The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) on Tuesday approved a new regulation banning most U.S. employers from utilizing non-compete agreements. Not only will current non-compete agreements become invalid, but employers will have to notify employees in writing that those agreements are no longer valid. This will clearly affect insurance agencies wishing to keep producers from leaving and directly competing against them.
PIA and many other business groups have lobbied against this rule. The U.S. Chamber of Commerce has promised a court challenge, saying the FTC “lacks the statutory or constitutional authority to issue a competition rule.” If this or another court challenge to the new rule is successful in getting an injunction, the effective date could be delayed for a year or more. If the rule does take effect in 120 days, as written, there are some work-arounds that can be used:
Non-competes have been under legal attack in recent years, and have been progressively limited by U.S. Courts. As a result, many employers have already made adjustments away from “non-compete” language and toward “non-solicitation” language.
PIA is currently updating the sample producer contracts that we offer to members for free in our member InfoHub at piaw.org, and those will be updated shortly. Please feel free to reach out to me (phanson@piaw.org) if you have questions or if you would like to receive a copy of the updated producer contract from PIA, once available.