Unemployed Workers

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South Carolina Senate Proposes Tax Credit for Hiring Unemployed

Tuesday, April 5th, 2011

The South Carolina Senate Finance Committee unanimously approved a tax credit measure last week that would reward South Carolina employers when they hire the unemployed.  The tax credit would accumulate at the rate of $100 per month for a maximum credit of $2,400 over a two-year period.

The bill was written by South Carolina’s Senate Majority Leader Harvey Peeler (Rep.).   Peeler proposed the same bill in 2009, at which time it failed to pass the South Carolina House. 

“I hope this time they’ll look on it favorably,” Peeler said. “I think there’ll be more than enough support in the Senate to get it through the Senate again.” Read about it in a Bloomberg Business Week article, here.

WYFF Chanel 4, of Greenville, SC covered the bill in a news story on March 30th.  See it here.  Or here on YouTube.

Amazing Map — Geography of a Recession — And the Hire Act Payroll Tax Exemption

Wednesday, July 28th, 2010

This amazing map was published by the American Observer (American University’s Graduate Journalism Magazine). Using color mapping, it illustrates the monthly progress of the recession in each U.S. county as reflected by increasing levels of unemployment.

With the unfortunate and deep increases in unemployment throughout the country, companies really need to be looking at their eligibility for the HIRE Act’s 2010 Payroll Tax Exemption.  If an individual has been unemployed for 60 days or more prior to their hire date, their new employer is exempt from paying the 6.2% employer portion of the federal payroll tax.  The benefit applies to wages earned from March 19 through December 31, 2010.

The YouTube version of the map is posted below but I recommend you visit the American Observer’s website and view the original presentation.

To see the original presentation, click HERE  (Don’t forget to press play.)

From IRS Newswire – Two New Tax Benefits Aid Employers Who Hire and Retain Unemployed Workers

Friday, March 19th, 2010

Directly from the wire….

WASHINGTON — Two new tax benefits are now available to employers hiring workers who were previously unemployed or only working part time. These provisions are part of the Hiring Incentives to Restore Employment (HIRE) Act enacted into law today.

Employers who hire unemployed workers this year (after Feb. 3, 2010 and before Jan. 1, 2011) may qualify for a 6.2-percent payroll tax incentive, in effect exempting them from their share of Social Security taxes on wages paid to these workers after the date of enactment. This reduced tax withholding will have no effect on the employee’s future Social Security benefits, and employers would still need to withhold the employee’s 6.2-percent share of Social Security taxes, as well as income taxes. The employer and employee’s shares of Medicare taxes would also still apply to these wages.

In addition, for each worker retained for at least a year, businesses may claim an additional general business tax credit, up to $1,000 per worker, when they file their 2011 income tax returns.

“These tax breaks offer a much-needed boost to employers willing to expand their payrolls, and businesses and nonprofits should keep these benefits in mind as they plan for the year ahead,” said IRS Commissioner Doug Shulman.

The two tax benefits are especially helpful to employers who are adding positions to their payrolls. New hires filling existing positions also qualify but only if the workers they are replacing left voluntarily or for cause. Family members and other relatives do not qualify.

In addition, the new law requires that the employer get a statement from each eligible new hire certifying that he or she was unemployed during the 60 days before beginning work or, alternatively, worked fewer than a total of 40 hours for someone else during the 60-day period. The IRS is currently developing a form employees can use to make the required statement.

Businesses, agricultural employers, tax-exempt organizations and public colleges and universities all qualify to claim the payroll tax benefit for eligible newly-hired employees. Household employers cannot claim this new tax benefit.

Employers claim the payroll tax benefit on the federal employment tax return they file, usually quarterly, with the IRS. Eligible employers will be able to claim the new tax incentive on their revised employment tax form for the second quarter of 2010. Revised forms and further details on these two new tax provisions will be posted on IRS.gov during the next few weeks.

Senate Votes to Limit Further Debate on Senator Reid’s New Tax Credits

Monday, February 22nd, 2010

It just hit the news – and we received a corroborating update from Paul E. Suplizio, President of the WOTC Coalition. As anticipated, the U.S. Senate voted this afternoon to limit debate on Senator Reid’s amendment SA 3310 to the Jobs for Main Street Act of 2010 (H.R. 2847). As I described yesterday, Reid’s amendment adds two new federal tax-incentive programs intended to help the private sector create and maintain new jobs.

The Senate invoked cloture on the Reid Amendment by a vote of 62-30. With further debate thus limited, the amendment is on its way to Senate passage and then back to the House of Representatives, where it will most likely be approved.

My firm is preparing to assist our clients with these new hiring-based tax benefits. Implementation could face challenges similar to those we faced in 2009 with the mid-year addition of two new eligibility categories to the Work Opportunity Tax Credit program. Like last years Stimulus Act, this bills language provides for retroactive eligibility — meaning that employees hired before the bill’s passage may still become eligible to generate the new tax benefits for their employer.

Fortunately, our clients are already obtaining some of the required information from their employees at the time of hire using our WOTC surveying forms.  If we do have to go back and get more information for the new tax benefit programs, we’ll already know who might qualify. So, we can limit our attention to just those employees.

For more information, please call me at 888-655-5281, extension 101. Or email me at vah@hromiko.com .  And have a great evening!  I am Vaughn Hromiko.

Back to Work Tax Credit Act

Friday, October 30th, 2009

Congressman John Boccieri (Democrat of Ohio)

Representative Tom Rooney (Republican of Florida), has introduced a second bill proposing to expand the Work Opportunity Tax Credit (or WOTC) program. Cosponsored by Congressman John Boccieri (Democrat of Ohio), this bill would add a new eligibility category (or “targeted group”) — Long Term Unemployed. Click here for Representative Rooney’s press release.

Under this proposal, employers who hire an individual that has received 26 weeks of unemployment benefits will receive a federal tax credit equal to 40% of the employees first $6,000 (that’s $2,400) in wages during their first year of employment.

Earlier this month, this same bi-partisan duo introduced a bill dubbed as The HIRE American Act, which would expand the WOTC program to provide a smaller tax credit for the hire of any new employee — even those not qualifying under any specific targeted group.

To be fair, here’s a photo of Representative Boccieri from Ohio. (I included Representative Rooney’s picture in the previous post.)

The HIRE America Act—New Proposal to Expand Work Opportunity Tax Credit

Friday, October 16th, 2009

Republican Tom Rooney of Florida.

U.S. Representatives Tom Rooney (Rep of Florida), with co-sponsor John Boccieri (Dem of Ohio), has introduced a measure that would expand the Work Opportunity Tax Credit (or WOTC) program even further than the federal Stimulus Bill of last February.

The Helping Invigorate and Revive our Economy Act of 2009 (H.R. 3784), also known as the HIRE America Act, would not only increase the credit allowed for employees qualifying under the existing “targeted groups” — it would also provide a smaller credit for the hire of any new employees, even those not qualifying under a specific targeted group.

The bill would also make its new WOTC provisions permanent, avoiding the repeated need for reauthorization. Currently, the WOTC program is set to expire in August 2011. The effort to make WOTC a permanent part of the tax code has been ongoing for many years.

Here’s Rep Tom Rooney’s blog entry about the bill. Click Here.

And here is his previous Press Release.