DEA Considers Reclassification of Marijuana: A Potential Shift in Federal Tax Policy
In a move that could significantly alter the landscape of cannabis regulation in the United States, the Drug Enforcement Administration is set to hold a public hearing on the potential rescheduling of medical marijuana from a Schedule I to a Schedule III controlled substance. This development marks a pivotal moment in the ongoing debate surrounding medical marijuana’s legal status and its implications for the medical marijuana industry, law enforcement, and taxes.The proposed rescheduling of marijuana does not apply to recreational marijuana, only to medical marijuana. The Hearing: Date, Time, and Place The DEA has scheduled the public hearing for December …
No Taxes on Tips: What Tax Pros and Accountants Need to Know
Recent campaign proposals from both sides of the aisle have suggested eliminating taxes on tips. While this idea may sound appealing to constituents, the reality is more complex — especially for tax professionals advising service industry clients. Here’s what you need to know. (We’ll be discussing this topic even more in-depth in our two-part livestream special, Tax at the Ballot Box, taking place October 22nd and December 10th.) The Current Landscape for TIP TAXATION The service industry comprises approximately 4 million tipped workers, representing 2.5% of the U.S. workforce, according to Yale University’s Budget Lab. These workers tend to be younger …
IRS Issues Relief for Victims of Hurricane Helene
The Internal Revenue Service has announced comprehensive tax relief for individuals and businesses affected by Hurricane Helene. The IRS has extended tax deadlines for the entire states of Alabama, Georgia, North Carolina, and South Carolina, as well as designated counties in Florida, Tennessee, and Virginia. All taxpayers in these areas now have until May 1, 2025, to file various federal individual and business tax returns and make tax payments.This extension applies to:2024 individual and business returns normally due in March and April 20252023 individual and corporate returns with valid extensionsQuarterly estimated tax payments due on Jan. 15, 2025, and April …
Storm Damage Loss Swamped and Sunk for Lack of Appraisals or Other Proof of Loss (Thomas Richey and Maureen Cleary v. Comm., TCM 2023-43)
Thomas Richey and Maureen Cleary owned a home and a boat in March 2017, when Winter Storm Stella hit Stone Harbor and flooded the city’s streets. Richey and Cleary claimed that the storm damaged the waterside portion of their property and their 40-foot boat, The Celtic Dream. On their 2017 tax return, they claimed total casualty losses of more than $820,000 and a deduction—after considering the income limitation—of nearly $740,000. Calculating the Deduction: There are three rules for determining a casualty loss deduction. The first rule is that only physical damage can be counted as a casualty loss and decreases …
California Corner: The California Department of Tax and Fee Administration Tax Guides
This summer, the California Department of Tax and Fee Administration (CDTFA) posted a new comprehensive Tax Guide for Event Planners to help them (and tax practitioners) understand their tax obligations. Here’s a summary of the key points: Tax Guide for Event Planners – Key Topics Sales and Use Tax Application: Event planners may be subject to sales tax on certain services and products they provide. Consultation Services and Planning: Mandatory charges for professional planning or coordination are taxable if connected to sales of tangible personal property. Tips and Gratuities: Optional tips are generally not taxable, but mandatory service charges are …
California Corner: The California Supreme Court Upholds Proposition 22
On July 25, 2024, the California Supreme Court delivered a landmark ruling upholding Proposition 22, a measure passed by California voters in November 2020. The Court’s decision in People v. Uber Technologies, Inc. allows companies such as Uber, Lyft, and DoorDash to classify their drivers as independent contractors rather than employees. The Court’s ruling maintains that drivers for these app-based services are not employees but independent contractors. This classification exempts them from traditional employee benefits while ensuring they receive certain specific benefits under Proposition 22. Compliance Requirements for App-Based Companies: To comply with Proposition 22, app-based companies must adhere to …
The Supreme Court Overrules the Forty-year-old Chevron Doctrine
On June 28, 2024, the Supreme Court delivered a landmark decision in Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo fundamentally altering the role of federal agencies in interpreting the laws they enforce. In a 6-3 ruling, the Court overruled the Chevron doctrine, a principle established in Chevron U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc. (1984). Under Chevron, courts were required to defer to federal agencies’ interpretations of ambiguous statutes if the agency’s interpretation was deemed reasonable, provided Congress had not directly addressed the issue.The recent decision in Loper Bright shifts this paradigm. The Supreme Court ruled that judges should no longer …
DOL Updates Exemptions For Executive, Administrative, Professional, Outside Sales, And Computer Employees
The Department of Labor final rule Defining and Delimiting the Exemptions for Executive, Administrative, Professional, Outside Sales, and Computer Employees took effect on July 1, 2024. The final rule updated and revised the regulations issued under §13(a)(1) of the Fair Labor Standards Act implementing the exemption from minimum wage and overtime pay requirements for executive, administrative, and professional (EAP) employees. Revisions include increases to the standard salary level and the highly compensated employee total annual compensation threshold, as well as a mechanism that provides for the timely and efficient updating of these earnings thresholds to reflect current earnings data. Specific …
The Fact and Fiction of the “Self Employment Tax Credit”
Move over, ERC: there’s another social media craze gaining steam. The IRS has issued an alert regarding misleading information on social media telling people they can cash in on the “Self Employment Tax Credit” (sometimes abbreviated as “the SETC”) as a way for self-employed individuals and gig workers to qualify for payments of up to $32,000 (with some sources claiming as high as $36,200) related to the COVID-19 pandemic period. The actual credit being referred to is the Credits for Sick Leave and Family Leave, and while it is certainly real, there are important details some social media influencers are not …
GPS Tracker Doesn’t Work Alone to Get Deduction for Tax Preparer (Patricia Chappell v. Comm., TCS 2024-2)
Patricia Chappell used MileIQ to track her location from March 23 to December 15, 2015. From the app, she entered whether trips were business or personal. MileIQ summarized Ms. Chappell’s tracking information and provided a log that could be used to help substantiate her business miles driven during the year. Ms. Chappell’s driver’s license was suspended for about six months in the middle of 2015. During that time, she used a driver. In a close examination of her records, there were inconsistencies in dates and purchases. There were several days on which gas was purchased multiple times, but no excessive …
Used Car Salesman Sells Judge on Cohan Rule (Jesse Alvarado and Estate of Maria De Lourdes Velasques v. Comm., TCM 2024-1)
After 25 years as a commercial lender at Comerica Bank, Mr. Alvarado opened South Bay Autos, a used car business, preparing a few tax returns on the side. South Bay relied heavily on credit, both for the acquisition of inventory and for the sale of vehicles to customers. South Bay purchased vehicles at car auctions using credit with terms that required repayment in 45 days before having to pay high interest charges. Vehicles were generally sold on credit, with the contracts sold to financing companies. The finance companies would pay the face amount of a contract less a reserve and …
Unreported Income, Unsubstantiated Deductions, Late Filing – Three Strikes and Taxpayer Loses (Paulette Thompson and Johnnie Thompson v. Comm., TCM 2024-14)
The Thompsons earned income from farming operations raising and selling cattle, chickens, eggs, and turkeys. Mrs. Thompson also earned income from a tax preparation business (which earned her a space in this tax update manual). IRS prepared SFRs for 2014, 2015, and 2016. Mrs. Thompson mailed a 2014 tax return to the IRS on April 16, 2018. She provided her 2015 and 2016 returns to an Appeals officer in February 2019. IRS did not process the returns for 2014 – 2016. Income from her tax preparation business was reported on Schedule F as “Custom Hire (Machine Work) Income.”Gross income from …
IRS Explains the Employer-Provided Childcare Tax Credit on New IRS.gov Page (IR-2024-34)
IRS has provided several plain language explanations on claiming the employer-provided childcare credit (§45F). An eligible employer must have paid or incurred qualified childcare expenditures to provide childcare services to employees. The credit is 25% of qualified childcare facility expenditures plus 10% of qualified childcare resource and referral expenditures, limited to $150,000 per year. The credit is claimed on Form 8882, Credit for Employer-Provided Childcare Facilities and Services. Qualified Childcare Expenditures Qualified childcare expenditures are:Costs associated with acquiring, constructing, rehabilitating or expanding property used as the taxpayer’s qualified childcare facility;Qualified childcare facility expenditures are operating expenses made by the taxpayer, …
Taxpayer Was Willful in Failure to File FBARs When He Ignored Red Flags (US v. David Vettel, Apr. 11, 2024. US District Court for the District of Columbia, No. 4:21-CV-03099)
David Vettel opened a Swiss bank account and, from 2006 to 2011, failed to file FBARs to report the account. CPA Terri Phelps prepared Mr. Vettel’s federal income tax returns for tax years 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, and 2011. Mr. Vettel did not provide CPA Phelps with information about his Swiss bank account. CPA Sent Organizer and Engagement Letter: CPA Phelps sent Mr. Vettel an “organizer” each year that contained a series of questions to which Mr. Vettel was supposed to respond in order to aid CPA Phelps’s preparation. The organizer included a question about whether Mr. Vettel had …
Cannabis Tax Legislation Went Up in Smoke, but the DEA Decides It’s High Time for a New Leaf on Pot Policy
The DEA has begun the process to reclassify marijuana from a Schedule I drug (like heroin and LSD) to a Schedule III drug (like ketamine and anabolic steroids.) The proposal does not legalize recreational marijuana use, but it recognizes cannabis as a less dangerous drug and acknowledges its medical uses. The move represents the DEA’s biggest policy shift in decades, and it’s likely to have far-reaching business and tax implications. What are the tax and accounting implications of marijuana rescheduling? Under Section 280E of the Internal Revenue Code, businesses involved in “trafficking” Schedule I and II substances may not claim …
Energy Credit Legislation Is Proving More Expensive Than Planned
The centerpiece of the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 (IRA22) was a myriad of new and expanded energy credits intended to address climate change. Using the Congressional Budget Office’s February 2024 report, the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget estimates that the ten‐year cost of the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 credits will increase by 170% from $271 billion to $736 billion between 2022 and 2031. The increased costs will contribute to the pressure to repeal or reduce energy credits if the November election results in changes to the control of the House, Senate, and/or the White House. STAY TUNED Stay updated with …
EITC Improper Payments Increased Almost 50% from 2020 to 2023
The GAO estimates that 34% of Earned Income Tax Credit payments issued in FY 2023 were improper at a cost to the government of $21.9 billion. The Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration (TIGTA) estimated an error rate of 24% for FY 2020.TIGTA reported that refundable credit improper payments are not primarily the result of internal control weaknesses that the IRS can address. Eligibility rules for ETTC are “often complex because they address complicated family relationships and residency arrangements to determine eligibility.”Carefully completing the Form 8867 to demonstrate preparer due diligence (while bothersome) serves to protect us and the client …
Sam Bankman-Fried Sentenced to 25 Years
Sam Bankman-Fried, the former wunderkind of the cryptocurrency world, was sentenced to 25 years in prison on Thursday, March 28th, 2024, for his role in defrauding FTX customers of $8 billion. He was facing a maximum sentence of 110 years, and prosecutors were hoping for 40-50 years. For a deep-dive into the background of the Sam Bankman-Fried fraud case from an accounting point of view, see Jeff Sailor, CPA’s on-demand video course, Focus on Fraud: FTX! What Happened? (1 CPE Credit, Accounting) In a statement from the Department of Justice, U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland said: “There are serious consequences for …
The 90-Day Clock is Ticking for Beneficial Ownership Reporting
An Alabama Federal District Court found the Corporate Transparency Act and its Beneficial Ownership Interest (BOI) reporting to be unconstitutional (National Small Business United et al v. Yellen et al). The Justice Department on behalf of Treasury filed a Notice of Appeal on March 11, 2024. What happens now? While the litigation is ongoing, FinCEN will continue to implement the Corporate Transparency Act as required by Congress, while complying with the court’s order. Other than the particular individuals and entities subject to the court’s injunction, reporting companies are still required to file beneficial ownership reports as provided in FinCEN’s regulations. …
Bipartisan “Stop Subsidizing Giant Mergers Act” Takes Aim at Tax-Free Reorganizations
Few proposals have been made to change tax-free reorganizations in the past century, but today, a Democrat and a Republican have combined forces to attempt exactly that. This morning (3/21), Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse (D., R.I) and Sen. J.D. Vance (R., OH) introduced new legislation aimed at transforming the tax implications of big mergers by revising the corporate tax code. The Stop Subsidizing Giant Mergers Act is described in a statement from the senators as “ending a wasteful subsidy for mergers where combined average annual revenues exceed $500 million.”The bipartisan bill sets its sights on companies’ ability to complete tax-free mergers. …