Limited cooperative association


In business, and only in United States corporate law, a limited cooperative association is a type of for-profit cooperative which is chartered to allow for outside investment by non-owner members. LCAs combine cooperative principles with elements of partnership and limited liability company principles, and are recognized in several U.S. states. It is a form of multi-stakeholder cooperative.

Aspects

A key difference between most cooperatives and an LCA is the latter's recognition of two classes of members: patron members and investor members.
Another is the minority involvement of investor members in the decision-making process as well as in profits and loss. Under most statutes, investor members may participate in decision making, but patron members must remain the majority of the total voting power in the LCA, and the majority of the board of directors of the LCA must be elected by patron members. In addition, certain decisions require an affirmative vote by a majority of voting patron members in an LCA, such as amendments to articles or bylaws, dissolution, disposition of assets, conversion, or merger of the LCA.
Finally, while LCAs are typically taxed like other for-profit cooperatives under subchapter T of the Internal Revenue Code, an LCA may elect for subchapter K tax status, also known as partnership taxation, in which the LCA is not taxed at the federal level and instead passes income, losses and taxation through to the members. However, subchapter K may be more difficult due to limitations on unallocated reserves, and self-employment taxes.

Legislation by state

The LCA was first promoted under the Wyoming Processing Cooperative Law in 2001 to allow joint ownership by farmers and investors and aid the formation and development of farm producer-owned ventures. Similar legislation was passed in multiple states, with many states adopting the Uniform Limited Cooperative Association Act, which was drafted by the Uniform Law Commission in 2007.
StateDate passedDate in effectLegislation
ColoradoMay 23, 2011April 2, 2012
IowaMay 20, 2005January 1, 2006
KentuckyApril 23, 2012April 23, 2012
MarylandApril 22, 2025October 1, 2026
MinnesotaMay 25, 2003August 1, 2003
NebraskaMay 16, 2007January 1, 2008
OklahomaMarch 20, 2009March 20, 2009
TennesseeMarch 20, 2004January 1, 2005
UtahMarch 18, 2008March 18, 2008
VermontApril 20, 2011April 20, 2011
WashingtonApril 17, 2019April 28, 2019
Washington, D.C.February 27, 2011July 2, 2011
WisconsinMay 23, 2006June 5, 2006
WyomingMarch 1, 2001July 1, 2001

Limited worker cooperative association

The Illinois General Assembly passed a bill allowing for the creation of limited worker cooperative associations , which is a form of LCA which limits patron membership to employees. Similar legislation has been filed in other states.
StateDate passedDate in effectLegislation
IllinoisAugust 9, 2019January 1, 2020

Criticism

In the magazine Cooperative Grocer, writer Laddie Luschin cautioned against this approach as fundamentally against what coops stand for, even going so far as to label it a "trojan horse" that allows for "coop washing".