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HonorBank   Business Advisor 
April 
2011
Community News 

 

 Honor Banker helps homeless in New Orleans

 

Lindsay



Lindsay Murray

CSR - Honor Branch

  

Spring break is usually a time when students take time off from school to enjoy oneself and relax.  However during Spring Break this year, United Way of Northwest Michigan took a group of ten students to New Orleans, LA to help rebuild houses and fellow Honor Banker, Lindsay Murray, was among them.  Following is Lindsay's account in her own words.

 

"After driving for twenty hours in a van we finally arrived to the city where houses are still destroyed everywhere and there are homeless people on every other block.  We started off the week with insulating a house and then by the end of the week we had most of the dry walling done in the two story house!

 

When we weren't helping to rebuild this house we were making food and bringing it to downtown New Orleans to help feed the homeless.  It was a great experience being able to help people rebuild their lives starting with their houses that they have been unable to come home to for over five years now.  While it was by no means comfortable, it was worth it to see the end result of a house ready to be painted!"

 

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 The Non-Optimized Life
 

When you measure an activity, you can improve it.

Computers make it easy to optimize just about every portion of your life.

 

Surely, you can optimize a website or a blog for traffic. You can optimize ads to make them yield more results. You can optimize your presentation style to close more sales or change more minds. You can optimize your workout to get faster and stronger. You can optimize your diet to lose weight and gain muscle.

You can optimize your sleeping patterns to get more rest in less time. Cosmo even says you can optimize your sex life...And then, at some point, you realize you're spending your best energy on optimization, not on creation.

  

This is a fine line to walk, because of course you can optimize your creation time as well! You can develop habits to amplify your best thoughts and make it likely you'll ship work that matters. I get that. But I also worry that a never-ending cycle of optimization can become a crutch, a place to hide when you really should be confronting the endless unknown, not the banal stair step of incremental optimization. While Yahoo was optimizing their home page in 2001, the guys at Google were inventing something totally new.

That's one reason I resist the temptation to optimize this blog for traffic and yield. I'd rather force myself to improve it by having the guts to write better posts instead.

 

By Seth Godin

[blogmailfromseth@yahoo.com]

Equal Housing Lender
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 Small Business Tax Advice:

5 Common Mistakes 

With tax time upon us, we review five tips to help you with avoid common mistakes. 
 
Not saving receipts of less than $75

 

People sometimes get excited when they hear that the IRS doesn't require receipts for meal and entertainment expenses of less than $75.  Dont fall into this trap.

 

You may not need the receipt, but you still need to have some sort of record documenting where you went, when you went there, who you were with, the business purpose of the meal or entertainment and the business relationship between you and the people you were with.  When you look at the list of requirements, what could be better for documentation than a credit-card charge receipt? In most cases, the charge slip will already have printed on it the name and address of the restaurant and the date and time you were there. All you have to do is write on the slip who you were with and what the business relationship and purpose was of the event. While a receipt may not be required, for many people hanging onto the receipt is going to be easier than keeping an entirely separate log of the expense information.

Lumping equipment with supplies

Equipment is a capital expenditure, and capital expenditures have to be depreciated.

 

Special rules do allow most small businesses to write off up to $24,000 in capital expenditures for tangible personal property (such as computers and office furnishings) in the year it is purchased. However, you still have to report these purchases as capital expenditures and elect to use this special method of expensing the costs.

 

What if you don't report the purchases properly and instead just deduct your computers and other capital items as supplies? The IRS could rule that you improperly characterized the expense and are not entitled to the deduction you claimed.

 

Not only that, but since you failed to properly categorize the property or make an election, you could also find that youre required to add the cost of the property to your overall investment in your business. Result: no current deduction at all.

Forgetting to track reimbursable expenses

Many small-business owners pay for some business expenses with cash out of their own pocket or through a personal credit card.  That's fine.  The mistake is if they don't track those costs and submit the expenses to their company for reimbursement. Also, the company must have an established plan that does deduct the expenses and enables reimbursements to be nontaxable to employees.  But if you don't keep track of and substantiate the expenses, you will at best have a non-reimbursed business expense. These can be deducted on your personal tax return only to the extent that all of your miscellaneous Schedule A expenses exceed 2% of your adjusted gross income.

Miscalculating automobile deductions

Part of the problem here is that there are many ways to calculate deductions for business use of a car. Here are some brief guidelines that can help you:

  • You can take a standard mileage deduction per business mile, or you can take a deduction for actual expenses, including depreciation of the car. But you cannot claim the standard mileage deduction and the depreciation for actual expenses.
  • You can switch between the two methods. However, if you go from standard mileage to actual expenses, you cannot take depreciation using the MACRS (modified accelerated cost recovery system) depreciation system. You have to take a straight-line depreciation, which typically yields a smaller initial deduction.
  • If the car is owned by the corporation, 100% of the costs can be deducted. However, any personal use by an employee has to be included as taxable income to the employee. Your tax pro or IRS Publication 917 ("Business Use of a Car") can help you figure out how to determine the value of personal use.

Giving more than you can receive, tax-wise

It seems like every year I see at least one small business saying that it had a couple thousand dollars in deductible business gifts in the previous year.

 

Now, I have no problem with gifts to clients and business associates. But a four-figure deduction for gifts gets my attention, because the IRS allows us to deduct only up to $25 worth of gifts to any individual per year. So $2,000 in deductions would mean that gifts were given at least 80 different people. Thats a lot of gifts.

 

Usually it turns out that while the money was indeed spent, it was divided into several gifts that were more than $25 a piece. There's nothing wrong with being generous. But only that first $25 per recipient is a deductible business expense. The rest is a nondeductible expense.

Sometimes it does seem as if no good deed goes unpunished.


 Joseph Anthony is a tax professional in Portland, OR, who writes about finance and tax issues affecting small businesses.


News You Can Use

 

 
  

Highlights of Proposed Michigan Tax Reform Plan  

Last week, Governer Snyder, Senate Majority Leader Richardville, and House Speaker Bolger reached an agreement on Tax Reform.  Here's an overview.

 

  • Eliminate the MBT and replace it with a flat 6% Corporate Income Tax. In general, only "C" corporations would be subject to the tax. Other businesses, such as partnerships, sole-proprietorships, and most limited liability companies would be exempt.
  • Individual income tax rate would be reduced from 4.35% to 4.25% on October 1, 2011, as scheduled.  Broaden the individual income tax base in order to capture all individual income earned in the state regardless of source and eliminate all credits and deductions related to the individual income tax, with the exception of the personal exemption, homestead property tax credit, and a few other subtractions.
  • 6% Corporate Income Tax
  • The Small Business Alternative Credit is retained from the MBT. All other credits are eliminated for CIT purposes.
  • Taxpayers with a CIT liability of $100 or less need not file a CIT return or pay the tax.
  • A unitary business group is required to file a combined return.
  • Insurance companies are subject to a tax equal to 1.25% of gross direct premiums written on property or risk located or residing in Michigan.
  • Financial institutions are subject to a franchise tax equal to 0.29% of the financial institution's net capital. Net capital means equity capital as computed in accordance with GAAP less the average daily book value of U.S. and Michigan obligations. Net capital is based on a 5-year average.
  • Public and private pensions, senior dividends and interest, and political contributions are no longer subtracted from AGI. Thus, these items will now be taxable.
  • The personal exemption allowance is fixed at the 2011 level of $3,700. Further, the exemption is phased out at a certain level of income. All special exemptions are repealed except for the exemption for disabled persons. Special provisions for military personnel and veterans are retained.
  • Changes to the property tax credit will reduce the 100% credit for seniors to 80%, increase the current 60% credit for other claimants to 80%, and retain the 100% credit for disabled persons. The property tax credit maximum of $1,200 is retained.
  • The phase-out range for the property tax credit is lowered to $61,000 to $70,000 from the current $73,650 to $82,650.
  • Many other credits are repealed going forward including:

o Earned income tax credit

o Energy efficient home improvement credit

o Historic preservation credit

o Film production wage withholding credit

o City income tax credit

o Gifts: public art, radio, colleges, universities, archives, museums, libraries credit

o Community foundations, food banks and homeless shelters credit

o College tuition and fees credit

o Automobile donation credit

o Family/Individual development accounts credit

o Renewable energy surcharge credit

o Medical care savings accounts credit