Supreme Court Ruling on CFPB Funding Structure Disappoints Small Businesses
WASHINGTON, D.C. (May 16, 2024) – Small businesses are disappointed by today’s U.S. Supreme Court decision in Consumer Financial Protection Bureau v. Community Financial Services Association of America, Limited. The Court ruled that the funding mechanism for the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau
Sign Up for the Nebraska Legislative Session Recap
Join us Tuesday, June 4th at 9 a.m. to discuss what Nebraska lawmakers did for small business this legislative session and the 2024 General Election!
NFIB Asks for Veto of Colorado House Bill 1008
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: Tony Gagliardi, Colorado State Director, Tony.Gagliardi@nfib.org
or Tony Malandra, Senior Media Manager, Anthony.Malandra@nfib.org
DENVER, May 16, 2024—Colorado’s leading small-business association today asked Gov. Jared Polis for a veto of House Bill 1008,
NFIB VT Calls on Governor Phil Scott to Veto H.766
Michigan Small Businesses Endorse Tom Barrett for Election to Congress
LANSING, Mich. (May 15, 2024) – The National Federation of Independent Business (NFIB), the nation’s leading small business advocacy organization, today endorsed Tom Barrett for election to the United States House of Representatives to represent Michigan’s 7th Congressional District.
“Tom Barrett
Expert Tips and Insights in New Podcast Episode and Webinar
New podcast episode discusses why shopping small is important in larger communities. Webinar guest explains wage and hour laws and the new overtime rule.
Join Us Online for a Legislative Review with Gov. Bill Lee
U.S. House and Senate Introduce Legislation to Repeal Small Business Ownership Registry
Congress introduced legislation to repeal the beneficial ownership reporting requirement and relieve small businesses of one of the largest regulations.
Wage Transparency Could Have Unintended Consequences
NFIB State Director Natalie Robinson recently wrote a guest column for Indianapolis Business Journal about efforts to pass pay transparency legislation in the state legislature. She writes that revealing salary information might work in some circumstances but shouldn’t be law.
By NATALIE ROBINSON