Sept. 19, 2017

In This Edition
Tips for Deducting Losses from a Disaster
Understanding the Differences Between Health Care Accounts
Employee Misclassification:  Beware of the Ongoing Risk
Hawkins Ash CPAs News



Tips for Deducting Losses from a Disaster
If you suffer damage to your home or personal property, you may be able to deduct the losses you incur on your federal income tax return. Here are some things you should know about deducting casualty losses:
  • Casualty loss. You may be able to deduct losses based on the damage done to your property during a disaster. A casualty is a sudden, unexpected, or unusual event, such as a natural disaster (e.g., a hurricane, tornado, flood, or earthquake), fire, accident, theft, or vandalism.
  • Normal wear and tear. A casualty loss does not include losses from normal wear and tear or progressive deterioration from age or termite damage.
  • Covered by insurance. If you insured your property, you must file a timely claim for reimbursement of your loss. If you don't, you cannot deduct the loss as a casualty or theft. 
  • When to deduct. As a general rule, you must deduct a casualty loss in the year it occurred. However, if you have a loss from a federally declared disaster area, you may have a choice of deducting the loss on your return for the year the loss occurred or on an amended return for the immediately preceding tax year. 
  • Amount of loss. Your loss is generally the lesser of (1) your adjusted basis in the property before the casualty (typically, the amount you paid for it); or (2) the decrease in fair market value of the property as a result of the casualty, reduced by any insurance or other reimbursement you received or expect to receive.  
  • $100 rule. After you have figured your casualty loss on personal-use property, you must reduce that loss by $100. This reduction applies to each casualty loss event during the year. It does not matter how many pieces of property are involved in an event.
  • 10% rule. You must reduce the total of all your casualty or theft losses on personal-use property for the year by 10% of your adjusted gross income.
Contact: Greg Kenworthy, CPA
[email protected]
608.793.3141
Understanding the Differences Between Health Care Accounts
Health care costs continue to be in the news and on everyone's mind. As a result, tax-friendly ways to pay for these expenses are very much in play for many people. The three primary players, so to speak, are Health Savings Accounts (HSAs), Flexible Spending Arrangements (FSAs) and Health Reimbursement Arrangements (HRAs).

All provide opportunities for tax-advantaged funding of health care expenses. But what's the difference between these three types of accounts? Here's an overview of each one:  

HSAs
If you're covered by a qualified high-deductible health plan (HDHP), you can contribute pretax income to an employer-sponsored HSA - or make deductible contributions to an HSA you set up yourself - up to $3,400 for self-only coverage and $6,750 for family coverage for 2017. Plus, if you're age 55 or older, you may contribute an additional $1,000.  

You own the account, which can bear interest or be invested, growing tax-deferred similar to an IRA. Withdrawals for qualified medical expenses are tax-free, and you can carry over a balance from year to year.  

FSAs
Regardless of whether you have an HDHP, you can redirect pretax income to an employer-sponsored FSA up to an employer-determined limit - not to exceed $2,600 in 2017. The plan pays or reimburses you for qualified medical expenses.  

What you don't use by the plan year's end, you generally lose - though your plan might allow you to roll over up to $500 to the next year. Or it might give you a 2.5-month grace period to incur expenses to use up the previous year's contribution. If you have an HSA, your FSA is limited to funding certain "permitted" expenses.

HRAs
An HRA is an employer-sponsored arrangement that reimburses you for medical expenses. Unlike an HSA, no HDHP is required. Unlike an FSA, any unused portion typically can be carried forward to the next year. And there's no government-set limit on HRA contributions. But only your employer can contribute to an HRA; employees aren't allowed to contribute. Read more about HRAs here>>>

Please bear in mind that these plans could be affected by health care or tax legislation. Contact our firm for the latest information, as well as to discuss these and other ways to save taxes in relation to your health care expenses.

Contact: Matt Eckelberg, CPA
715.384.1995
Employee Misclassification: Beware of the Ongoing Risk
We live in an increasingly specialized society. As such, there's a growing subset of the workforce with distinctive skill sets that can perform high-quality services. Through independent contractor relationships, companies are able to access these services without the long-term entanglements of traditional employment.

And yet, risk remains. Classifying a worker as an independent contractor frees a business from payroll tax liability and allows it to forgo providing overtime pay, unemployment compensation, and other employee benefits. Also, independent status takes an individual off the company payroll, where an employee's share of payroll taxes, plus income taxes, is automatically withheld.

For these reasons, the federal government views misclassifying a bona fide employee as an independent contractor as forcing a square peg into a round hole.  

Key Factors
The IRS has long been a primary enforcer of proper worker classification. When assessing worker classification, the agency typically looks at the:

Level of Behavioral Control
This means the extent to which the company instructs a worker on when and where to do the work, what tools or equipment to use, whom to hire, where to purchase supplies and so on. Also, control typically involves providing training and evaluating the worker's performance. The more control the company exercises, the more likely the worker is an employee.

Level of Financial Control 
Independent contractors are more likely to invest in their own equipment or facilities, incur unreimbursed business expenses, and market their services to other customers. Employees are more likely to be paid by the hour or week or some other time period; independent contractors are more likely to receive a flat fee.

Relationship of the Parties
Independent contractors are often engaged for a discrete project, while employees are typically hired permanently (or at least for an indefinite period). Also, workers who serve a key business function are more likely to be classified as employees.

The IRS examines a variety of factors within each category. You need to consider all of the facts and circumstances surrounding each worker relationship.

Protective Measures
Once you've completed your review, there are several strategies you can use to minimize your exposure. When in doubt, reclassify questionable independent contractors as employees. This may increase your tax and benefit costs, but it will eliminate reclassification risk.

From there, modify your relationships with independent contractors to better ensure compliance. For example, you might exercise less behavioral control by reducing your level of supervision or allowing workers to set their own hours or work from home.
Also, consider using an employee-leasing company. Workers leased from these firms are employees of the leasing company, which is responsible for taxes, benefits and other employer obligations.

Before and During
Sometimes a company engages an independent contractor with short-term intentions only to gradually integrate the person into its staff, creating a risk of employee misclassification. Our firm can help you review the pertinent factors and use protective measures before  and during  an engagement.


Contact: Lance Campbell, CPA
507.252.6674
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