In case you missed it: Oct. 29
With a few members of our editorial team out west at the CWS Summit last week, and the Webinar we...
Here on The Seamless Workforce there have been a number of discussions about employee classification and the risks associated with noncompliance. Several of you might say this is an IRS-related effort, and the chances of being audited for labor classification are as likely as me being personally audited by the IRS. While this may be true, I would caution that the odds are starting to stack against you.
With government agency coffers running on empty as a result of the current economic bailout, government has two, well, three options to recoup funds:
And executing it they are. We already introduced you to FedEx's classification woes, and, as if things couldn't get worse for the company, now New Jersey, New York and Montana plan to sue FedEx Ground, claiming the unit's classification of workers as independent contractors rather than employees violates state labor laws. What does this prove? If you're a national company, you better have all your ducks in a row regarding employee classification because if one state finds grounds to sue, all the other states you operate in are going to follow suit.
Remember my earlier comment about the chances of being audited? Consider this: How many individuals, time and resources would have to be invested in order to collect the same fees that auditing a single Fortune 500 company found to be in violation could provide? The truth is, the government knows where to find money; companies have much deeper pockets than individual taxpayers.
A recent Washington National Tax Services (WNTS) report highlights a new IRS compliance program focused on worker classification. The report states that this will be "the most comprehensive IRS examination of employment tax compliance undertaken since 1984." The new program, scheduled to begin later this year, may increase tax exposure for businesses that rely heavily on independent contractors, of which the U.S. government estimates there are as many as 10 million in the workforce.
The potential exposure and risk associated with this include:
Remember what Benjamin Franklin said? "The only things certain in life are death and taxes." We know we can't cheat death, and now it seems the government is making it increasingly harder for organizations to avoid some additional taxes as well.
With a few members of our editorial team out west at the CWS Summit last week, and the Webinar we...
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