New Articles

US Government Adds 4 Military-Connected Entities in Burma to Entity List and Sanctions 22 Burmese Individuals

burma

US Government Adds 4 Military-Connected Entities in Burma to Entity List and Sanctions 22 Burmese Individuals

As part of the U.S. Government’s ongoing response to the military coup in Burma (Myanmar), the Department of Commerce’s Bureau of Industry and Security (“BIS”) added four entities to the Entity List effective July 6, 2021 and the Department of Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (“OFAC”) added twenty-two individuals to the Specially Designated Nationals & Blocked Persons List (“SDN List”) effective July 2, 2021.

Commerce Secretary Gina M. Raimondo noted that the four entities include a satellite communications services provider to the Burmese military and three entities that have revenue-sharing agreements with Myanmar Economic Holdings Limited (“MEHL”), an entity that generates revenue for the Burmese military and which was previously added to the Entity List. As a result of the additions, licenses are required for exports, reexports, and in-country transfers of all items “subject to the EAR” to the four entities and BIS will employ a presumption of denial license review policy. The entities are:

-King Royal Technologies Co., Ltd.;

-Myanmar Wanbao Mining Copper, Ltd.;

-Myanmar Yang Tse Copper, Ltd.; and

-Wanbao Mining, Ltd.

The twenty-two individuals added to the SDN List under Executive Order 14014 include two members of the State Administrative Council currently participating in governance of Burma and the Ministers of Information; Investment and Foreign Economic Relations; Labor, Immigration, and Population; and Social Welfare, Relief, and Resettlement. Fifteen of the twenty-two added to the SDN List were added because of being either spouses or adult children of persons on the SDN List.

As a result of the SDN designations, all property and interests in property of these persons in the US or controlled by US persons must be blocked and reported to OFAC. US persons are prohibited from sending or receiving any provision of funds, goods, or services to/from these newly designated SDNs. According to OFAC’s “50% Ownership Rule,” these sanctions also extend to any subsidiaries in which these SDNs directly or indirectly hold, either individually or in the aggregate with other SDNs, an ownership interest of 50% or more.

_______________________________________________________________

Cortney O’Toole Morgan is a Washington D.C.-based partner with the law firm Husch Blackwell LLP. She leads the firm’s International Trade & Supply Chain group.

Grant Leach is an Omaha-based partner with the law firm Husch Blackwell LLP focusing on international trade, export controls, trade sanctions and anti-corruption compliance.

Tony Busch is an attorney in Husch Blackwell LLP’s Washington, D.C. office.

safe harbor

SBA Extends Safe Harbor Deadline to May 14, 2020 and Confirms that Foreign Affiliate Employees Must be Counted for Size Purposes

Late on May 5, 2020 the Small Business Administration (SBA) issued another round of Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) that extended the Safe Harbor Deadline to return Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) loan funds from May 7, 2020 to May 14, 2020. Significantly, the SBA also confirmed that its rules regarding foreign affiliates are applied to PPP applicants in the same manner as its other programs. Loan applicants should closely review the most updated version of the SBA’s FAQs and talk to their counsel about the best way to proceed.

Safe Harbor Extended from May 7, 2020 to May 14, 2020

As discussed in a previously, on April 23, 2020 (20 days after applications could first be submitted for PPP loans), the SBA issued FAQ 31 that significantly increased the requirements surrounding an applicant’s certification that “current economic uncertainty makes this loan request necessary to support the ongoing operations of the Applicant.” In the strongly worded FAQ 31, the SBA stated that “[b]orrowers must make this certification in good
faith, taking into account their current business activity and their ability to access other sources of liquidity sufficient to support their ongoing operations in a manner that is not significantly detrimental to the business.” Unfortunately, as of the date of this alert, neither the Department of Treasury (Treasury) nor the SBA have issued any further guidance beyond the above sentence to confirm how applicants actually make this determination. On April 28, 2020, the SBA also confirmed that FAQ 31 equally applies to both public and private companies.

In addition to issuing FAQ 31, the SBA also issued an initial Safe Harbor Deadline of May 7, 2020 to return PPP loans. This May 7, 2020 Safe Harbor Deadline has now been extended to May 14, 2020. Under FAQ 43 that was issued on May 5, the SBA and Treasury are allowing borrowers to return PPP loan funds by May 14, 2020. For those borrowers that return funds by May 14, the SBA and Treasury have confirmed that they will deem the certification regarding “need” to have been made in good faith. The SBA also has confirmed that it intends to issue additional guidance on how it will review the “need” certification before May 14, 2020.

While the SBA’s recent guidance does not specifically reference any eligibility certifications outside of the “necessity” for the loan, a borrower knowing that it has a separate eligibility issue should seek counsel about addressing that issue before the extended deadline of May 14, 2020.

Frustration and confusion abound since the issuance of FAQ 31 and FAQ 37. There are several questions that Treasury has not adequately answered. Until further guidance is issued, applicants are faced with a difficult choice of keeping funds with the risk that the government may later hold the unclear guidance against them, or refuse the funds and accept the impacts that go along with that, including a possible reduction of employees.

Applicants across the country have been raising these complaints, and Treasury has at least initially responded by extending the deadline to May 14, 2020. We hope that Treasury will also soon issue additional FAQs or rules to confirm the parameters for which businesses can in good faith certify the need for a PPP loan.

Borrowers Must Count Employees of Foreign Affiliates When Determining Eligibility for a PPP Loan

The SBA also issued FAQ 44 on May 5, which confirms that borrowers must count both foreign and domestic affiliates when determining eligibility for PPP loans. FAQ 44 has significant impacts on businesses which applied for PPP loans without counting the employees of foreign affiliates.

As a reminder, SBA’s regulations confirm that “[c]oncerns and entities are affiliates of each other when one controls or has the power to control the other, or a third party or parties controls or has the power to control both.” 13 C.F.R. § 121.301(f) (February 5, 2020). The PPP Loan Affiliation Rules describe how the SBA determines affiliation for PPP loans.

SBA’s rules for determining size have long required participants in SBA’s programs to count both foreign and domestic affiliates. See 13 CFR §§ 121.103(a)(6), 104(a), 106(b)(1), and 301(f)(6) (confirming that both foreign and domestic affiliates should be considered for size purposes).

However, when the SBA issued the PPP Loan Affiliation Rules, it did not include the pre-March 11, 2020 version of 13 C.F.R. § 121.301(f)(6)1, which confirms that foreign affiliates should be counted. The PPP Loan Affiliation Rules do not reference Section (f)(6). The Interim Final Rule first issued on April 2, 2020 and SBA’s FAQ 3 also states that borrowers are eligible for a PPP loan “if the business has 500 or fewer employees whose principal place of residence is in the United States,” or meets other criteria.

The use of the term “principal place of residence in the United States” in the Interim Final Rule and SBA’s FAQs created confusion about whether employees of foreign affiliates actually needed to be counted for PPP loan eligibility. For those who have long worked with SBA’s rules, it seemed that not counting foreign affiliates would be a significant change from SBA’s past implementation of its regulations, but the clear language in the above sources made it reasonable to openly consider that question to determine if the SBA was handling the PPP loan program differently.

On May 5, the SBA confirmed that PPP loans are consistent with its other programs and borrowers must count foreign affiliates when considering size:

For purposes of the PPP’s 500 or fewer employee size standard, an applicant must count all of its employees and the employees of its U.S. and foreign affiliates, absent a waiver of or an exception to the
affiliation rules. 13 C.F.R. 121.301(f)(6). Business concerns seeking to qualify as a “small business concern” under section 3 of the Small Business Act (15 U.S.C. 632) on the basis of the employee-based size standard must do the same.

See FAQ 44.

Businesses which have already applied and know that foreign affiliates would cause them to exceed the relevant size standard should discuss this with their counsel to closely evaluate next steps on how to proceed. It would be wise to consider and address this before the May 14, 2020 Safe Harbor Deadline.

For specific guidance on this issue, please contact Josh Mullen, John  Scannapieco, or Jeff Wagner. For more information and general guidance on how to address other legal issues related to COVID-19, please visit the Coronavirus (COVID-19): What You Need to Know information page on our website.