Legal Compliance Framework โ Lantern โ
Effective Date: 2026-01-09
Status: Constitutional Document (requires 75% employee vote to amend)
Purpose โ
This document identifies legal requirements and compliance obligations for Lantern's employee-owned governance structure. It serves as a checklist for working with legal counsel to formalize the cooperative.
โ ๏ธ DISCLAIMER: This is NOT legal advice. Consult qualified legal counsel in your jurisdiction before implementing any governance structure.
Core Legal Requirement โ
Lantern's governance must comply with applicable laws while protecting employee-ownership and mission.
Key principle: Our governance documents add protections above legal minimums. We never violate law to achieve our goals.
Legal Areas to Address โ
1. Corporate Structure & Formation โ
Required Legal Steps โ
- [ ] Choose legal entity type (see options below)
- [ ] File articles of incorporation with state/jurisdiction
- [ ] Draft and adopt bylaws compliant with entity type
- [ ] Obtain EIN (Employer Identification Number) from IRS (US) or equivalent
- [ ] Register with state agencies (Secretary of State, labor department, tax authorities)
- [ ] Open business bank account (requires articles, EIN, bylaws)
Entity Type Options (US) โ
Option 1: Worker Cooperative Corporation
- Legal structure: Corporation owned and controlled by worker-members
- Pros: Designed for employee ownership; democratic governance built-in; mission protection
- Cons: Not available in all states; may require specialized attorney
- States with coop statutes: California, Colorado, Massachusetts, New York, Oregon, Vermont, Washington, Wisconsin
- Governance: One-member-one-vote; profit sharing to members; mission protection
- Tax: Can elect C-corp or S-corp taxation
Option 2: LLC with Cooperative Structure
- Legal structure: Limited Liability Company with custom operating agreement
- Pros: Available in all states; flexible structure; simpler than corp
- Cons: Requires careful drafting of operating agreement to ensure coop principles
- Governance: Defined in operating agreement (one-member-one-vote, equal profit sharing)
- Tax: Pass-through taxation (members pay tax on profit share)
Option 3: Benefit Corporation (B-Corp) with Employee Ownership
- Legal structure: For-profit corporation with mission accountability
- Pros: Mission protection built into law; investor-friendly if needed
- Cons: Less clear employee-ownership structure; may need ESOP or equity plan
- Governance: Board of directors; must consider stakeholders (employees, mission, community)
- Tax: C-corp taxation; can elect S-corp if eligible
Option 4: Traditional Corporation + ESOP
- Legal structure: C-corp or S-corp with Employee Stock Ownership Plan
- Pros: Well-established; tax benefits for ESOP; investor-compatible
- Cons: ESOP complex and expensive to administer; less direct democratic control
- Governance: Board of directors; ESOP trustee votes on behalf of employees
- Tax: ESOP contributions tax-deductible; potential tax-free status if 100% ESOP-owned
Recommended for Lantern: Worker Cooperative Corporation (if available in state) or LLC with Cooperative Structure (if not).
2. Employment Law Compliance โ
Employee Classification (Critical) โ
- [ ] Properly classify workers as employees vs. contractors (see Contractor Pathway)
- [ ] Apply IRS tests for employee vs. contractor (behavioral, financial, relationship)
- [ ] Review contractor relationships quarterly to prevent misclassification
- [ ] Consult attorney if uncertain about classification
Misclassification penalties:
- Back payroll taxes (employer portion)
- Back wages, overtime, benefits
- Federal and state fines
- Lawsuits from misclassified workers
IRS Form: SS-8 (Determination of Worker Status) if classification is unclear
Wage & Hour Laws โ
- [ ] Comply with minimum wage (federal, state, localโuse highest)
- [ ] Pay overtime for non-exempt employees (1.5ร for hours >40/week in US)
- [ ] Maintain timekeeping records (hours worked, breaks, overtime)
- [ ] Exempt vs. non-exempt classification (salaried employees may still be non-exempt)
- [ ] Equal pay laws (no discrimination based on gender, race, etc.)
Lantern commitment: Living wage minimum (75,000/year) exceeds legal minimums; 4-day week (32 hours standard) with overtime pay for 33+ hours.
Leave & Benefits (US) โ
- [ ] Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA): 12 weeks unpaid leave (50+ employees)
- [ ] State paid leave: Varies by state (CA, NY, WA, etc. have paid family leave)
- [ ] Sick leave: Required in many states/cities (e.g., CA, NYC)
- [ ] Health insurance: ACA requires offer to full-time employees (50+ employees)
- [ ] Workers' compensation insurance: Required in all states
- [ ] Unemployment insurance: Required; pay state/federal unemployment taxes
Lantern commitment: Exceeds legal minimums (unlimited PTO, 26 weeks paid parental leave, etc.)
Anti-Discrimination & Harassment โ
- [ ] Comply with Title VII (federal): No discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, national origin
- [ ] Comply with ADA (Americans with Disabilities Act): Reasonable accommodations for disabilities
- [ ] Comply with ADEA (Age Discrimination in Employment Act): No age discrimination (40+)
- [ ] Comply with state/local laws: Many states add protections (sexual orientation, gender identity, etc.)
- [ ] Implement anti-harassment policy and training
- [ ] Provide reporting mechanism (anonymous option)
- [ ] Investigate complaints promptly and take corrective action
Lantern commitment: Zero tolerance for discrimination/harassment (see Employee Rights Charter)
3. Tax Law Compliance โ
Federal Taxes (US) โ
- [ ] Employer payroll taxes (Social Security, Medicareโ7.65% employer share)
- [ ] Federal unemployment tax (FUTA)
- [ ] Income tax withholding for employees (W-4 forms)
- [ ] Quarterly tax filings (Form 941 for payroll taxes)
- [ ] Annual tax return (Form 1120 for C-corp, 1120-S for S-corp, 1065 for partnership/LLC)
- [ ] 1099 forms for contractors (1099-NEC by Jan 31)
- [ ] W-2 forms for employees (by Jan 31)
State/Local Taxes โ
- [ ] State income tax (if applicable)
- [ ] State unemployment tax (SUTA)
- [ ] Local business taxes (city, county)
- [ ] Sales tax (if applicable to business model)
Cooperative Tax Considerations โ
- [ ] Cooperative tax election (IRC Section 521 or Subchapter T for coops)
- [ ] Patronage dividends (profit distributions to members may be deductible for coop)
- [ ] Consult tax attorney for optimal structure (coop tax law is specialized)
Lantern commitment: Maintain 6-month cash reserves to ensure tax payments never missed.
4. Governance & Corporate Law โ
Articles of Incorporation (Must Include) โ
- [ ] Company name and purpose
- [ ] Registered agent and address
- [ ] Ownership structure (employee-owned; no outside equity)
- [ ] Voting rights (one-member-one-vote)
- [ ] Mission statement (privacy-first, no data sales)
- [ ] Stewardship Board powers and composition
- [ ] Amendment process (supermajority requirements)
- [ ] Dissolution clause (what happens if company closes)
Bylaws (Must Include) โ
- [ ] Membership criteria (employee-owners)
- [ ] Voting procedures (quorum, thresholds, proxy rules)
- [ ] Board structure (if applicable; or employee-managed)
- [ ] Officer roles (CEO, CFO, Secretary, etc.) and selection process
- [ ] Profit distribution formula (equal sharing among members)
- [ ] Transfer restrictions (cannot sell shares to non-employees)
- [ ] Buyback procedures (when employee leaves)
- [ ] Meeting requirements (annual member meetings, notice procedures)
Fiduciary Duties โ
- [ ] Duty of care: Directors/officers must act with reasonable care
- [ ] Duty of loyalty: No self-dealing; act in company's best interest
- [ ] Duty of good faith: Honest, ethical conduct
- [ ] Business judgment rule: Protects directors from liability for good-faith decisions
For coops/B-corps: May have expanded fiduciary duties (consider members, mission, communityโnot just profit).
Annual Compliance โ
- [ ] Annual report to state (filing fee, updated info)
- [ ] Annual member meeting (required by bylaws)
- [ ] Board elections (if applicable)
- [ ] Meeting minutes (document all major decisions)
5. Securities Law (If Offering Ownership Interests) โ
Securities Compliance (Critical) โ
- [ ] Determine if ownership interests are securities (likely yes for equity; maybe for coop membership)
- [ ] Federal securities laws: SEC registration or exemption (e.g., Rule 701 for employee equity)
- [ ] State securities laws ("Blue Sky Laws"): May require registration or notice filing
- [ ] Consult securities attorney before offering equity to employees
Common exemptions for employee ownership:
- Rule 701: Employee benefit plans (stock options, ESOP)
- Intrastate exemption: Offer limited to residents of one state
- Reg D (506(b)): Private placement to accredited investors (less relevant for employee ownership)
For coops: Membership shares may not be securities if:
- Cannot be transferred (or very restricted transfer)
- No expectation of profit from others' efforts
- Governance rights only (voting, not investment)
Consult attorney: Securities law violations can result in rescission rights, fines, and criminal penalties.
6. Contract Law (Agreements & Policies) โ
Required Written Agreements โ
- [ ] Employee offer letters (role, salary, benefits, start date)
- [ ] Employee-owner agreements (ownership stake, voting rights, profit sharing, buyback terms)
- [ ] Contractor agreements (scope of work, payment, IP assignment, classification justification)
- [ ] Lender agreements (loan terms, interest, repayment, no voting rights clause)
- [ ] Advisor agreements (scope, compensation, confidentiality, no decision-making power)
- [ ] Vendor/supplier contracts (services, SLAs, payment terms)
Required Policies (Handbook) โ
- [ ] Anti-discrimination and harassment policy
- [ ] Workplace safety policy
- [ ] Leave policies (PTO, sick leave, parental leave, FMLA)
- [ ] Compensation and benefits (salary bands, profit sharing, equity vesting)
- [ ] Code of conduct (ethics, conflicts of interest)
- [ ] Confidentiality and IP assignment (company owns work product)
- [ ] Termination and resignation procedures
- [ ] Dispute resolution (mediation, arbitration)
Employees must acknowledge receipt of handbook (signed acknowledgment).
7. Intellectual Property โ
IP Ownership โ
- [ ] Assign IP to company in employee and contractor agreements
- [ ] "Work for hire" clause: All work created during employment owned by company
- [ ] Trademark registration: Protect company name and logo (USPTO)
- [ ] Copyright registration: Protect original works (code, content, designs)
- [ ] Patent consideration: If applicable (likely not for Lantern)
Open Source & Licensing โ
- [ ] Review open source dependencies (GPL, MIT, Apache licenses)
- [ ] Comply with license terms (attribution, copyleft requirements)
- [ ] Publish license for own code (if open-sourcing any components)
8. Privacy & Data Protection โ
US Privacy Laws โ
- [ ] CCPA (California Consumer Privacy Act): If have CA users
- Right to know what data is collected
- Right to delete data
- Right to opt out of data sales (Lantern doesn't sell dataโcompliant by default)
- Privacy policy required
- [ ] COPPA (Children's Online Privacy Protection Act): If app used by children <13
- Parental consent required
- Restrictions on data collection
- Lantern: Age-restricted (21+ for venues serving alcohol)โCOPPA likely not applicable
- [ ] State privacy laws: VA, CO, CT, UT have privacy laws similar to CCPA
International Privacy Laws (If Operating Globally) โ
- [ ] GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation): EU users
- Consent for data collection
- Right to access, delete, portability
- Data protection officer (if processing at scale)
- Breach notification (72 hours)
- Fines: up to 4% of global revenue
- [ ] UK GDPR: Post-Brexit UK version
- [ ] Other jurisdictions: Brazil (LGPD), Canada (PIPEDA), Australia (Privacy Act)
Lantern commitment: Zero-knowledge encryption (we can't decrypt user data) makes compliance easier.
Privacy Policy (Required) โ
- [ ] Publish privacy policy accessible to all users
- [ ] Describe data collection: What data, why, how used
- [ ] Describe data sharing: Third parties (if any)
- [ ] Describe user rights: Access, deletion, opt-out
- [ ] Update annually or when practices change
9. Lender & Investor Compliance โ
Lending Regulations โ
- [ ] Usury laws: Maximum interest rates (varies by state; federal ~20%+)
- [ ] Loan documentation: Written agreement with clear terms
- [ ] Truth in Lending Act (TILA): Disclosures for consumer loans (likely not applicable for business loans)
- [ ] Fair Debt Collection Practices Act: If loan goes to collections
If Accepting Investment (Avoid if Possible) โ
- [ ] Securities compliance: See Section 5 above
- [ ] Accredited investor verification (if using Reg D exemption)
- [ ] Anti-fraud rules: Accurate disclosures; no misleading statements
- [ ] Filing requirements: Form D with SEC (Reg D), state filings
Lantern commitment: Avoid equity investment; use loans only (lenders are creditors, not investors).
10. Dissolution & Exit Planning โ
Dissolution Procedures โ
- [ ] Bylaws specify dissolution process (employee vote, asset distribution)
- [ ] Pay creditors first (including lenders)
- [ ] Distribute remaining assets per articles/bylaws (typically to employees or mission-aligned nonprofit)
- [ ] File dissolution paperwork with state
- [ ] Final tax returns (federal, state)
- [ ] Close bank accounts and wind down operations
Asset Distribution (Typical for Coops) โ
- Pay all debts and liabilities (lenders, vendors, taxes)
- Refund member capital contributions (if any)
- Distribute remaining assets:
- To members (equal distribution among employee-owners), OR
- To mission-aligned nonprofit (if articles specify), OR
- Combination (partial distribution to members, remainder to nonprofit)
Lantern commitment: Dissolution requires 75% employee vote; assets distributed to employees or donated to privacy/worker cooperative nonprofits.
Jurisdiction-Specific Considerations โ
United States โ
- Federal employment law: FLSA, Title VII, ADA, ADEA, FMLA
- State variations: CA, NY, WA have strongest worker protections
- Local ordinances: Minimum wage, sick leave (e.g., San Diego has local sick leave ordinance)
California-Specific (San Diego) โ
- [ ] CA Labor Code: Strong wage/hour protections; meal/rest break requirements
- [ ] CA Fair Employment and Housing Act (FEHA): Broader than federal anti-discrimination
- [ ] CA Paid Family Leave: 8 weeks paid leave (state-funded)
- [ ] CA Privacy Laws: CCPA compliance required
- [ ] CA Cooperative Corporation Law: Enables worker coop structure
International Expansion โ
- [ ] Each jurisdiction: Different labor, tax, corporate, privacy laws
- [ ] Options:
- Employer of Record (EOR) service (e.g., Deel, Remote.com)
- Local subsidiary (for multiple employees in country)
- Remote employee classification (if legally allowed)
- [ ] Compliance: Must follow local employment laws (benefits, leave, termination)
Required Legal Counsel & Advisors โ
When to Hire Attorneys โ
Corporate/Cooperative Attorney (Priority 1)
- [ ] Formation and entity selection
- [ ] Articles of incorporation and bylaws
- [ ] Employee-owner agreements and equity structure
- [ ] Annual compliance review
Employment Attorney (Priority 2)
- [ ] Employee vs. contractor classification
- [ ] Employee handbook and policies
- [ ] Termination procedures
- [ ] Discrimination/harassment investigations
Tax Attorney/CPA (Priority 3)
- [ ] Tax structure optimization (coop election, S-corp, etc.)
- [ ] Annual tax filings
- [ ] Payroll tax compliance
- [ ] Multi-state tax issues
Securities Attorney (If Offering Equity)
- [ ] Securities compliance (Rule 701, exemptions)
- [ ] State filings (Blue Sky compliance)
- [ ] Investment agreements (if ever accepting outside capital)
Privacy/Data Attorney (If Scaling)
- [ ] GDPR/CCPA compliance
- [ ] Privacy policy drafting
- [ ] Data breach response plan
Estimated Legal Costs (US, 2026) โ
| Service | Estimated Cost |
|---|---|
| Entity formation (coop/LLC) | $2,000โ$5,000 |
| Articles + bylaws drafting | $3,000โ$10,000 |
| Employee agreements (templates) | $1,000โ$3,000 |
| Employment handbook | $2,000โ$5,000 |
| Tax structure consultation | $1,500โ$3,000 |
| Securities compliance (if needed) | $5,000โ$15,000 |
| Annual legal review | $1,000โ$3,000/year |
Total startup legal: $10,000โ$30,000 depending on complexity
Ongoing annual: $2,000โ$5,000 for compliance and updates
Compliance Checklist (Year 1) โ
Before Hiring First Employee โ
- [ ] Choose and register legal entity (coop, LLC, corp)
- [ ] Obtain EIN from IRS
- [ ] Draft and adopt articles + bylaws
- [ ] Open business bank account
- [ ] Register with state tax and labor agencies
- [ ] Obtain workers' comp insurance
- [ ] Set up payroll system (or use service like Gusto, Rippling)
Before Offering Equity/Ownership โ
- [ ] Consult securities attorney (if offering equity shares)
- [ ] Draft employee-owner agreements
- [ ] Establish vesting schedule (if applicable)
- [ ] Determine buyback procedures for departing employees
Before Hiring Contractor โ
- [ ] Review IRS classification tests
- [ ] Draft contractor agreement (scope, payment, IP, no voting rights)
- [ ] Set up 1099 tracking
Before Taking Loan โ
- [ ] Consult corporate attorney
- [ ] Draft lender agreement (interest, repayment, no voting rights clause)
- [ ] Employee vote to approve loan (if >$100K or >2ร revenue)
- [ ] Stewardship Board review (if applicable)
Ongoing (Monthly/Quarterly/Annually) โ
- [ ] Monthly: Payroll processing and tax deposits
- [ ] Quarterly: Payroll tax filings (Form 941), estimated tax payments
- [ ] Quarterly: Review contractor relationships for misclassification risk
- [ ] Quarterly: Financial reports to employees
- [ ] Annually: W-2s to employees (by Jan 31)
- [ ] Annually: 1099s to contractors (by Jan 31)
- [ ] Annually: Tax returns (Form 1120/1120-S/1065)
- [ ] Annually: State annual report filing
- [ ] Annually: Annual member meeting
- [ ] Annually: Governance review (bylaws, policies, compliance)
Red Flags (Legal Risk) โ
Watch for these and consult attorney immediately:
๐ฉ Contractor treated like employee (exclusive work, set hours, company equipment)
๐ฉ Employee classified as exempt but paid <$684/week (US overtime threshold)
๐ฉ Non-employee given voting rights (securities law violation)
๐ฉ Loan agreement includes equity conversion without securities compliance
๐ฉ Privacy policy not updated after changing data practices
๐ฉ No written employment contracts or handbook
๐ฉ Misclassifying international workers (employee vs. contractor)
๐ฉ Not withholding payroll taxes for employees
Resources โ
Government Agencies (US) โ
- IRS: Tax compliance, EIN, forms (irs.gov)
- DOL (Dept. of Labor): Wage/hour, FMLA, OSHA (dol.gov)
- EEOC: Anti-discrimination (eeoc.gov)
- SEC: Securities compliance (sec.gov)
- State Secretary of State: Business registration
- State Labor Department: Unemployment, workers' comp
Professional Organizations โ
- U.S. Federation of Worker Cooperatives: Resources, model bylaws (usworker.coop)
- Democracy at Work Institute: Coop formation guides (institute.coop)
- National Cooperative Business Association (NCBA): Advocacy, resources (ncba.coop)
Legal Templates (Use with Attorney Review) โ
- Cooley GO: Startup legal docs (cooleygo.com)
- Rocket Lawyer / LegalZoom: Basic templates (not coop-specific)
- USFWC Model Bylaws: Worker coop templates (usworker.coop)
FAQs โ
Q: Can we start without a lawyer?
A: Not recommended. Formation documents must be legally sound. Use attorney for articles/bylaws; you can handle routine filings yourself after setup.
Q: Which legal entity is best for Lantern?
A: Likely worker cooperative corporation (if in CA or other coop-friendly state) or LLC with cooperative operating agreement. Consult attorney for your jurisdiction.
Q: Do we need a Stewardship Board legally?
A: Not required by law, but highly recommended for mission protection. Can be established in articles/bylaws.
Q: How much does legal compliance cost annually?
A: Estimated $2,000โ$5,000/year for legal review + $2,000โ$10,000 for accounting/tax + ongoing filing fees (~$500โ$1,000). Total: $5,000โ$15,000/year.
Q: What happens if we violate employment law?
A: Penalties vary: back wages, fines, lawsuits, criminal charges (for egregious violations). Prevention is far cheaper than remediation.
Q: Can employees be board members?
A: Yes! In worker coops, employees often ARE the board (or elect board from membership). This is legal and encouraged.
Related Documents โ
- Governance & Ownership โ Legal structures overview
- Contractor Pathway โ Employee vs. contractor classification
- Immutable Rights โ Rights that must be legally codified
- Employee Rights Charter โ Employee benefits and protections
Amendment Process โ
This framework is a constitutional document:
- Requires 75% employee-owner vote to amend
- Annual review for legal updates
- Consult legal counsel before implementing changes
Final Note โ
Legal compliance is not optional. Violating employment, tax, securities, or privacy laws can result in:
- Fines and penalties
- Lawsuits and liability
- Criminal prosecution (in extreme cases)
- Dissolution of company
Invest in proper legal setup from day one. It's far cheaper to do it right than to fix violations later.
This document is a starting point, not legal advice. Always consult qualified legal counsel in your jurisdiction before making legal decisions.