July 2006
CLIENT NEWS
AQA International
AQA
International recently announced the acquisition of their new
world headquarters building. The new building at 501 Commerce
Drive, NE in Columbia will provide expanded office space and
training facilities.
AQA is accredited to provide a
wide range of certifications or registrations for all major
IAF codes. They provide audits for companies to maintain
their certifications and provide training related to certification.
Visit their website at: http://www.aqausa.com
NEWS FROM BP&S
Ken
Bauknight
Congratulations
to Ken Bauknight, who has been elected Treasurer of the Palmetto
Place Children’s Emergency Shelter.
Children are referred to Palmetto
Place for temporary placement by local
Departments of Social Services when they must be removed from
their homes because of abuse, abandonment or neglect, or when
their parents are incarcerated or even hospitalized and the
children have no place to go.
Visit their website at:
http://www.palmettoplaceshelter.org/
Seminars
The Firm
will be hosting two continuing education seminars this Fall.
The first is scheduled for Friday September 29 and the second
will be on Friday, October 20.
As in the
past, we are planning for four hours each day, starting around
8:30am and ending with lunch. Details, including timing
and topics will be announced in our August newsletter.
Denise Gunter
and Barbara Luksik recently attended the AICPA’s Small Business
Practitioner’s Tax Forum in Chicago. We are planning for
them to share some of what they learned.
If you are
interested in attending one or both of these seminars, please
contact Tom Pietras (so we can get a head count).
Looking for
Experienced Auditors
Due
to continued strong growth in our audit and accounting practice,
the Firm is looking for an audit senior with two to four years
of recent, high quality audit experience. Compensation
will be commensurate with experience. If you are interested
(or know of someone who is interested), please e-mail your resume
directly to Tom Pietras at
tpietras@bpscpas.com.
TECHNICAL
ISSUES
Update on Recent Federal Tax Law Changes
The following is a summary of the
most important tax developments that have occurred in the past
three months that may affect you, your family, your investments,
and your livelihood. Please call us for more information about
any of these developments and what steps you should implement
to take advantage of favorable developments and to minimize
the impact of those that are unfavorable.
New tax reconciliation act.
The “Tax Increase
Prevention and Reconciliation Act” (TIPRA) was signed into law
by the President on May 17, 2006. The most talked about provisions
in this law were the short-term alternative minimum tax relief
for 2006 and the extension of the current low-taxed capital
gains and dividends rate that was due to expire after 2008.
However, it also carried a number of other changes affecting
individuals and businesses, and included corporate and foreign
provisions, technical corrections and extensions of several
provisions. Some of these are:
...
kiddie tax age limit raised from under 14 to under 18 for tax
years beginning after December 31, 2005.
...
income limit on Roth IRA conversions eliminated for tax years
beginning after December 31, 2009.
...
extension of increased Internal Revenue Code Section 179 expensing
for small business through the end of 2009.
...
modification of the 50% W-2 wage limit on the Internal Revenue
Code Section 199 domestic production deduction, effective for
tax years beginning after May 17, 2006.
...
information reporting required for tax-exempt interest after
December 31, 2005.
...
changes for corporate estimated tax payments due on September
15, 2010 and September 15, 2011.
...
capital gain treatment allowed for self-created musical works
at the taxpayer's election for a pre-January 1, 2011 sale or
exchange in tax years beginning after May 17, 2006.
...
amortization of expenses paid for musical works and copyrights
for tax years beginning after December 31, 2005 and before January
1, 2011.
...
the active business test for a tax-free corporate spin-off is
simplified for distributions made after May 17, 2006 and before
January 1, 2010.
...
changes (some not favorable to taxpayers) to the foreign earned
income exclusion and housing allowance for U.S. citizens working
abroad for tax years beginning after December 31, 2005.
Military tax relief law.
On May 29, 2006, the
President signed the “Heroes Earned Retirement Opportunities
Act” (HERO Act) into law. The HERO Act allows excluded combat
pay to be treated as compensation for purposes of the individual
retirement account (IRA) contribution rules. Most individuals
who received excluded combat pay in 2004 or 2005 have until
May 28, 2009 to make an IRA contribution for either or both
of those years.
Internal Revenue Code Section
199 final regs and other guidance.
The IRS has issued a barrage of new
guidance on the Internal Revenue Code Section 199 domestic production
activities deduction, including final regs, temporary regs,
and a new revenue procedure. This deduction, which has attracted
much criticism, commentary, and several waves of interim guidance
since it was added to the Code by the 2004 Jobs Act is 3% (for
2006; 6% through 2009; and 9% thereafter) of the lesser of a
taxpayer's qualified production activities income or taxable
income, subject to a 50% of W-2-wages limitation. The long-awaited
final regs, though complex, carry a number of liberalizations,
simplifying conventions, and examples. The guidance provides
major breaks for the software and construction industries. Where
either of two fairly broad exceptions to the general rules is
satisfied, the IRS, reversing its previous position, allows
gross receipts from providing software for a customers' direct
use while connected to the Internet to be treated as derived
from a qualifying disposition. The IRS also broadens the definition
of qualifying construction activities, allowing gross receipts
derived from materials and supplies consumed in a construction
project to be included in domestic production gross receipts
from the construction of real property.
The IRS concedes on long-distance
telephone excise tax.
The IRS, after repeatedly losing in
one court after another, has finally conceded that the federal
excise tax doesn't apply to long-distance calls for which the
charges are computed on an elapsed time basis regardless of
distance. Taxpayers no longer have to pay the tax and can request
a credit or refund under the terms of an IRS notice for amounts
paid for service billed to them after February 28, 2003 and
before August 1, 2006. Remarkably, the IRS has also conceded
that the excise tax doesn't apply with regard to Voice over
Internet Protocol service, prepaid telephone cards, and plans
that provide both local and long distance service for either
a flat monthly fee or a charge that varies with the elapsed
transmission time—all issues that the IRS hasn't repeatedly
litigated and lost. Individuals (including Schedule C filers),
but not other taxpayers, can request a refund or credit using
either the actual amount of tax paid for services or use a safe
harbor amount (which the IRS has yet to specify).
How to revoke an election
not to defer income.
Generally, an employee or independent
contractor is taxed on property received in connection with
the performance of services only when the property is either
not subject to a substantial risk of forfeiture, or is transferable
to a third party free of this risk. However, a person may instead
elect under Internal Revenue Code Section 83(b) to include
the income from the transfer for the year in which the property
is received. The Section 83(b) election subjects an employee
to immediate tax liability, but any increase in the value of
the property after its receipt and up to the time it's disposal
is taxed as capital gain. The IRS has explained how to request
its consent to revoke a Section 83(b) election not to defer
income from restricted stock or property. While the formalized
procedures basically leave the existing rules unchanged, they
underscore how care must be taken by a taxpayer making the Section
83(b) election because circumstances in which the IRS will allow
it to be revoked are relatively narrow. In a market that suddenly
declines, an electing employee can find that he's paid tax on
property (e.g., stock) that's worth less than when he made the
election, or worse, is worthless, with the result that he's
not only paid tax sooner but that he's paid more tax than he
would have at a later point in time. Once elected, undoing the
election isn't easy.
Interest on S corporation's
overpayment. In general,
the interest rate on a tax overpayment by a corporation is the
federal short-term rate, plus two percentage points. However,
to the extent that a tax overpayment by a corporation for any
tax period exceeds $10,000, the interest rate for such a “large
corporate overpayment” is the federal short-term rate plus 0.5
percentage points. The Tax Court has held that the interest
on an S corporation's refund wasn't limited to the rate for
large corporate overpayments. That lower rate applied only to
C corporations, and not S corporations. However, the Court also
said that the S corporation wasn't entitled to the higher overpayment
rate for noncorporate taxpayers—the federal short-term rate,
plus three percentage points.
Ford, Honda, and Toyota vehicles
qualify for the alternative motor vehicle income tax credit.
The IRS has said that
various model years of the Ford Escape Hybrid, Mercury Mariner
Hybrid, Honda Civic Hybrid, Honda Insight, Honda Accord Hybrid,
Toyota Prius, Toyota Highlander, Toyota Camry, Lexus GS 450h,
and Lexus RX400h qualify for the alternative motor vehicle income
tax credit. The credit amount may be as much as much as $3,400
for a hybrid vehicle. Taxpayers may claim the full amount of
the allowable credit up to the end of the first calendar quarter
after the quarter in which the manufacturer records its sale
of the 60,000th vehicle. Additional phaseouts apply to later
periods. The IRS's sales report for the first quarter indicate
that Ford and Toyota haven't hit this limit yet and that their
customers may continue to claim the full Section 30B alternative
motor vehicle credit at least through September 30, 2006.
Back
|