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$1.9 Trillion Stimulus Bill Passed

A $1.9 trillion U.S. coronavirus relief package was passed by the Senate on Saturday 3/6, and has now been signed by the House of Representatives as well.

Known as the American Rescue Plan Act, H.R. 1319, the bill will now be sent to President Biden’s desk to be signed into law. It is expected to be signed by the President ahead of the 3/14 expiration for the $300/week federal funds added to unemployment checks.

 

The Senate bill retains most of the tax provisions in the House bill, however, eligibility for the recovery rebate credits (to be paid to most taxpayers in advance as economic impact payments) would phase out more quickly than it did in the two previous rounds.

 

For single taxpayers, the phaseout will begin at an adjusted gross income (AGI) of $75,000 and the credit will be completely phased out for taxpayers with an AGI over $80,000.

 

For married taxpayers who file jointly, the phaseout will begin at an AGI of $150,000 and end at AGI of $160,000. And for heads of households, the phaseout will begin at an AGI of $112,500 and be complete at AGI of $120,000.

 

Under the House bill, the phaseout range was $25,000 for single taxpayers (i.e., from AGI of $75,000 to AGI of $100,000), $50,000 for joint filers, and $37,500 for heads of household.

 

The Senate bill also includes:

 

 

Extended Unemployment Benefits

 

The American Rescue Plan extends unemployment benefits of $300 a week through September 6, 2021. In addition, the first $10,200 in 2020 benefits is tax free for families making $150,000 or less.

 

It also provides a 100% subsidy of COBRA health insurance premiums so unemployed workers can remain on their employer healthcare plans through the end of September.

 

 

Expanded Child Tax Credit

 

The legislation calls for payments of $3,000 a year for each child ages 6 to 17, and $3,600 for each child under age 6 for couples who make $150,000 or less and single parents who make $112,500 or less. Payments would be sent by direct deposit on a monthly basis.

 

As written, the bill provides for one year of credit payments. The idea behind regular payments is to help families pay for ongoing costs instead of claiming a credit when they file their taxes. The credit is refundable, meaning everyone who qualifies will get it no matter their tax situation.

 

 

Continued Eviction and Foreclosure Moratoriums

 

The legislation includes $30 billion in emergency rental assistance and $10 billion for mortgage assistance.

 

 

Student Loan Forgiveness

 

While the plan does not include student loan forgiveness, it does include a provision that any student loan forgiveness passed between Dec. 30, 2020 and Jan. 1, 2026, will be tax free. Normally, loan forgiveness counts as taxable income.

 

 

Schools and Childcare Block Grants

 

The bill sets aside $130 billion for K-12 education. This money will be used to reduce class sizes, improve ventilation, purchase personal protective equipment, and fund other steps to help schools reopen safely.

 

 

Help for Businesses

 

A new program for restaurants and bars allocates $25 billion in pandemic assistance grants. The grants can provide up to $10 million per company with a limit of $5 million per physical location and used to cover payroll, rent, utilities and other expenses. The Paycheck Protection Program will receive an additional $7.25 billion and more non-profits will now be allowed to apply for forgivable loans to help cover payroll and other operating expenses.

 

 

State and Local Government

 

The American Rescue Plan includes $350 billion in aid to states, cities, tribal governments, and U.S. territories. These funds are designated to help replace lost tax revenue due to the pandemic.

 

 

Increased Food Aid

 

Includes $510 million for the FEMA Emergency Food and Shelter Program which will be used to provide overnight shelter, meals, one month’s rent or mortgage assistance and one month’s utility payments.

The American Rescue Plan Act provides extended emergency nutritional assistance to food-stamp recipients, including a 15% increase in benefits that will continue through September, instead of expiring at the end of June.

 

 

Pandemic Response

 

About $50 billion will pay for additional COVID-19 testing and contact tracing, and $19 billion will help increase the size of the public health workforce. About $16 billion will fund vaccine distribution and supply chains.

 

SOURCE: Journal of Accountancy

IRS Offers Guidance On Employee Retention Credit

On March 1, 2021, the Internal Revenue Service issued Notice 2021-20 in order to provide further guidance on the Employee Retention Credit.

A summary of the new guidance is as follows:

     

  • An employer that operates a business is considered to have a partial suspension of business operations if, based on the facts and circumstances, more than a nominal portion of its business operations are suspended by a government order. Notice 2021-20 states that an employer’s business operations will be deemed to constitute more than a nominal portion of its business operations if one of the following two tests are met:
    • The first test is met if the gross receipts from the portion of the business operations suspended by a government order is not less than 10 percent of the total gross receipts. Determine this by looking at the gross receipts of the same calendar quarter in 2019.
    • The second test is met if the hours of service performed by employees in the portion of the business suspended by a government order is not less than 10 percent of the total number of hours of service performed by all employees in the employer’s business. Determine this by looking at the number of hours of service performed by employees in the same calendar quarter in 2019.
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  • Notice 2021-20 lists factors that should be taken into account in determining whether a modification required by a government order has more than a nominal effect on business operations. The mere fact that the employer must modify business operations due to a government order does not result in a partial suspension unless the modification has a more than nominal effect on the business operations. The factors to consider include, but are not limited to:
    • Limiting occupancy to provide for social distancing. Please note that Notice 2021-20 also states that sufficient physical space to accommodate customers, regardless of the restriction, will likely NOT result in a more than nominal effect on the business operations.
    • Requiring services to be performed only on an appointment basis for businesses that previously offered walk-in service
    • Changing the format of the service
    • Reduced operating hours
    • A government order that reduces the employer’s ability to provide goods and services in the normal course of business of not less than 10% of the employer’s business operations is deemed to have more than a nominal effect on business operations
    • Modifications altering customer behavior, such as mask requirements or one way aisles, do NOT result in a more than nominal effect on business operations
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  • The wages an employer uses for PPP forgiveness are excluded from qualifying for the Employee Retention Credit. Examples are as follows:
    • Employer A received a PPP loan of $100K and reported $100K of payroll costs on the PPP forgiveness application. The $100K of payroll costs are not eligible for the Employee Retention Credit.
    • Employer B received a PPP loan of $200K and reported $250K of payroll costs on the PPP forgiveness application. $200K of the payroll costs are not eligible for the Employee Retention Credit, but $50K of the payroll costs are eligible for the Employee Retention Credit.
    • Employer C received a PPP loan of $200K and reported $200K of payroll costs and $70K of other eligible expenses on the PPP forgiveness application. $130K of the payroll costs are not eligible for the Employee Retention Credit, but $70K of the payroll costs are eligible for the Employee Retention Credit.
    • Employer D received a PPP loan of $200K and reported $200K of payroll costs and $90K of other eligible expenses on the PPP forgiveness application. $120K (60% x $200K) of the payroll costs are not eligible for the Employee Retention Credit, but $80K of the payroll costs are eligible for the Employee Retention Credit.  This is because at least 60% of the PPP forgiveness must be for payroll costs.
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  • Claiming the Employee Retention Credit for 2020
    • An employer eligible for the Employee Retention Credit for 2020 can claim the refund retroactively by filing Form 941-X for the relevant calendar quarters in which the employer paid qualified wages during 2020
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  • Tax Impact of the Employee Retention Credit
    • The Employee Retention Credit reduces the wage expense that an eligible employer could otherwise deduct on its federal income tax return. This works similar to the Work Opportunity Tax Credit.
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  • Third-Party Payers
    • A common law employer who uses a third-party to report and pay employment taxes is entitled to the Employee Retention Credit
    • The third-party payer is not entitled to the Employee Retention Credit with respect to the wages it remits on the common law employer’s behalf
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  • Documentation
    • An eligible employer needs to create and maintain records that support their eligibility for the Employee Retention Credit and maintain these records for at least four years. The following documentation should be kept:
      • Documentation showing how the employer determined they were eligible for the credit
      • Any government orders that suspended business operations
      • Any records relied upon to determine whether more than a nominal portion of business operations were suspended due to a government order or whether the government order had more than a nominal effect on business operations
      • Any records showing a significant decline in gross receipts
      • Payroll records supporting qualified wages
      • Documentation showing qualified health plan expenses
      • Documentation related to whether the employer is a member of an aggregated group
      • Copies of federal employment tax returns

Source:  Internal Revenue Service Notice 2021-20

 

New PPP Changes For Small Businesses

The Biden Administration announced this week that it will institute a two-week period starting Wednesday, 2/24 during which only businesses with fewer than 20 employees will be able to apply for Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) loans.

 

The exclusive application window is one of several moves the White House said it is making to further target the PPP funds to the smallest businesses. The administration also will:

 

  • Change the PPP loan calculation formula to help sole proprietors, independent contractors, and self-employed individuals receive more financial support. In addition, $1 billion will be set aside for businesses in this category that don’t have employees and are located in low- and moderate-income areas. Details of the changes have not yet been released.

 

  • Eliminate a restriction preventing small business owners with prior nonfraud felony convictions from obtaining relief through the PPP.

 

  • Remove a rule preventing small business owners who are delinquent on federal student loan payments from securing a PPP loan.

 

  • Allow noncitizen small business owners who are lawful U.S. residents to use individual taxpayer identification numbers (ITINs) to apply for relief.

 

The administration said the 14-day exclusive application period is designed to help the 98% of small businesses that have fewer than 20 employees, noting that these businesses often struggle more than larger businesses to collect the necessary paperwork and secure a PPP loan through a lender.

 

The White House statement also said that the administration would continue to work with lenders and other stakeholders to address PPP processing delays caused by anti-fraud validation checks that must be completed before loan guaranty approval is granted. The statement said the U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) would continue to work with lenders to create streamlined processes to resolve issues as quickly as possible while still working to ensure taxpayer funds are spent wisely.

 

The administration also will make the following moves:

 

  • Update key areas of SBA websites to help more applicants find resources for understanding relief options and completing applications.

 

  • Continue to conduct stakeholder outreach to learn more about challenges and opportunities in the implementation of current emergency relief plans.

 

  • Launch a new initiative to increase communication with lenders. Specifically, the SBA will increase opportunities for lenders to provide recommendations and ask questions about the PPP. The goal is to drive resolution of open questions and concerns in a more streamlined way.

 

The application window for the current $284 billion iteration of PPP is scheduled to close March 31.

 

For any questions regarding this announcement or assistance with your PPP filing, please contact your Whalen advisor.

 

 

Source: Journal of Accountancy

Lawmakers Ask IRS To Extend Tax Season

Democrats on the House Ways and Means Committee are urging the IRS to again extend tax season beyond April 15 to July 15 to give taxpayers an additional three months to file.

 

Lawmakers on the tax-writing committee in Congress wrote a letter to IRS Commissioner Charles Rettig last Thursday to make the request, citing what happened last year in the early months of the COVID-19 pandemic as Congress and the IRS moved to provide relief to taxpayers to deal with the pandemic.

 

Many individuals are still coping with challenges of the pandemic, and in addition, tax provisions contained in last year’s stimulus packages including the CARES Act and the Families First Coronavirus Response Act have presented changes for filing this year.

 

The IRS delayed the start of tax season this year by about three weeks until last Friday, 2/12 in order to distribute the second round of Economic Impact Payments authorized by Congress in December.

 

The IRS has been asked to make an announcement as soon as possible to eliminate unnecessary anxiety for both taxpayers and tax practitioners.

 

We will continue to monitor this situation for any changes, and will keep you informed as soon as a decision regarding the deadline has been announced.

 

 

 

SOURCE: Accounting Today

Did you make donations in 2020? There’s still time to get substantiation

If you’re like many Americans, letters from your favorite charities may be appearing in your mailbox acknowledging your 2020 donations. But what happens if you haven’t received such a letter — can you still claim a deduction for the gift on your 2020 income tax return? It depends.

What is required

To support a charitable deduction, you need to comply with IRS substantiation requirements. This generally includes obtaining a contemporaneous written acknowledgment from the charity stating the amount of the donation, whether you received any goods or services in consideration for the donation and the value of any such goods or services.

“Contemporaneous” means the earlier of:

  • The date you file your tax return, or
  • The extended due date of your return.

So if you made a donation in 2020 but haven’t yet received substantiation from the charity, it’s not too late — as long as you haven’t filed your 2020 return. Contact the charity and request a written acknowledgment.

Keep in mind that, if you made a cash gift of under $250 with a check or credit card, generally a canceled check, bank statement or credit card statement is sufficient. However, if you received something in return for the donation, you generally must reduce your deduction by its value — and the charity is required to provide you a written acknowledgment as described earlier.

New deduction for non-itemizers

In general, taxpayers who don’t itemize their deductions (and instead claim the standard deduction) can’t claim a charitable deduction. Under the CARES Act, individuals who don’t itemize deductions can claim a federal income tax write-off for up to $300 of cash contributions to IRS-approved charities for the 2020 tax year. The same $300 limit applies to both unmarried taxpayers and married joint-filing couples.

Even better, this tax break was extended to cover $300 of cash contributions made in 2021 under the Consolidated Appropriations Act. The new law doubles the deduction limit to $600 for married joint-filing couples for cash contributions made in 2021.

2020 and 2021 deductions

Additional substantiation requirements apply to some types of donations. We can help you determine whether you have sufficient substantiation for the donations you hope to deduct on your 2020 income tax return — and guide you on the substantiation you’ll need for gifts you’re planning this year to ensure you can enjoy the desired deductions on your 2021 return.