.  They tend to always appear at the end of the contract and are almost always an afterthought by the parties. After all, those provisions don’t mean anything

How Business Gets Done, Words of Wisdom from Central Iowa Experts has hit the virtual bookshelves at www.lulu.com. I am honored to be a contributing author with several respected peers in our business community. My chapter is on the Partnership Prenuptial where I discuss the importance of drafting a  buy-sell agreement from the beginning