The U.S. Federal Trade Commission Votes to Ban Non-Compete Agreements, But the Issue is Far From Settled
Early last year, the U.S. Federal Trade Commission (“FTC”) proposed a rule banning non-compete agreements nationwide. Yesterday, the FTC voted 3 to 2 in favor of adopting this rule. The FTC’s newly adopted rule bars for-profit employers from entering into new non-compete agreements with employees, including highly compensated and executive employees. Existing non-compete agreements with senior executives are still enforceable under the new rule, but employers must, by the rule’s effective date, notify all other employees with non-compete agreements that those agreements are unenforceable. The rule defines a “senior executive” as a worker who was in a policy-making position and earns at least $151,164 per year. The rule does not apply to agreements...