Small Businesses And Social Distancing

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Newsletter from

Steve Richardson & Company

Certified Public Accountants

April 1, 2020

Small Businesses and Social Distancing

 

To Our Clients and Friends:

The curfew order
A curfew order shutting down ‘non-essential’ small businesses is in effect nationwide. To the best of my knowledge small businesses in Tuscaloosa are in full compliance with these orders. That’s good!

The curfew orders are not voluntary.

Do not lose your business licenses
Law enforcement officers are actively visiting non-compliant small businesses. These officers have the power to permanently revoke business licenses. Thankfully this has not happened in Tuscaloosa but it is happening.

Essential businesses are allowed to stay open
This is not a ‘free-pass’ for essential businesses. We are required to follow certain public health standards and rules.

Our CPA firm is an essential business; even so, we must comply with certain public health standards as does Publix, Lowe’s, and the other essential businesses.

Note: I’m actually impressed with our Publix. They have a substantial staff dedicated to keeping the store as hygienic as possible. Every half hour, they disinfect every surface in their store. They are doing the best that can be done and setting a good example for other essential businesses.

Public health officials in Tuscaloosa and Mayor Maddox have made it crystal clear to me and our CPA firm that we must do better.

Virtual Meetings Only
Mayor Maddox and our public health officials are insisting that as many of our client meetings as possible be done via US Mail, e-mail and by virtual means. They are very serious.

This will not be a hardship for us; our CPA firm has clients in 35 states and 25 foreign counties. We know how to do this. We can take care of you!

Do Not Delay!!!
Do not delay in getting your 2019 tax returns done! Much of the COVID-19 stimulus and tax relief is based on 2019 tax returns and financial data. Especially important: many of the “forgiveness” features related to COVID-19 SBA loans, likewise, depend upon 2019 tax returns. Do Not Delay!

Sincerely,

Steve Richardson, CPA

 

 

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The 5th COVID-19 Newsletter

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Newsletter from

Steve Richardson & Company

Certified Public Accountants

March 31, 2020

The 5th COVID-19 Newsletter


To Our Clients and Friends:

We asked a local bank for clarification on how a business applies for the Payment Protection Program (PPP) Loan. They have been very helpful but the message the bank is sending is that this is a new and “evolving” program. I do know that the bank is “selling” these loans hard because they make money processing these SBA loans with zero risk to the bank.

Following is what the bank told us
The final qualifying guidelines and application process for the Small Business Administration’s Payment Protection Program (PPP) Loan have not been published. We are asking interested parties to begin the process of gathering information that might be necessary for submitting a request. NO GUARANTY, NO COLLATERAL.

Along with the list of financial and business-related information below, an SBA Borrower Information Form is attached. While we expect the application for the PPP loan to be streamlined. Please take some time to review the information the SBA has historically required for their guarantee loans.

Steve’s Note: The bank expects the application for the PPP loan to be streamlined

SBA needs the following information to determine if your business qualifies for the PPP loan and to calculate your maximum loan amount:

  1. SBA Borrower Information Form (See Attached):
  2. Financial Information
    1. Most Recent Business Tax Return (2018 or 2019), or YTD 2019 P&L and Balance Sheet if taxes not done.
    2. YTD Profit & Loss and Balance Sheet dated 02-15-2020
Steve’s Note: Tax returns for 2018 and 2019 was going to be required. P&Ls for 2019 and through 02-15-2020 will be required. Given some of the calculations required in the law, I strongly encourage you to have your 2019 through 02-15-2020 P&Ls done on a month-by-month basis. Month-by-month data is required in the law for all debt forgiveness calculations.
  1. Business Ownership/Authorization Documents (Articles of Incorporation, Licenses, etc.)
  2. Brief description of how COVID-19 has impacted your business
  3. Payroll and Employee Related Expenses:
    1. Payroll reports by month (in total and by employee) for 2019, indicating which employees are full-time and which are part-time
    2. Payroll reports by pay period (in total and by employee) for January-March of 2020, indicating which employees are full-time and which are part-time.
    3. Compensation to any one employee in excess of $100,000 for the prior 12 months
    4. Copies of quarterly 941 reports and state unemployment reports for all of 2019 and Q1 2020
    5. Copy of 2019 940 report
    6. 2019 W-2s for all employees
    7. Payments for group health insurance premiums, from April 1, 2019 to March 31, 2020
    8. Payments to or income of a sole proprietor or independent contractor that is a wage, commission, income, net earnings from self-employment, or similar compensation from April 1, 2019 to March 31, 2020
    9. 1099s for 2019 for independent contractors that would otherwise be an employee of your business. Do NOT include 1099s for services.
    10. Document the sum of all retirement plan funding that was paid by the Company Owner (do not include funding that came from the employees out of their paycheck deferrals).
      1. Include all employees, including company owners.
      2. 401K plans, Simple IRA, SEP IRAs.

Steve’s Note: The point of this SBA program is employment retention. Detailed payroll data will be required by employee, by pay period, by month, by quarter and by year. This data will need to reconcile with the payroll tax returns as filed. If they do not reconcile, payroll tax reports will need to be amended. I know how to do this stuff, but, frankly, Liz knows how to do it much better that I do. I might pass this task over to Liz.

Steve’s Note: I am here to assist you. Please feel free to contact me with questions. In our lifetime, the events of 2020 are unprecedented.

Sincerely,

Steve Richardson, CPA

 

 

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The 4th COVID-19 Newsletter

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Newsletter from

Steve Richardson & Company

Certified Public Accountants

March 31, 2020

The 4th COVID-19 Newsletter

To Our Clients and Friends:

If you’re wondering what happened to the promised 3rd letter, Todd, my associate, said it was confusing and misleading. When we looked at it together, he had a valid point. The mythical 3rd letter is being restarted from scratch.

This letter is a summary and a clarification of things I’ve learned thus far.

Individual help
All US residents with adjusted gross income up to $75,000 ($150,000 married), who are not a dependent of another are eligible for the full $1,200 ($2,400 married) rebate. In addition, they are eligible for an additional $500 per child. This is true even for those who have no income, as well as those whose income comes entirely from non-taxable benefit programs, such as Supplemental Security Income (SSI) benefits.

Note: These payments are based, in part, on data in the 2019 tax returns! Get your 2019 tax returns prepared and filed as soon as possible!

Key point: The rebate is treated like other refundable tax credits, such as the child tax credit and earned income tax credit, and is not taxable income. For the vast majority of Americans, no action on their part will be required to receive a rebate check since the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) will use a taxpayer’s 2019 tax return if filed (or their 2018 return if they haven’t filed their 2019 return).

Businesses have several benefits in the CARES Act
One is the employee retention tax credit.

This is a credit designed to prevent layoffs and keep workers on the job. Tax-exempt employers (including churches) are eligible.

Eligible employers are allowed a credit against employment taxes (FICA, income tax) based on a specific formula. The fully refundable credit would be available to any business or non-profit that has a furloughed or reduced workforce as a result of a forced closure or the quarantining of employees.

The credit would also be available to any business that has seen a 50 percent drop in gross receipts when compared to the same quarter last year. Many businesses, churches in particular, will be able to show this 50% drop in gross revenues.

A special rule applies to eligible small employers (those with 100 employees or less) that provides a 50-percent credit for all wages paid, regardless of whether employees are furloughed or not.

The credit is capped at $10,000 and is refundable against payroll taxes.

Key point: If an eligible employer receives a forgivable loan under the Paycheck Protection Program, it is not eligible for the employee retention credit under this section.

Paycheck Protection Program (PPP)
The Act establishes a new US Small Business Administration loan program called the Paycheck Protection Program for small employers (including nonprofits and churches) with 500 or fewer employees to help prevent workers from losing their jobs and small businesses from failing due to economic losses caused by the COVID-19 pandemic.

The program provides federally guaranteed loans to cover payroll and other operating expenses.

To be eligible, the small employer must have been harmed by the pandemic between February 15, 2020, and June 30, 2020. The Act requires eligible borrowers to make a good-faith certification that:

  • The loan is necessary due to the current economic conditions caused by COVID-19;
  • The funds will be used to retain workers and maintain payroll, lease, and utility payments; and
  • They are not receiving duplicative funds for the same uses from another SBA program.

Principal amounts on the loan for the first eight-week period from the time the loan was made may be forgiven if used to pay:

  • Compensation under $100,000 (per employee)
  • Payment of interest on any obligation
  • Rent
  • Utilities

The amount of loan forgiveness is reduced based on an employer’s decline in workers or wages (declines between February 15, 2020, and April 26, 2020, do not reduce the amount of loan forgiveness provided the employer returns to pre-decline levels by June 30, 2020).

Any portion of a loan not forgiven is carried forward as an ongoing loan with a term of ten years at four percent interest.

The program is retroactive to February 15, 2020, to help bring workers who may have already been laid off back onto payrolls. The loan period ends on June 30, 2020.

Key point: If an eligible employer receives an employee retention credit (see above), it is not eligible for the Paycheck Protection Program.

Unemployment insurance provisions
The Act creates a temporary Pandemic Unemployment Assistance program through December 31, 2020, to provide payment to those not traditionally eligible for unemployment benefits (self-employed, independent contractors, those with limited work history, and others) who are unable to work as a direct result of the coronavirus public health emergency.

The Act provides an additional 13 weeks of unemployment benefits through December 31, 2020, to help those who remain unemployed after weeks of state unemployment benefits are no longer available.

Key point: The application of this provision to church employees is unclear. State and federal laws exempt from unemployment taxes “service performed in the employ of a church, a convention or association of churches, or an organization that is operated primarily for religious purposes and that is operated, supervised, controlled, or principally supported by a church or convention or association of churches.”

Church Clarification Needed!
Does the CARES Act’s temporary Pandemic Unemployment Assistance program apply to church employees on the ground that they “are not traditionally eligible for unemployment benefits”? This question needs clarification.

Sincerely,

Steve Richardson, CPA

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