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Showing posts with label first. Show all posts
Showing posts with label first. Show all posts

Sunday, March 22, 2020

Family First Coronavirus Response Act


Congress passed and the President signed a coronavirus-related bill this week. While mainly addressing employment benefits, it also includes payroll-tax-related provisions to mitigate the effect of the benefit expansion on employers.

Following is a recap of the Act. It is intended as an introduction and quick reference only. Please review the Act itself for detailed questions.


The Family First Corona Virus Response Act has two key employment-benefit components. Employers are to be reimbursed for the benefit expansion via a tax credit mechanism.

A. The Emergency Paid Sick Leave Act

1.  Private employers employing less than 500 employees shall provide an employee with paid sick time if:

i. The employee is subject to quarantine or isolation due to COVID-19.
ii.  The employee has been advised by a health care provider to self-quarantine due to concerns related to COVID– 19.
iii.  The employee is experiencing symptoms of COVID– 19 and seeking a medical diagnosis.
iv. The employee is caring for an individual described in (i) or has been advised as described in (ii).
v. The employee is caring for a son or daughter of such employee if the school or place of care of the son or daughter has been closed, or the child care provider of such son or daughter is unavailable, due to COVID–19 precautions.
vi. The employee is experiencing any other substantially similar condition specified by the Secretary of Health and Human Services in consultation with the Secretary of the Treasury and the Secretary of Labor.

2. Full-time employees are entitled to 80 hours of paid sick time.

3. Part-time employees are entitled to the average number of hours worked on over a 2-week period.  For employees with varying schedules, the employer shall use the employee’s average number of hours per day over the 6-month period ending on the date the employee takes leave under the Act.

4. If an employee takes time off for self-care, the employee shall be compensated at the employee’s regular pay rate.

     i. Not to exceed $511 per day and $5,110 in the aggregate

5. If an employee takes time off for a sick family member or child, the employee shall be compensated at 2/3 of the employee’s regular pay rate.

     i. Not to exceed $200 per day and $2,000 in the aggregate

6. There are comparable provisions for the self-employed.

7. The Act expires on December 31, 2020.

8. The Labor Secretary is authorized to exempt employers with less than 50 employees if the requirements would imperil the viability of the business.

9. Employers who violate this Act shall be considered to have failed to pay minimum wages in violation of the FLSA and be subject to penalties related to such a violation.

B. Emergency Family and Medical Leave Expansion Act (E-FMLA)

1. The Act expands coverage of the Family and Medical Leave Act (“FMLA”) for employers with fewer than 500 employees. Employees are typically not eligible for FMLA leave until they have worked at least 12 months and 1250 hours. 

i.  For purposes of E-FMLA, this threshold is reduced to 30 days.

2.  E-FMLA applies if the employee leave is to care for a child under 18 if the school or place of care has been closed or child care provider is unavailable due to a public health emergency.

3. Protected leave can be for up to 12 weeks, but the first 10 days may consist of unpaid leave.

4.  The employee shall be compensated not less than two-thirds of the employee’s regular rate of pay.

i. Not to exceed $200 per day and $10,000 in the aggregate (for each employee)  

5. There are comparable provisions for the self-employed.

6. The Act expires on December 31, 2020.

7. The Labor Secretary is authorized to exempt employers with less than 50 employees if the requirements would imperil the viability of the business.

8. Employers who violate this Act shall be considered to have failed to pay minimum wages in violation of the FLSA and be subject to penalties related to such a violation.

C. Tax Credits

1. The compensation paid under the Act is not subject to the Old-Age, Survivors and Disability portion of FICA (that is, the 6.2%).

2. The compensation paid under the Act is subject to the Hospital Insurance portion of FICA (that is, the 1.45%).

3. On a quarterly basis, employers can claim a payroll tax credit for the sum of the following:

                a. Wages paid under this Act
b. Allocable “qualified health plan expenses” 

      ... think health insurance

c. The employer portion of Hospital Insurance (that is, the 1.45%)

4. Treasury is authorized to issue Regulations waiving penalties for not making payroll tax deposits in anticipation of the credit to be allowed.

5. The credit is refundable if it exceeds the amount the employer owes in payroll tax.

6. Employer taxable income is to be increased by the amount of payroll credit received.

           i. Otherwise there would be a double tax benefit.    




Friday, August 26, 2016

What Does It Take To Get Reasonable Cause Around Here?



My partner has a difficult IRS penalty issue.

He expects a client to be penalized for more than one year. This complicates how we handle the first year.


The IRS has reorganized its penalty review function to a system called the Reasonable Cause Assistant (RCA). There however is a problem: the system does not work well. The Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration (TIGTA) reported that RCA was inaccurate 89% of the time in 2012.

Step away from RCA and you still have the following:
 * It used to be that penalties were assessed as a means to encourage voluntary compliance. Many tax pros feel that is no longer the case, and penalties are being used as a means to raise revenue.  An example is the penalty assessed for late filing of a partnership return: $195 per month per partner. Take a 10-person partnership, file a week late and face a $1,950 penalty. There is little consideration for the size of the partnership, its total assets or revenues - or the fact that partnerships do not pay federal taxes.            
* Penalties are assessed even when taxpayers are trying to do the right thing. For example, enter into a reportable transaction, disclose it on your tax return but forget to file a copy with a second office and you will be assessed a penalty. Fail to disclose the transaction at all and you will be subject to the same penalty.
 * The IRS is automatically asserting penalties. For example, for fiscal year 2015, the IRS assessed over 40 million penalties on individuals and businesses. To put that in context, there were approximately 243 million returns filed for the period.
* Many penalties can be waived if the taxpayer can show "reasonable cause," but many tax professionals believe the IRS has so narrowed the definition as to be almost unreachable, unless you are willing to die. To aggravate the matter, the IRS has also instructed its personnel to substitute "first time abatement" (FTA) for reasonable cause as a matter of policy. While the IRS argues that FTA is easier to review and administer than reasonable cause, there exists a high degree of skepticism. Why would a taxpayer automatically burn a "get out of penalty-jail free" card if the taxpayer otherwise has reasonable cause? Wouldn't a taxpayer want to keep that card available just in case?
My partner - by the way - has that last situation: burning his FTA chip without a reasonable-cause backup for the second year. Ironically, he may have reasonable cause for the first year, but that sequence does not follow IRS policy. I anticipate going to Appeals to obtain reasonable cause and preserve the FTA for the second year.

Let's talk about the Carolyn Rogers (Rogers v Commissioner) case.

Carolyn lived in New York. In 2006 she had a small business (Talk of the Town Singles) which she operated from her cooperative. In 2006 there was a fire which rendered the place uninhabitable.

She moved. In 2007 there was another fire, one she appears to have caused herself. The local newspaper called her out, and she was thereafter harassed by people in her neighborhood.

She moved to the YWCA until 2010. She did not have a pleasant time there, and in 2009 she fell off a subway platform and fractured her skull on the rails. She was in the hospital for days, and she continued to suffer from dizzy spells thereafter.

Prior to this period, she had a record of filing timely returns. She also made significant efforts to correctly prepare her tax returns, consulting books and references and more than once contacting the IRS. She did not use a paid preparer.

The IRS penalized her for not filing a 2009 return.

She explained that the insurance company settled the second fire in 2009, and she lost a bundle. According to her research, the casualty loss would wipe out her income, and she was therefore below the filing threshold. She did not need to file.

The IRS then trotted technical guidance on a casualty loss. While the layperson might think that the loss would be deferred until the insurance is settled, the tax Code uses a different test:
* If an insurance claim is not paid in the year of casualty AND there is a reasonable prospect of recovery, then the loss is deferred until one can determine the amount of recovery.
* If there is no hope for insurance - or the prospect of recovery is unreasonable - then the loss is deductible in the year of the casualty.
 The IRS said that she came under the second rule. She knew that insurance would not cover the full loss from the 2007 fire. The loss was therefore deductible in 2007.
COMMENT: There is enough "what if" to this rule that even a tax professional could blow it.
The IRS wanted penalties for not filing that 2009 return.  

The Tax Court reviewed her filing history and her chaotic life. It noted:
Petitioner's error (regarding the proper year of deduction of the portion of a casualty loss for which there is no reasonable prospect of recovery from insurance) is considerably different from the errors made by a taxpayer whose failure to file, late filing, or late payment is chronic. Erroneously deducting a loss in a year later than the correct year is not usually considered to be a blatant tax avoidance technique ..."
Ouch. The Court did not appreciate the IRS wasting its time.
Taking into account all of the facts and circumstances, we conclude that petitioner exercised ordinary business care and prudence under the difficult circumstances in which she was living at the time leading up to the due date of her 2009 return...."
The Court found reasonable cause. She owed the tax, but she did not owe the penalties.

The IRS should have found reasonable cause too. It is troubling that it didn't.

Friday, January 4, 2013

IRS Penalties and First Time Abatement



I drafted a letter this past Monday. Later in the day I saw a report from the Treasury Inspector General of Tax Administration (TIGTA) on the same topic. Serendipity.

We have a newer client who set-up an S corporation in 2011. That’s fine, except that he had not spoken with an accountant and did not meet us until April, when his individual tax return was due. This meant that his S corporation return was already late, as corporate returns are due a month earlier than individual returns.

Sure enough, he received a letter from the IRS asking for $195 – because the S corporation return was a month late.

So I drafted a letter that included the following magic words:

The taxpayer requests first-time abatement under IRM 20.1.1.3.6.1. Tax year 2011 was the taxpayer’s initial year of existence.”

The “IRM” is the Internal Revenue Manual.

The idea behind the first-time abatement (FTA) is “get out of jail free.” You haven’t had problems with the IRS before, and the IRS spots you a mulligan.



IRS penalties normally do not work this way. One usually has to provide “reasonable cause”for why one failed to file, pay or whatever. Penalties can add up. There are two common ones:

(1) The failure-to-file (FTF) penalty is usually 5 percent of the unpaid taxes for each month or part of a month that a tax return is late, not to exceed 25 percent. If you file the tax return more than 60 days late, figure the minimum FTF penalty to be the smaller of $135 or 100 percent of tax due.

(2) If you file but do not pay in full, then the failure-to-pay (FTP) is usually one-half of one percent each month or part of a month that the taxes remain unpaid. This penalty can be as much as 25 percent of the unpaid taxes.     

The IRS can abate both penalties if one shows reasonable cause. A top-of-the-line reasonable cause is to get hit by a bus and be in the hospital. As you can guess, the IRS does elevate the bar a bit for reasonable cause. “I was busy” is almost a guaranteed loser.

Let’s circle back to the FTA. You do not need to show reasonable cause; all you have to do is ask for it. And with that we have the following from the TIGTA report:

“Penalty waivers should not be granted only to taxpayers or preparers with knowledge of IRS processes,” said TIGTA Inspector General J. Russell George.

TIGTA estimated that for 2010, approximately 250,000 taxpayers with FTF penalties and 1.2 million taxpayers with FTP penalties qualified for FTA but not receive abatement. The reason? The taxpayers did not to ask for it. TIGTA estimated the unabated penalties at more than $181 million.

TIGTA is requesting that the IRS review its procedures for penalty assessment, especially with an eye toward first-time abatement. For example, perhaps the IRS could send a notice but immediately apply the FTA. It would inform the taxpayer of the penalty and abatement, thereby saving on IRS manpower and reducing the number of times folks like me have to write an FTA letter. Sounds like a winner.

Until then, remember that first-time abatement is available. Do not be one of the $181 million.