legislation

Current Pending Legislation Affecting Businesses and Individuals

Introduction 

As your trusted advisors, we at Linkenheimer LLP strive to keep you informed about the latest legislative developments that could impact your business and personal financial planning. In this edition, we highlight significant pending legislation at both the state and federal levels that may affect our clients, including business owners, winery and restaurant owners, and individuals. We have not received any updates regarding potential federal adjustments for PG&E payments and Research & Development expense capitalization, and unfortunately, we remain pessimistic about any forthcoming changes. As a result, beginning July 1, 2024, we will proceed with finalizing the returns that were on hold pending this legislation. 

State-Level Proposed Legislation 

  • California AB 1181: Minimum Wage Increase 

AB 1181 proposes to increase the state minimum wage to $16 per hour for all employees, regardless of the size of the business, by January 1, 2025. For small business owners, this could mean higher payroll costs and a need to revisit pricing strategies and workforce management. 

  • California AB 543: Paid Family Leave Expansion 

AB 543 seeks to extend the duration […]

By |2024-07-09T20:43:30+00:00July 1st, 2024|ca, CA tax, california, law, New Tax Laws, propositions|0 Comments

Keep an Eye Out for Extenders Legislation

The pieces of tax legislation garnering the most attention these days are the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) signed into law last December and the possible “Tax Reform 2.0” that Congress might pass this fall. But for certain individual taxpayers, what happens with “extenders” legislation is also important.

Recent history

Back in December of 2015, Congress passed the PATH Act, which made a multitude of tax breaks permanent. However, there were a few valuable breaks for individuals that it extended only through 2016. The TCJA didn’t address these breaks, but they were retroactively extended through December 31, 2017, by the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2018 (BBA), which was signed into law on February 9, 2018.

Now the question is whether Congress will extend them for 2018 and, if so, when. In July, House Ways and Means Committee Chair Kevin Brady (R-TX) released a broad outline of what Tax Reform 2.0 legislation may contain. And he indicated that it probably wouldn’t include the […]

By |2018-08-21T19:30:51+00:00August 21st, 2018|New Tax Laws, tax|0 Comments

Challenging Tax Environment

challenge

Taxpayers and their advisers engaged in year-end tax planning for 2015 are challenged by the uncertain fate of “extender legislation.” In previous years, a number of “temporary” tax rules, i.e., those having a termination date specified in the Code, routinely were extended for one or two years, but this year, Congress has yet to act on a host of important provisions that expired at the end of 2014. Some or all of these expired provisions may be retroactively reinstated, thereby opening up some truly last minute year-end tax planning opportunities, but there’s no way of knowing if that will take place.
The tax breaks that expired at the end of 2014 include, for individuals: the option to deduct state and local sales and use taxes instead of state and local income taxes; the above-the line- deduction for qualified higher education expenses; tax-free IRA distributions for charitable purposes by those age 70-1/2 or older and the exclusion for up-to-$2 million of mortgage debt forgiveness on a principal residence. For businesses, tax breaks that expired at the end of last year and may be retroactively reinstated and extended include: 50% bonus first year depreciation for most new machinery, equipment and software; the $500,000 annual expensing limitation; the […]

By |2020-09-03T20:05:20+00:00December 1st, 2015|tax|0 Comments
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