Archive for the ‘General Business’ Category

New NLRB Poster Requirement May Be Coming

Tuesday, December 21st, 2010

The National Labor Rela­tions Board (NLRB) announced that most pri­vate employ­ers may soon have to dis­play a poster in their work places that informs employ­ees of their right to form and/or join a union.  At the moment it is a pro­posed rul­ing, which is under­go­ing a 60-day com­ment period. 

IF the pro­posed rul­ing goes into effect after the com­ment period, fail­ure to dis­play the poster would be treated as an “unfair labor prac­tice.”  In gen­eral, it would be treated as evi­dence of unfair labor prac­tices if a case is ini­ti­ated against an employer.  It does not gen­er­ate enforce­ment action on its own.  The poster would be avail­able or it could be down­loaded for free from the NLRB. If a sig­nif­i­cant num­ber of employ­ees do not speak Eng­lish the employer would be required to dis­play a poster in their lan­guage. If an employer nor­mally elec­tron­i­cally con­veys posters, and elec­tronic ver­sion would be required in addi­tion to the phys­i­cal one in the workplace. 

The National Labor Rela­tions Act applies to most pri­vate employ­ers as the thresh­hold num­ber of employ­ees is 1.  The Act does not apply to work­ers who are cov­ered by the Rail­way Labor Act, agri­cul­tural employ­ees, domes­tic employ­ees, super­vi­sors, fed­eral, state or local gov­ern­ment work­ers, inde­pen­dent con­trac­tors and some close rel­a­tives of indi­vid­ual employers.

If you would like to read more about poster require­ments, espe­cially as they relate to Ari­zona employ­ers, please check out http://artandbusinessconsulting.com/arizona-employer-requirements.htm#AZ_Employer_Information. The infor­ma­tion pre­sented on this page is not all inclu­sive, nor does it pro­vide, nor is it intended to pro­vide com­plete or full descrip­tion, dis­cus­sion, or analy­sis of any law, topic, or issue.  ABC strongly advises busi­nesses to com­ply with all employ­ment laws that they are sub­ject to, and con­sult with an employ­ment lawyer or other employ­ment law spe­cial­ist when nec­es­sary — ABC is not engage to prac­tice law, nor is ABC an HR Specialist. 

As always, small busi­ness ser­vices and tax­a­tion are our busi­ness.  If you need help Please give Art & Busi­ness Con­sult­ing a call.  We would love to engage you as a client. 

The usual dis­claimers: Although ABC has made every effort to insure the accu­racy of Taxes, Tips and Tools, mis­in­for­ma­tion, dis­in­for­ma­tion, changes, mis­takes, typos and hack­ers hap­pen, there­fore Art & Busi­ness Con­sult­ing LLC takes no respon­si­bil­ity for any action taken or results based on the infor­ma­tion sup­plied here in. The con­tent of this blog gen­er­ally applies to busi­ness and indi­vid­ual tax­a­tion in the United States of Amer­ica.  Inter­nal Rev­enue Ser­vice Cir­cu­lar 230 Dis­clo­sure:  As pro­vided for in Trea­sury reg­u­la­tions, advice (if any) relat­ing to fed­eral taxes that is con­tained in this com­mu­ni­ca­tion (includ­ing attach­ments) is not intended or writ­ten to be used, and can­not be used for the pur­pose of (1) avoid­ing penal­ties under the Inter­nal Rev­enue Code or (2) pro­mot­ing, mar­ket­ing or rec­om­mend­ing to another party any plan or arrange­ment address herein.  Art & Busi­ness Con­sult­ing LLC cur­rently does not have a cer­ti­fied pub­lic accoun­tant, human resource spe­cial­ist, cer­ti­fied finan­cial plan­ner or an attor­ney on staff; this infor­ma­tion is purely for edu­ca­tional pur­poses and not to be con­strued as legal or finan­cial advice. Art & Busi­ness Con­sult­ing LLC and its employ­ees, mem­bers and asso­ciates are not engage to prac­tice law; you always should dis­cuss legal mat­ters with your attor­ney before talk­ing to anyone else.

Small Business Jobs Act-Misnomer?

Thursday, October 7th, 2010

Con­gress finally did some­thing, only it wasn’t all of what we all have been wait­ing on.  There still is no estate tax fix, no AMT patch, no rein­state­ment of Bush tax cuts, no deci­sion on cap­i­tal gains taxes and other tax breaks such as teacher’s sup­plies, col­lege tuition etc. Look for these issues to be addressed one way or the other in the post-election lame duck session.

Any­way, on Sep­tem­ber 27, the Small Busi­ness Jobs Act was signed into law by Pres­i­dent Obama.  It is sup­posed to pro­vide $12 bil­lion in tax breaks for small businesses-but the “small” busi­nesses that will ben­e­fit from these tax breaks are prob­a­bly NOT con­sid­ered “small” busi­ness by your aver­age Mom & Pop operation. 

What are the pro­vi­sions (and off­sets) of this act?

  • An increase in the deduc­tion for startup costs from $5,000 to $10,000 & the startup expense maximum, before dol­lar for dol­lar decrease in the deduc­tion begins, is bumped from $50,000 to $60,000.  Need­less to say this is not of any ben­e­fit to busi­nesses that were in exis­tance at the begin­ning of 2010.
  • The write off of up to $500,000 in new equip­ment pur­chased in 2010, and the limit before dol­lar for dol­lar reduc­tion occurs raised to $2 mil­lion. Spe­cial 50% Bonus depre­ci­a­tion is also extended for 2010. Cer­tain real prop­erty is eli­gi­ble for expens­ing as well. For larger small busi­nesses these exten­sions of expens­ing ben­e­fits may be useful.  If a busi­ness is truly “small,” or a service-based busi­ness, it is not heav­ily invested in equip­ment; the increase in Sec­tion 179 and extend­ing 50% Bonus depre­ci­a­tion for another year isn’t too helpful.
  • A 5-year car­ry­back period for unused Gen­eral Busi­ness Credits.  Of course the ben­e­fit requires a busi­ness to have unused Gen­eral Busi­ness Cred­its and have prof­itable years to carry them back to.  An eli­gi­ble small busi­ness for pur­poses of this tax break is one with aver­age gross receipts of less than $50 mil­lion dol­lars over the last three years. 
  • In 2010 the Gen­eral Busi­ness Credit can off­set AMT.
  • The hold­ing period for Built-In-Gains tax for a C-corporations that con­verted to S-corporation is reduced from 10 years if the 7th year of the hold­ing period pre­cedes 2009 or 2010, and or the 5th year of the hold­ing period precedes 2011. 
  • Reduc­tion of net earn­ings from self-employment tax for insur­ance pre­mi­ums paid by the self-employed. It is a good tax break.  Of course the small busi­ness owner must be pay­ing health insur­ance pre­mi­ums to take advantage.
  • The act does have sev­eral ways to increase money avail­able to bor­row­ers, includ­ing a $30 bil­lion fund to increase lend­ing by com­mu­nity banks, and reduced fees for cer­tain SBA loans, but it has not changed lend­ing stan­dards, which have tight­ened up con­sid­er­ably since the reces­sion began. Mom & Pop’s abil­ity to bor­row tends to be pred­i­cated on their indi­vid­ual FICO scores.  Also lend­ing tends to be pred­i­cated on growth-Mom & Pop would have to pro­duce a busi­ness plan, show­ing how they intend to use the money to grow (and pro­vide jobs perhaps), but growth is not some­thing hap­pen­ing in many small busi­nesses right now.  Lenders could change their stan­dards, but they don’t have to…  How­ever a small busi­ness may be able to ben­e­fit from these loans if they can move for­ward with a coher­ent SBA loan application. 
  • For years 23% of fed­eral con­tracts have been sup­posed to go to small busi­ness.  The act is sup­posed to reduce the red tape for get­ting a fed­eral con­tract and peri­od­i­cally check on the size of fed­eral con­trac­tors to make sure they still qual­ify as a small business. 
  • Investors have a very lim­ited win­dow of oppor­tu­nity to invest in small busi­nesses and get a 100% tax break from cap­i­tal gains taxes down the road.  How­ever this tax break is for busi­nesses orga­nized as C-Corporations only-those that issue Qual­i­fied Small Busi­ness Stock.  For S-Corporations, LLCs, part­ner­ships and sole pro­pri­etor­ships there is no sim­i­lar incen­tive for investors. 
  • Busi­nesses get relief from the Tax Code require­ment that they account for how much of their employ­ees’ company-issued cell phone use is for per­sonal calls in order to deduct the full cost of the phones. Removing cell phones from listed prop­erty is a wel­come change.
  • Lim­i­ta­tion of penalty for fail­ure to dis­close cer­tain reportable trans­ac­tions on a return; the penalty is lim­ited to 75% of the reduc­tion in tax from the transaction-there are min­i­mum and max­i­mum penal­ties as well.  The change in penal­ties is retroac­tive to 2007. 
  • The IRS can levy a fed­eral con­trac­tor before a CDP hearing, although tax­pay­ers would still have a rea­son­able time for a CDP hear­ing after the levy is issued.
  • Start­ing in 2011, par­tic­i­pants in 457 plans are allowed to treat elec­tive defer­rals as Roth IRA contributions
  • Rollovers from elec­tive defer­ral plans 403(b), 401(k) and 457(b) are allowed to be treated as rollovers into Roth IRAs.
  • There is also a pro­vi­sion for more favor­able treat­ment of non­qual­i­fied annu­ity contracts
  • Guar­an­tee Fees paid by US tax­pay­ers to for­eign per­sons will be sub­ject to with­hold­ing tax.
  • Any fuel with an acid num­ber greater than 25 (crude tall oil, a waste pro­duc­tion from paper man­u­fac­tur­ing) is excluded from the def­i­n­i­tion of “cel­lu­losic bio­fuel” for pur­poses of the tax credit for alco­hol used as fuel.
  • Start­ing in 2011 there is an increase in the penalty for fail­ure to report pay­ments via 1099s from $50 to $250 and busi­nesses receiv­ing rental income are required to report pay­ments of more than $600 on Forms 1099-MISC and Form 1096 (with some excep­tions such as mil­i­tary per­son­nel tem­porar­ily rent­ing out their prin­ci­pal res­i­dences etc.). This reg­u­la­tion is on top of the  expanded 1099-MISC infor­ma­tion report­ing that was buried in the health care legislation. 

Some of these pro­vi­sions are not pro-Mom & Pop moves and do not “help Main Street busi­nesses com­pete with large cor­po­ra­tions.”  Whereas a moderate-sized busi­ness prob­a­bly has resources to han­dle reg­u­la­tory red tape — the aver­age Mom & Pop does not; respond­ing to red tape takes valu­able time and money away from their busi­ness, resources they can ill afford in the cur­rent eco­nomic climate. It is very hard for Mom & Pop to respond on the fly to con­tin­u­ously chang­ing rules for employ­ees, envi­ro­men­tal reg­u­la­tions and tax laws.

Small busi­ness cre­ates most jobs, but right now there is no con­sumer demand. Few small busi­nesses are in a posi­tion to take advan­tage of the pro-growth pro­vi­sions in the Small Busi­ness Jobs Act. It is hard to see how this act actu­ally will cre­ate jobs. For the aver­age Mom & Pop there aren’t many pro­vi­sions that ben­e­fit them. 

Of course we can always hope the Small Busi­ness Jobs Act accom­plishes it goals…

As always, small busi­ness ser­vices and tax­a­tion are our busi­ness.  If you need help Please give Art & Busi­ness Con­sult­ing a call.  We would love to engage you as a client. 

The usual dis­claimers: Although ABC has made every effort to insure the accu­racy of Taxes, Tips and Tools, mis­in­for­ma­tion, dis­in­for­ma­tion, changes, mis­takes, typos and hack­ers hap­pen, there­fore Art & Busi­ness Con­sult­ing LLC takes no respon­si­bil­ity for any action taken or results based on the infor­ma­tion sup­plied here in. The con­tent of this blog gen­er­ally applies to busi­ness and indi­vid­ual tax­a­tion in the United States of Amer­ica.  Inter­nal Rev­enue Ser­vice Cir­cu­lar 230 Dis­clo­sure:  As pro­vided for in Trea­sury reg­u­la­tions, advice (if any) relat­ing to fed­eral taxes that is con­tained in this com­mu­ni­ca­tion (includ­ing attach­ments) is not intended or writ­ten to be used, and can­not be used for the pur­pose of (1) avoid­ing penal­ties under the Inter­nal Rev­enue Code or (2) pro­mot­ing, mar­ket­ing or rec­om­mend­ing to another party any plan or arrange­ment address herein.  Art & Busi­ness Con­sult­ing LLC cur­rently does not have a cer­ti­fied pub­lic accoun­tant, human resource spe­cial­ist, cer­ti­fied finan­cial plan­ner or an attor­ney on staff; this infor­ma­tion is purely for edu­ca­tional pur­poses and not to be con­strued as legal or finan­cial advice. Art & Busi­ness Con­sult­ing LLC and its employ­ees, mem­bers and asso­ciates are not engage to prac­tice law; you always should dis­cuss legal mat­ters with your attor­ney before talk­ing to any­one else.

Make Sure Withholding Orders Come From Official Enforcement Agency

Tuesday, August 24th, 2010

Some scams rely on peo­ple not check offi­cial look­ing correspondence.

You are prob­a­bly famil­iar with phish­ing scams where one receives an email from Pay­pal, eBay, Bank, Credit Union, even the IRS, com­plete with logos and links say­ing your account is sus­pended or some­thing sim­i­lar until you com­plete an account review-clicking on the link in the email takes you to a scam­mer site where they ask you for your per­sonal infor­ma­tion to rip you off. What you may not be aware of is sim­i­lar scams occur by snail mail as well. Mail Fraud has been around a lot longer than the internet.

Recently a group call­ing them­selves Child Sup­port Ser­vices of Atlanta, Inc. (CSS) set up a scam in Geor­gia.  Accord­ing to the United States Postal Ser­vice (USPS)  in a com­plaint filed with the court in USPS v. CSS No. 7–09-/cv-11(WLS) (M.D Ga 9–16-09),

  • CSS claimed affil­i­a­tion with the Geor­gia state agency.
  • CSS sent doc­u­ments to non­cus­to­dial par­ents that looked like they were from the Geor­gia Court.
  • CSS forged cor­re­spon­dence to state child sup­port col­lec­tion entities.
  • CSS ter­mi­nated cus­to­dial and non­cus­to­dial par­ents affil­i­a­tion with the Geor­gia Office of Child Sup­port Services.
  • CSS threat­ened non­cus­to­dial par­ents with wage orders, arrest, license sus­pen­sion and wage garnishment.

The bold­ness of this scam is breath­tak­ing.  USPS stopped all mail to CSS, mark­ing it Return to Sender Due to Addresee’s Vio­la­tion of Postal False Rep­re­sen­ta­tion Law; any mail with­out a return address was destroyed.

Need­less to say not only were indi­vid­u­als caught up in this mail fraud, so were employ­ers who may have received gar­nish­ment orders to col­lect child sup­port from employ­ees who were non cus­to­dial par­ents; they have to pay the child sup­port gar­nished from employ­ees wages again.

Bot­tom Line:  Whether you are an indi­vid­ual or an employer check out the bone fides of any new offi­cial look­ing cor­re­spon­dence to make sure it really is a valid order.

As always, small busi­ness ser­vices and tax­a­tion are our busi­ness.  If you need help Please give Art & Busi­ness Con­sult­ing a call.  We would love to engage you as a client.

The usual dis­claimers: Although ABC has made every effort to insure the accu­racy of Taxes, Tips and Tools, mis­in­for­ma­tion, dis­in­for­ma­tion, changes, mis­takes, typos and hack­ers hap­pen, there­fore Art & Busi­ness Con­sult­ing LLC takes no respon­si­bil­ity for any action taken or results based on the infor­ma­tion sup­plied here in. The con­tent of this blog gen­er­ally applies to busi­ness and indi­vid­ual tax­a­tion in the United States of Amer­ica.  Inter­nal Rev­enue Ser­vice Cir­cu­lar 230 Dis­clo­sure:  As pro­vided for in Trea­sury reg­u­la­tions, advice (if any) relat­ing to fed­eral taxes that is con­tained in this com­mu­ni­ca­tion (includ­ing attach­ments) is not intended or writ­ten to be used, and can­not be used for the pur­pose of (1) avoid­ing penal­ties under the Inter­nal Rev­enue Code or (2) pro­mot­ing, mar­ket­ing or rec­om­mend­ing to another party any plan or arrange­ment address herein.  Art & Busi­ness Con­sult­ing LLC cur­rently does not have a cer­ti­fied pub­lic accoun­tant, human resource spe­cial­ist, cer­ti­fied finan­cial plan­ner or an attor­ney on staff; this infor­ma­tion is purely for edu­ca­tional pur­poses and not to be con­strued as legal or finan­cial advice. Art & Busi­ness Con­sult­ing LLC and its employ­ees, mem­bers and asso­ciates are not engage to prac­tice law; you always should dis­cuss legal mat­ters with your attor­ney before talk­ing to any­one else.

Hiring Your Spouse Without Running Afoul The IRS.

Tuesday, August 17th, 2010

On the advice of a CPA a farmer hired his wife who had worked on the fam­ily farm for years with­out pay.  All the farm and per­sonal expenses were paid from the same joint check­ing account (this is called co-mingling of funds).  The ratio­nal for sud­denly hir­ing his wife and pay­ing her a mod­est salary was so they could set up a plan to reim­burse the her as an employee for med­ical expenses.  The wife opened an account to receive her pay and to pay for the med­ical expenses.  The IRS denied the med­ical reim­burse­ments on the Sched­ule C and the tax court agreed (Shel­lito V Com­mis­sioner TC Memo 2010–41).

Why? The Eco­nomic Sub­stance Doc­trine.  The wife had work for years with no pay and the only rea­son to make the change was to receive a tax ben­e­fit.  The change in the farmer’s busi­ness prac­tice had no eco­nomic sub­stance other than the tax ben­e­fit so the ben­e­fit was denied.

Bot­tom Line: When related par­ties are involved employ­ers should fol­low all legal for­mal­i­ties and have an eco­nomic sub­stance behind them.  The farmer did not have a rea­son for sud­denly pay­ing for work that was pre­vi­ously unpaid, and did not estab­lish that the pay was rea­son­able for the work done.  Also since the farm and per­sonal expenses were paid from an account co-owned by the farmer’s wife she was essen­tially reim­burs­ing herself.

See Med­ical Insur­ance Plans for Small/Micro Busi­ness Own­ers about one way to do it properly.

See Tips to Avoid Get­ting Audited, and How to Make Your Audi­tor Drool for more infor­ma­tion about not co-mingling your funds and other ways to steer clear of an IRS audit.

As always, small busi­ness ser­vices and tax­a­tion are our busi­ness.  If you need help Please give Art & Busi­ness Con­sult­ing a call.  We would love to engage you as a client.

The usual dis­claimers: Although ABC has made every effort to insure the accu­racy of Taxes, Tips and Tools, mis­in­for­ma­tion, dis­in­for­ma­tion, changes, mis­takes, typos and hack­ers hap­pen, there­fore Art & Busi­ness Con­sult­ing LLC takes no respon­si­bil­ity for any action taken or results based on the infor­ma­tion sup­plied here in. The con­tent of this blog gen­er­ally applies to busi­ness and indi­vid­ual tax­a­tion in the United States of Amer­ica.  Inter­nal Rev­enue Ser­vice Cir­cu­lar 230 Dis­clo­sure:  As pro­vided for in Trea­sury reg­u­la­tions, advice (if any) relat­ing to fed­eral taxes that is con­tained in this com­mu­ni­ca­tion (includ­ing attach­ments) is not intended or writ­ten to be used, and can­not be used for the pur­pose of (1) avoid­ing penal­ties under the Inter­nal Rev­enue Code or (2) pro­mot­ing, mar­ket­ing or rec­om­mend­ing to another party any plan or arrange­ment address herein.  Art & Busi­ness Con­sult­ing LLC cur­rently does not have a cer­ti­fied pub­lic accoun­tant, human resource spe­cial­ist, finan­cial plan adviser, or an attor­ney on staff; this infor­ma­tion is purely for edu­ca­tional pur­poses and not to be con­strued as legal or finan­cial advice. Art & Busi­ness Con­sult­ing LLC and its employ­ees, mem­bers and asso­ciates are not engage to prac­tice law; you always should dis­cuss legal mat­ters with your attor­ney before talk­ing to any­one else.

New Backup Withholding Rules For TIN-Name Mismatch

Saturday, July 24th, 2010

When you are noti­fied by the IRS that a payee pro­vided an incor­rect name and tax­payer iden­ti­fi­ca­tion num­ber (TIN) com­bi­na­tion, you are to start backup with­hold­ing (28%) and pass along any “B Notices” you receive.  

 The inter­rim pro­ce­dures require the payee to val­i­date a Social Secu­rity num­ber (SSN) by con­tact­ing the local Social Secu­rity Admin­is­tra­tion (SSA) office request­ing an SSN print­out, which they must give you a copy of.  Once you receive the print­out you can stop backup withholding. 

There are 2 “B Notices”. These are notices you receive with your mis­match noti­fi­ca­tion that you are to for­ward to the payee with the TIN-Name mis­match.   The first B-Notice you receive should be given to the payee with a Form W9, Request for Tax­payer Iden­ti­fi­ca­tion Num­ber and Cer­tifi­cate

NOTE: Fol­low­ing this link takes you do a pdf doc­u­ment at the IRS.gov web­site.  Pdfs can be viewed and printed using Adobe Acro­bat Reader, which can be down­loaded for free from Adobe.comArt and Busi­ness Con­sult­ing LLC (ABC LLC) and its own­ers, employ­ees and affli­ates are NOT affil­i­ated with IRS.gov or Adobe.com.  When you visit their sites you will be sub­ject to their poli­cies and ABC LLC does not know what thier poli­cies are. 

To con­tinue.  When you receive the first Notice of a TIN/Name mis­match from the IRS you should deliver the B Notice to the payee with a blank Form W-9 and begin backup with­hold­ing of 28%.  Pre­sum­ably if they return the W-9 with dif­fer­ent TIN/Name infor­ma­tion you would make the change and stop backup with­hold­ing.  If they don’t then even­tu­ally you will get the sec­ond B notice, but while you are wait­ing for it you would con­tinue backup with­hold­ing in the absence of any action by the payee. 

When you receive a sec­ond notice of TIN/Name mis­match you should deliver the sec­ond B notice to the payee (do NOT give them a w-9); the sec­ond notice tells the payee they must go to the IRS or SSA to get the proper Name-TIN com­bi­na­tion.  The payee must now cer­tify the TIN-Name Com­bi­na­tion with the SSN print­out.  In the past the SSA would send a form SSA-7028, but the Form is now obso­lete hence the inter­rim pro­ce­dure noted above. 

In gen­eral you should only receive 2 of these notices in a 3 year period per payee. 

As always, small busi­ness ser­vices and tax­a­tion are our busi­ness.  If you need help Please give Art & Busi­ness Con­sult­ing a call.  We would love to engage you as a client.

The usual dis­claimers: Although ABC has made every effort to insure the accu­racy of Taxes, Tips and Tools, mis­in­for­ma­tion, dis­in­for­ma­tion, changes, mis­takes, typos and hack­ers hap­pen, there­fore Art & Busi­ness Con­sult­ing LLC takes no respon­si­bil­ity for any action taken or results based on the infor­ma­tion sup­plied here in. The con­tent of this blog gen­er­ally applies to busi­ness and indi­vid­ual tax­a­tion in the United States of Amer­ica.  Inter­nal Rev­enue Ser­vice Cir­cu­lar 230 Dis­clo­sure:  As pro­vided for in Trea­sury reg­u­la­tions, advice (if any) relat­ing to fed­eral taxes that is con­tained in this com­mu­ni­ca­tion (includ­ing attach­ments) is not intended or writ­ten to be used, and can­not be used for the pur­pose of (1) avoid­ing penal­ties under the Inter­nal Rev­enue Code or (2) pro­mot­ing, mar­ket­ing or rec­om­mend­ing to another party any plan or arrange­ment address herein.  Art & Busi­ness Con­sult­ing LLC cur­rently does not have a cer­ti­fied pub­lic accoun­tant, human resource spe­cial­ist, finan­cial plan advi­sor or an attor­ney on staff; this infor­ma­tion is purely for edu­ca­tional pur­poses and not to be con­strued as legal or finan­cial advice. Art & Busi­ness Con­sult­ing LLC and its employ­ees, mem­bers and asso­ciates are not engage to prac­tice law; you always should dis­cuss legal mat­ters with your attor­ney before talk­ing to any­one else.