Winstead PC Releases Legal Blog
Winstead is one of the largest corporate law firms in Texas. Its advisors and lawyers serve as consultants to large and mid-market businesses, offering a core range of legal assistances vital to the firm’s success and operation. Renowned for its specialty from financial and real estate services to conglomerate and litigation practice, the firm provides practical information and responsive assistance. Winstead has branches in Washington, DC and Austin, Fort Worth, San Antonio, The Woodlands and Dallas, Texas.
Recently, Winstead PC launched its latest legal blog called Compensation Committee Corner (otherwise known as Comp Corner), which can be accessed at www.compensationcommitteecorner.com. Published by the firm’s compensation practice, the Comp Corner posts topics associated with compensation such as proxy disclosure, tax and security laws, compensation governance, director liability and institutional shareholder.
The topics that are featured on the blog site assist businesses in dealing with the progressively growing complex compensation environment, where developing laws and administrative rules can result to problems. Comp Corner is particularly appropriate for senior executives, in-house compensation professionals, in-house legal counsel, officers and boards of directors.
Anthony “Tony” J. Eppert is the current leading writer for the Compensation Committee Corner. His legal practice expertise covers executive compensation and employee benefit arrangements in Canada, China and the United States. He also specializes in accounting, securities, tax, and corporate governance issues.
Eppert is more than qualified for this position as he is also a member of the following organizations: the National Association of Stock Plan Professionals (NASPP), the National Institute of Pension Administrators (NIPA), the National Center for Employee Ownership (NCEO) and the Society for Human Resource Management. A Juris Doctorate graduate from the Michigan State University College of Law and an LLM from the New York University School of Law, he used to be a judicial clerk for the United States Court of Appeals under Hon. Richard F. Suhrheinrich.