Home | Newsroom | About Us | Upcoming Events | FAQ | Contact | Blog | RSS RSS
 
 
 

Posts Tagged ‘BOE’

The Way to Ensure Long Term Success: Make the Entire State an Enterprise Zone

Tuesday, January 25th, 2011 | Enterprise Zones, Tax News

 

George Runner, member of the BOE wrote this today:

Enterprise zones are one of California’s only remaining public policy measures specifically aimed at attracting and retaining jobs. These zones – there are currently 42 statewide – target economically distressed areas of the state with special state and local incentives to encourage business investment and promote the creation of new jobs. Since 1984 these tax incentives have been attracting new investment and allowing private sector market forces to revive local economies and create jobs.

It makes no sense to eliminate these vital economic development zones – we should instead be expanding them. Better yet, we should make all of California an enterprise zone. After all, the entire state is now economically distressed.

Making the whole state an enterprise zone would boost California’s economic competitiveness, which has languished in recent years as a result of ever mounting regulations, taxes and fees. It’s a tough sell to attract employers when the only thing good about our climate is the weather.

Read the entire article here.

BOE Approves Nassco Confirming That EZ Credits Can Offset AMT!

Thursday, November 18th, 2010 | Enterprise Zones, Tax News

 

Yesterday, the Board of Equalization voted to adopt the Nassco Formal Opinion.  This means  that EZ credits can be used to offset the Alternative Minimum Tax.  The decision will be final 30 days from yesterday at which time the opinion will be posted on the BOE’s website.

BOE March Bulletin

Friday, March 19th, 2010 | Tax News

New tax rates to take effect April 1, 2010
Voters in two cities in California have approved new transactions (sales) and use taxes (district taxes) that are effective April 1, 2010. The new rates apply only within each city’s incorporated limits. The tax rates outside the incorporated city limits will remain the same.

City of Gustine 8.75 percent
The City of Gustine, located in Merced County, approved a 0.50 percent City of Gustine transactions and use tax, (GSTG/224) which will increase the tax rate within city limits to 8.75 percent from 8.25 percent.

City of San Mateo 9.50 percent
The City of San Mateo, located in San Mateo County, approved a 0.25 percent City of San Mateo transactions and use tax (SMTG/226), which will increase the tax rate within city limits to 9.50 percent from 9.25 percent.

Is your address in the city limits or unincorporated county?
You can verify whether your business is located within a city that has a district tax. District boundaries are generally defined by city and county lines. Many California zip codes overlap city and county lines. To determine which district taxes affect your sales, visit www.boe.ca.gov/sutax/ cityaddresses.htm for a listing of city links. If you do not find the city you are looking for on our website, you may contact the city directly to determine whether or not your business or your customer is within the city boundaries.

Tax Rate Locator
As an additional resource for obtaining the sales and use tax rate for a specific address, you may want to use the free tax rate locator service on the Group 1 Software Local Sales and Use Tax Rate Locator website. That site allows any person to determine local tax jurisdictions and tax rates based on address. However, the geotax site is not maintained by the Board of Equalization (BOE) and the link is provided only as a public service. The BOE is not responsible for the content or accuracy of the information shown on that site.

For more information
For information on district taxes, please see publication 44, District Taxes. For updated tax rates throughout California, see publication 71, California City and County Sales and Use Tax Rates. BOE publications are available at www.boe.ca.gov.

If you are a qualified purchaser, your 2009 use tax return and payment are due by April 15, 2010

Revenue and Taxation Code (RTC) section 6225 now requires a “qualified purchaser” to register with the BOE and report and pay use tax directly to the BOE annually. In general, use tax applies to purchases of merchandise from out-of-state sellers (both foreign and domestic) for storage, use, or other consumption in California. If the out-of-state seller does not collect use tax on your purchase, then you must pay the applicable use tax directly to the BOE. This is true whether the purchases were made in person, over the Internet, by telephone, or by mail order. If an out-of-state seller charges you California tax, you should be sure to obtain a receipt. The use tax rate for any location is the same as the sales tax rate and applies to the purchase price of the property.

A “qualified purchaser,” is a person that meets all of the following conditions:
• Receives at least $100,000 in gross receipts from business operations per calendar year. Note: Gross receipts is the total of all receipts from both in-state and out-of-state business operations.

• Is not required to hold a seller’s permit or certificate of registration for use tax.
• Is not a holder of a use tax direct payment permit.
• Is not otherwise registered with the BOE to report use tax.
While the BOE has contacted many qualified purchasers in order to register them, it remains the qualified purchaser’s responsibility to register with the BOE. To register for a use tax account complete a BOE-404-A, Use Tax Registration, and submit it to the BOE. A qualified purchaser is also required to file a return, reporting and paying use tax on the total purchase price of tangible merchandise that is subject to use tax during the preceding calendar year, and for which tax was not paid to a retailer required to collect the use tax.

Please note: This does do not apply to the purchase of a vehicle, vessel, or aircraft. Registered qualified purchasers can electronically file (eFile) a use tax return through the BOE’s free eFiling system (BOE-file). The return for 2009, along with payment, is due by April 15, 2010.

For additional information regarding your registration and reporting requirements, please refer to publication 123, California Businesses: How to Identify California Use Tax Due, and special notice, L-232, New Registration and Reporting Requirements for Certain Purchasers (September 2009). For additional information on eFiling, refer to publication 159, eFile Guide. All BOE forms and publications are available at www.boe.ca.gov.

Certain nonprofit organizations are regarded as consumers, rather than retailers

Effective immediately through January 1, 2015, Assembly Bill 1486 provides that 501(c) membership organizations are consumers and not retailers of certain sales of tangible personal property (merchandise) sold to the organizations’ members under specific conditions. The requirements are:
1. The merchandise bears a logo or other identifying mark of the organization and is a promotional item or an item commonly associated with use by a member to demonstrate the member’s association with, or membership in, the organization.
2. The selling price of the merchandise to the member of the organization does not exceed the cost by the nonprofit organization to obtain and transfer the merchandise. The costs include any applicable sales or use tax paid by the nonprofit organization.
3. Reasonable steps are taken by the organization to ensure that no member is allowed to acquire more than 30 identical items of this merchandise or to resell the items to another person.
4. The merchandise is not distributed for political campaigning purposes or issue advocacy.

The purpose of this bill is to relieve nonprofit organizations from the burdensome and time-consuming task of maintaining records and filing sales tax returns for their sales of promotional items to members, when the sales prices of those promotional items are no more than the cost to the organization.

Flavored cigarettes banned in U.S.
Effective September 22, 2009, cigarettes that contain certain characterizing flavors are considered adulterated and the manufacture, import, and sale of these products are banned in the United States as authorized by the Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act (FSPTCA). The FSPTCA provides the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) with regulatory authority over the manufacture, marketing, and distribution of tobacco products. According to the Act:
“…a cigarette or any of its component parts (including the tobacco, filter, or paper) shall not contain, as a constituent (including a smoke constituent) or additive, an artificial or natural flavor (other than tobacco or menthol) or an herb or spice, including strawberry, grape, orange, clove, cinnamon, pineapple, vanilla, coconut, licorice, cocoa, chocolate, cherry or coffee, that is a characterizing flavor of the tobacco product or tobacco smoke.”
These products can no longer be manufactured, imported, or sold in the United States.

For general information regarding the FDA’s Tobacco Program and the ban on flavored cigarettes, please refer to the FDA’s website at www.fda.gov/TobaccoProducts/default.htm.

In compliance with the new federal law, flavored cigarettes banned by the FSPTCA have been removed and may continue to be removed from the California Tobacco Directory by California’s Attorney General. Cigarette and Tobacco Products Licensees should refer regularly to the California Tobacco Directory provided at www.ag.ca.gov/tobacco/directory.php for a product list of cigarette manufacturers and brand families that are authorized for sale in California.

It is illegal for distributors to affix a California tax stamp on packages of cigarettes or pay the tax on roll-your-own product unless the manufacturer and the brand family are listed in the California Tobacco Directory. Sales of cigarettes and roll-your-own products that are not listed in the California Tobacco Directory are prohibited and could be seized by federal, state, or local law enforcement authorities.

Sales of toasted sandwiches are taxable
Sandwich shops, delicatessens, and other retailers that sell sandwiches, beverages and other hot food need to be aware that to-go sales of hot prepared food products are taxable (see exception below for hot bakery items). A food product is considered a hot food product if it is heated to a temperature above room temperature (for example, grilling or toasting a sandwich, dipping a sandwich in hot gravy, or using infrared lights, steam tables, or microwave ovens). Examples of hot prepared food products include hot sandwiches, pizza, barbecued chicken, soup, consommé, bouillon, steak, and so forth.

Food is considered “hot” even if it has cooled by the time of sale since it was intended to be sold as a hot food. If your customer buys a cold food product to go and heats the food product in a microwave oven that is accessible to the public, the sale is not taxable. It is considered a sale of a cold food product to go.

Exception: Sales of hot bakery goods are not taxable when sold to go, unless they are sold as part of a combination package. For example, a combination of hot coffee and a doughnut for a single price is taxable because the combination package includes a hot food or hot beverage. For additional information see publication 22, Dining and Beverage Industry.

Are you familiar with the BOE’s website?
A wealth of information is available on the BOE’s website at www.boe.ca.gov.
On our website you’ll find an overview of the BOE’s organization, the professional history and qualifications of each Board Member, including the State Controller, who is the fifth, ex-officio, Board Member. Sections about the tax programs administered by the BOE are provided as well. These programs include: Sales and Use, Property, Timber, Fuel, and Excise Taxes, and Environmental Fees.

We also offer services to assist you! Our Help Center pages contain answers to frequently asked questions and if you have a question not addressed on the FAQ page, we provide a toll-free number for our Taxpayer Information Section so you can speak with a live person for assistance. On our website, you’ll find instructions and requirements for efiling, along with the methods of making electronic payments via credit card or Electronic Funds Transfer (EFT). We provide access to tax returns, required forms, and reference materials such as sales and use tax regulations, and BOE publications geared to assist specific business owners (for example, restaurants, jewelers and contractors) in learning the tax requirements that pertain to each industry. Many of our publications have been translated into various foreign languages as well.

There is a section on taxpayers’ rights that includes links to our Taxpayers’ Rights Advocate Office, the Tax Appellate Program, Offer in Compromise, and our Settlement Program. The Tax Appellate Program is the conduit to file appeals as the result of a BOE audit. The Offer in Compromise Program allows you to make a proposal to pay the BOE an amount that is less than the full amount of the tax or fee due on an account. Our Settlement Program provides that while you are pursuing an appeal (such as a petition for redetermination, an administrative protest, or a claim for refund) you may be able to propose a settlement of your case.

You will also find the dates and locations for future Board and Committee meetings. Should your interests focus on current or past legislation, links to these are also available. A yearly index and archived copies of the Tax Information Bulletin are also available for reference.

We are always working to develop new content that will be useful to people doing business in California. We hope you will explore and access the valuable information provided on the BOE’s website.

BOE’s online educational seminars

The BOE announced the expansion of its available online educational products to include the virtual replication of Small Business Fairs and Nonprofit Seminars.

These online products are a cost effective, convenient way for taxpayers to learn about the BOE tax programs and how to comply with California tax laws. The virtual seminars are designed specifically to enhance the in-person attention taxpayers can get through sales and use tax classes offered in BOE offices, and seminars offered throughout the state.

The BOE also offers a total virtual one-stop-shop option for Small Business Fairs and Nonprofit Seminars. The site includes links to our seminar partners: Internal Revenue Service, Franchise Tax Board, Employment Development Department, U.S. Small Business Administration, and other local, state and federal agencies. There you will find contact information, presentations, videos, audio recordings and much more!

BOE Denies FTB's Appeal and Holds That EZ Credits Can Reduce AMT

Tuesday, September 22nd, 2009 | Uncategorized

Enterprise Zone credits may reduce AMT, says Board
The Board of Equalization has denied the FTB’s petition for rehearing in the Appeal of Nassco Holdings, Inc. (February 25, 2009) Cal. St. Bd. of Equal. Case No. 317434. The Board has also directed its staff to draft a formal opinion in the matter, for consideration.
In the original, unpublished letter decision of Nassco, the Board ruled that a taxpayer may use Enterprise Zone tax credits to reduce AMT. Similarly situated taxpayers, who want to apply their Enterprise Zone credits against AMT, must file claims for refund citing the same arguments that the taxpayer cited in the Nassco appeal.

California State Board of Equalization Specialists Verify Business Permits

Wednesday, September 2nd, 2009 | Tax News

The California State Board of Equalization (BOE) today began sending letters to 5,188 retailers in 6 different zip codes notifying them of upcoming visits by BOE specialists. The affected zip codes receiving letters this month are: San Jose (95128, 95129, 95130, and 95131); Garden Grove (92840); and Temecula (92592).

The BOE specialists will be canvassing the areas to ensure that businesses are properly registered and paying taxes. The new enhanced compliance effort began in September 2008, with 130 zip codes already notified. Specialists have visited more than 74,000 businesses statewide.

These visits are part of the Statewide Compliance and Outreach Program (SCOP). The goal of these visits by the BOE specialists is to ensure all businesses are properly registered so there is no unfair business advantage over those businesses that are properly registered and reporting their taxes and/or fees. A recent two-year pilot estimated that more than three percent of businesses operating in California do so without the appropriate permits or licenses that allow for collection of sales and use tax, as well as other taxes and fees. Non-compliance is a part of the more than $2 billion sales and use tax gap. The tax gap is the difference between the amount of taxes owed and the amount paid.

The BOE specialists will conduct checks for seller’s permits of all storefronts and other known business locations.  When the specialists visit, business owners will be asked business-related questions and not be asked for personal financial information. If an owner has questions about the inquiries from the specialists, they should call their regional SCOP team contact or the Taxpayer Information Call Center at 800-400-7115.

There are seven teams of approximately eight people each located throughout the state that began their door-to-door visits based on zip code. Registered retailers will be checked for appropriate permits and licenses, as well as service industry businesses, especially if the particular service industry also sells taxable retail items. Those businesses found to be out of compliance will be given instructions on how to register with the BOE and given information about other necessary licenses. For more information on the Statewide Compliance and Outreach Program, click here.

 
 
Home | Newsroom | About Us | Upcoming Events | FAQ | Contact | Blog | RSS RSS
5670 Wilshire Blvd, Suite 1530, Los Angeles, CA 90036, Ph: 310-402-2780, Fax: 866-381-3118
© 2010 C&I Tax Consultants. All rights reserved.