Congressional Family Business Caucus Meets for Third Time with Family Businesses, Industry Leaders on Capitol Hill

Family Enterprise USA:

The Congressional Family Business Caucus met for the third time with multi-generational family businesses leaders on Capitol Hill with the goal of understanding the critical challenges facing America’s largest private employer, Family Businesses.


The bi-partisan Congressional Family Business Caucus met in the U.S. Capitol Building
with a focus on getting critical family business message points raised among legislators. The
meeting featured caucus co-chair Rep. Brad Schneider (D-Ill.), as well as new caucus members
Reps. Nick Langworthy (R-NY), Brad Sherman (D-CA), and Glenn Thompson (R-Pa.). The Caucus
leaders met with executives of many large family-owned businesses and family centers.
The overall purpose of the caucus is to educate legislative leadership on America’s
largest private employer, family business, and the importance of keeping that sector healthy.
The meeting was started with comments by co-chair Rep. Schneider, a member of the
tax-writing Ways and Means panel, who emphasized for stakeholders the importance of
engaging in talks with lawmakers. The group then heard from Reps. Langworthy and Sherman, who engaged in a bipartisan conversation on impact of taxes and regulations, and access to capital.


Rep. Glenn Thompson, chairman of the House Agriculture Committee, detailed
challenges his father’s family hunting and fishing equipment business faced and how family
businesses are the “backbone of the U.S. economy.”


The group also heard from Mimi Bair, legislative director for caucus co-chair Rep. Jodey
Arrington (R-TX), who serves on the House Budget Committee. She noted Arrington was the
lead sponsor on legislation to reduce the rate of estate, gift, and generation skipping tax to 20
percent.


The two other co-chairs of the caucus are Henry Cuellar (D-TX) and Rep. Claudia
Tenney’s (R-NY).


Luntz and Messaging
The meeting was hosted by Family Enterprise USA’s president, Pat Soldano, and the
group was led through discussion points on messaging by well-known communications
strategist and pollster, Dr. Frank Luntz.


Luntz urged the family-owned companies in attendance to focus on key messages when
speaking with lawmakers. He also coached attendees on communication techniques meant to
better deliver personal, fact-based issues to Congress.


“Legislators need to know the personal stories of family business,” Luntz said. “They
need to know the consequences of being punished for being a family business,” he said. “Family
business leaders need to be able to communicate their challenges in fifteen seconds. That’s all
you have here.”


During the Sept. 20 event, the federal lawmakers and caucus attendees heard from a
variety of multi-generational family business executives and family business experts tell their
stories, and advocate on their behalf regarding issues on the economy, taxes, and litigation.
Sponsors of the event included trucking companies CRST International Holdings and
A.Duie Pyle, as well as Hydraflow, Nielsen-Massey, and The High Center.


“Understanding the challenges, the generational challenges that confront the family
enterprise is crucial,” Rep. Schneider told attendees. “This is how we learn what we need to
know to make the decisions we make,” he added.


America’s family-owned trucking companies were represented John Smith (Cornell MBA ’74), chairman,
CRST International, who warned the caucus that the nation’s current economic landscape raises
the potential for sector wide layoffs.


“Short-term worry: huge trucking recession,” Smith said at the Capitol Hill forum. “It’s
hurting. We put off capital purchases.”


At the meeting, Peter Latta, chairman and CEO, of Pennsylvania-based trucking company
A. Duie Pyle, also emphasized a need for reforming aspects of the civil justice system around the
country. For the trucking businesses, tort reform is at the top the list of critical issues.
“We both have a target — a bull’s-eye — on our back,” Latta said of he and Smith. “But
we didn’t wear it today. Every other day of the year it’s on. We need to get some meaningful
tort reform in this country by eliminating contingency fees; losers pay winners for the costs.”
Family Enterprise USA and American Trucking Associations recently formed a strategic
partnership to advocate on behalf of family-owned businesses.


Other family business executives at the event were Mike Mitchell, Executive Director,
The High Center for Family Business at Elizabethtown (Penn.) College; one of the largest family
business centers in the US, and Cindy Ayloush, CEO and Chairman of Hydraflow, Fullerton, Calif.
Hydraflow is a manufacturer of designed aerospace fluid transfer components
used in the galleys, lavatories, oxygen systems, and fuel lines of both commercial and military aircraft.


Attendees also included Matt Nielsen, Vice President of Strategic Initiatives,
Nielsen-Massey Vanillas, and Managing Director Nielsen Real Estate BV and Nielsen-Massey
Vanillas Int’l. LLC based in Waukegan, Ill, and Alysha Calderon, President and COO, ISYS
Solutions, Inc., and Career Smart, both multi-generational family-owned businesses.


“Our goals are to educate our legislators on the size and power of all family-owned
businesses, including many family-owned trucking companies,” said Pat Soldano, President,
Family Enterprise USA and Policy and Taxation Group. “We need to let them know of damaging
tax and economic policies affecting their businesses. How we communicate those messages
effectively is a challenge and will be a focus for next year,” she said.


Family businesses are the largest private employers in the country, accounting for 83.3
million jobs, or 59 percent of the country’s private workforce, research shows.
“Family business is big business,” she said. “This caucus is helping get the word out
about the importance of family businesses to job growth and the health of our country.”
The first caucus meeting, held in February, focused on introducing the new caucus and
educating Congress on the importance of family businesses to the U.S. economy, which
contributes $7.7 trillion annually to the U.S. gross domestic product, according to research.
Other caucus attendees included many family business owners and family business
center and office executives.


The next Congressional Family Business Caucus meeting is scheduled for early the first
quarter of 2024.

To learn more about the Congressional Family Business Caucus contact:
Pat Soldano
pmsoldano@family-enterpriseusa.com
714-357-3140
http://www.familyenterpriseusa.com

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