$2.3M in back wages recovered from restaurants

by Ted

NEW YORK - State labor officials said Wednesday they recovered a record $2.3 million in back wages for more than 800 workers at nine restaurants.  The restaurants violated numerous labor laws including those dealing with minimum wage and overtime. The recovery is the largest collection for a single wage-violation case in the state Labor Department’s history.

Are you in compliance? PayMaster Pro’s payroll program enforces all minimum wage rules and correctly calculates overtime for tipped employees even when they work multiple jobs.

AIG bonus checks may be taxed at up to 100%

by Ted

Complete Article.

If AIG execs won’t return their $450 million in bonuses, lawmakers threatened Tuesday to pass a special new law taxing the payouts at anywhere from 60% to 100%.

“To those of you getting these bonuses: be forewarned, you will not be getting to keep them.”

Schumer called it “Alice in Wonderland business practices” to give bonuses to executives at a firm that lost nearly $100 billion last year and had to be rescued with $170 billion in taxpayer money.

Currently The IRS takes 35% of bonuses over $1 million.

COBRA: Answers for Employers

by Ted

http://www.irs.gov/newsroom/article/0,,id=204708,00.html

Please see the article for full details…

Under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009, certain individuals who are eligible for COBRA continuation health coverage, or similar coverage under State law, may receive a subsidy for 65 percent of the premium. These individuals are required to pay only 35 percent of the premium. The employer may recover the subsidy provided to assistance-eligible individuals by taking the subsidy amount as a credit on its quarterly employment tax return. The employer may provide the subsidy — and take the credit on its employment tax return — only after it has received the 35 percent premium payment from the individual.

Q: What individuals are eligible for the COBRA subsidy?

A: An assistance-eligible individual can be any COBRA qualified beneficiary associated with the related covered employee, such as a dependent child of an employee, who is covered immediately prior to the qualifying event. The qualifying event for purposes of eligibility for the subsidy is involuntary termination of the covered employee’s employment that occurs during the period beginning Sept. 1, 2008, and ending Dec. 31, 2009. The individual must also be eligible for COBRA coverage, or similar state coverage, during this period.

Q: Can an employer decide only to claim the credit at the end of the quarter rather than reducing its tax deposits during the quarter?

A: Yes. The employer can decide either to offset its payroll tax deposits or claim the subsidy as an overpayment at the end of the quarter.

Q: Can an employer reduce its payroll deposits during the quarter by the amount of the COBRA subsidy it provides during the quarter without incurring a Failure to Deposit penalty?

A: The amount of the COBRA subsidy the employer provides during the quarter (based on the 35 percent premium payments received from assistance eligible individuals during the quarter) will be treated as having been deposited on the first day of the quarter and applied against the employer’s deposit requirements.

Q: Will Schedule B continue to reflect the total payroll tax liabilities for the quarter, or will the liabilities reported be reduced by the COBRA subsidy credits?

A: Schedule B is used to report an employer’s payroll tax liability for each payroll period, not the amount of the employer’s payroll tax deposits. Therefore, when the employer reduces a deposit by the amount of the COBRA subsidy, this has no affect on the liabilities the employer reports on Form 941, Schedule B (or the monthly totals in Part 2 of Form 941).  The employer should still reflect on Schedule B (or in Part 2, Form 941) the total liabilities for all wages reported on Form 941.

Q: It might be difficult to make the April 30, 2009 deadline for filing the new Form 941. Who should we contact if we want to request an extension of time to file?

A: No extensions are available for filing of employment tax returns.

10 helpful tips for restaurateurs

by Ted

Chicago Tribune’s Phil Vettel gathered 10 tips for restaurants to follow. Among them: Keep regulars happy; pay attention to basic service; and pay attention to feedback.

1. Assign not the job of the hostess to the unworthy.
2. Prepare for guests a pleasant table.
3. Honor thy regulars.
4. Work well the service fundamentals.
5. Hearken to thy feedback.
6. Rethink thy wine list.
7. Retainest thou thy trained employees.
8. Expand thy horizons beyond the dining room.
9. Make flexibility thy watchword.
10. Work today with an eye on tomorrow.

IRS Releases Information to Help Employers Claim COBRA Medical Coverage Credit on new 941

by Ted

IR-2009-15, Feb. 26, 2009

WASHINGTON — The Internal Revenue Service today released new detailed information that will help employers claim credit for the COBRA medical premiums they pay for their former employees.

The IRS unveiled new information on this Web site, IRS.gov, that includes an extensive set of questions and answers for employers. In addition, the Web site contains a revised version of the quarterly payroll tax return that employers will use to claim credit for the COBRA medical premiums they pay for their former employees.

Form 941, Employer’s Quarterly Federal Tax Return, will also be sent to about 2 million employers in mid-March. The form is used to claim the new COBRA premium assistance payments credit, beginning with the first quarter of 2009.

“This is the first step in our effort to provide employers with information on this important health benefit for people who have lost their jobs,” said IRS Commissioner Doug Shulman. “We will continue our work in the weeks ahead to help employers implement this crucial change for the nation’s unemployed.”

Under the new law, eligible former employees, enrolled in their employer’s health plan at the time they lost their jobs, are required to pay only 35 percent of the cost of COBRA coverage. Employers must treat the 35 percent payment by eligible former employees as full payment, but the employers are entitled to a credit for the other 65 percent of the COBRA cost on their payroll tax return.

Employers must maintain supporting documentation for the credit claimed. This includes:

  • Documentation of receipt of the employee’s 35 percent share of the premium.
  • In the case of insured plans: A copy of invoice or other supporting statement from the insurance carrier and proof of timely payment of the full premium to the insurance carrier.
  • Declaration of the former employee’s involuntary termination.

More information about COBRA payments and the new law is available on www.dol.gov.

2009 Stimulus Tax Tables available.

by Ted

On Feb 21 2009, the IRS has released new tax tables that implement the ‘Making Work Pay’ stimulus package.

Available for tax years 2009 and 2010, the credit is 6.2 percent of a taxpayer’s earned income with a maximum credit of $800 for a married couple filing a joint return and $400 for other taxpayers, but it is phased out for higher income taxpayers.

Many higher-income taxpayers will see little or no change in their take-home pay. That’s because the Making Work Pay credit is phased out for a married couple filing a joint return whose modified adjusted gross income (AGI) is between $150,000 and $190,000 and other taxpayers whose modified AGI is between $75,000 and $95,000.

Taxpayers will not get a separate, special check mailed to them from the IRS like last year’s economic stimulus payment.

The new tax tables are easily installed, directly from the PayMaster program by going to Utilities / Apply SQL Patches and selecting Internet/Check for SQL updates. The program should then download a file called 2009-stimulusupdate.sql. Select this file and apply to all active companies by checking them off. Of course if you have any questions or concerns feel free to call the support line.

The IRS asks that employers start using these new tables as soon as possible but not later than April 1.

Deadline set for tax cuts.

by Ted

CNNMoney - President tells U.S. Treasury to implement cuts for 95% of Americans; by April 1, workers will see less taxes withheld from paychecks.

The tax cuts are part of a $787 billion economic recovery plan passed by the Democratic-controlled Congress over Republican opposition. The aim is to put more money in the pockets of Americans and stimulate the economy by increasing consumer spending.

“I’m pleased to announce that this morning the Treasury Department began directing employers to reduce the amount of taxes withheld from paychecks, meaning that by April 1st, a typical family will begin taking home at least $65 more every month,” Obama said in his weekly radio address.

As soon as the IRS releases new tax tables, an update will be available for the PayMaster Program.

Stimulus coming up short for taxpayers.

by Ted

Stimulus: How it may affect your wallet

Making Work Pay Credit: The bill provides a $400 credit per worker and a $800 credit per dual-earner couple. The full credit would be paid to people making $75,000 or less ($150,000 per dual-earner couple). For most working individuals, the credit will be paid over time at roughly $15 per period, assuming 26 pay periods in a year. Estimated cost: $116 billion.”

Peanuts come off the menu

by Ted

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/02/11/dining/11peanuts.html

“The immediate response has to be, rip it off the menu,” said Johnny Iuzzini, pastry chef at Jean Georges, who checked the Food and Drug Administration’s Web site daily until the restaurant’s Bronx-based nut supplier, Bazzini, was completely cleared.

Hundreds of products containing peanut butter have been recalled, all of them involving the products of the Peanut Corporation of America. All the major supermarket brands of peanut butter have been cleared of any contamination.

Records show peanut plant president complained about delays caused by contamination reports.

WASHINGTON — As salmonella illness began spreading across the country in the fall, the owner of a Georgia peanut company that was causing the outbreak railed against the cost and delays that the contamination was causing his businesses, according to internal company documents obtained by Congress.

Stewart Parnell, president of the Peanut Corporation of America, also pressed federal regulators to allow him to continue using peanuts from the tainted plant and shipped products to customers with a homemade certificate that falsely attested to their purity

Exempt Employees need to fill out a New W4

by Ted

On Feb 16, 2009, employers are required to withhold Federal Income Tax from employee who claimed ‘Exempt’ status in 2008 but have yet to complete a new W4 for 2009.   Until a new W4 is provided the employer should withhold as single filing status with zero withholding allowances.

Note. You cannot claim exemption from withholding if (a) your income exceeds $950 and includes more than $300 of unearned income (for example, interest and dividends) and (b) another person can claim you as a dependent on their tax return.