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Small Business Barter Transactions Are Separate from Payroll

Entrepreneurs and small business owners, especially in the start-up stages, learn quickly how to balance getting things done with income.

Every business needs actual cash coming in the door, but sometimes small businesses move forward in their development through barter. (more…)

Posted in: IRS and Tax forms, Operating a Small Business, Payroll, Payroll Processing, Rules, Regulations and Laws

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How Do You Know When it’s Time to Call the Experts In?

How Do You Know When it’s Time to Call the Experts In?

Unfortunately, too many small business owners stubbornly decide that once the doors officially open on their new venture, they will try their best to do everything on their own. That means they interview, hire, train and fire employees, create and follow a business plan, develop marketing strategies, secure some type of community presence, find a way to work with all types of vendors, repair whatever is broken, order whatever supplies are needed… oh, and also take care of payroll while also staying abreast of any changes in business and payroll taxes. Whew. (more…)

Posted in: IRS and Tax forms, Operating a Small Business, Payroll, Payroll Processing, Payroll Taxes, Rules, Regulations and Laws

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What Happens When YOU Get a Letter From the IRS?

What happens when you pick up the mail and there is an envelope from the IRS? Entrepreneurs and small business owners in every stage of development open it immediately. Those three letters definitely promote that piece of mail to priority status. (more…)

Posted in: IRS and Tax forms, Payroll, Payroll Processing, Payroll Taxes

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Are You Following the Federal Labor Standards Act?

Does your small business have to comply with the rules and regulations under the Fair Labor Standards Act? Well, of course, but which parts apply to your business and YOUR payroll?

Businesses considered covered enterprises, according to the U.S. Dept. of Labor’s Handy Reference Guide to the Fair Labor Standards Act, are those who employ “workers engaged in interstate commerce, producing goods for interstate commerce, or handle selling, or otherwise working on goods or materials that have been moved in or produced for such commerce by any person.”

For instance, under the Basic Wage Standards provisions, employees are entitled to a minimum wage of $7.25 per hour (effective June 24, 2009). However, some special provisions apply to workers in American Samoa and the Commonwealth of the Northern Marianna Islands.

34218984_sIn addition, nonexempt workers must be paid overtime at a rate of no less than one and one-half times their regular rates of pay after 40 hours of work in a workweek.

So then we have to ask, what defines a nonexempt worker?

To understand the Handy Guide, it might be better to ask who is an exempt worker? Now that includes a wide variety of workers when it comes to minimum wage and overtime pay, not limited to:

  • Executive, administrative, and professional employees
  • Outside sales employees
  • Employees in certain computer-related occupations
  • Employees of certain seasonal amusement or recreational establishments
  • Employees of certain small newspapers, fishing operations, or those engaged in newspaper delivery

There is a grey area covered by the word “certain” that makes entrepreneurs shiver.

When you are concerned with overtime pay only, there is another entire list and there is also a provision for those workers who fall under the category of “partial exemptions.”

Once you determine who does and who does not qualify for overtime pay, there is another section dedicated to computing overtime pay. It depends on how that person is paid – by the hour, by the piece or by salary. And, if salaried, you must consider if the employee is paid weekly or otherwise.

Yes, if you make a mistake or overlook something in your payroll, there are provisions in the Act for Enforcement and prosecution. Investigation, legal remedies, litigation and criminal procedures are outlined in the Act. And, as a final note, there are provisions in the Handy Guide to remind you that there are a number of other labor laws that require employer’s compliance.

The point is, simply, that every employer must comply with federal (and state) rules and regulations and IT IS COMPLEX and COMPLICATED. And, as we all know, it changes and you have new laws to understand and implement.

That is one of the reasons so many small business owners outsource payroll. The thought of making an error and being directed to those enforcement provisions is frightening. Business owners are focused on getting customers, getting work done and keeping employees and customers happy in the workplace.

The Payroll Department allows you to do what you need to do to keep the business running. We take care of accurately reporting and making deposits for payroll taxes to the government.

It’s a good arrangement.

-Elaine of The Payroll Department Blog Team

Posted in: HR Rules, Regulations and Laws, IRS and Tax forms, Payroll, Payroll Processing, Payroll Taxes, Rules, Regulations and Laws

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Big or Small – Outsourcing Payroll Makes Sense for Business

In a recent from Shared Services and Outsourcing article about outsourcing global payroll, this remark jumped out at me: (more…)

Posted in: IRS and Tax forms, Operating a Small Business, Payroll, Payroll Processing, Rules, Regulations and Laws

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Child Support Payroll Deductions Reaching Global Proportions

Just last month the Office of Child Support Enforcement issued a memorandum regarding the Uniform Interstate Family Support Act (UIFSA) (2008) and Hague Treaty Provisions. State agencies who administer the Child Support Enforcement Plan are aware that each state must enact amendments to UIFSA to integrate the provisions of the Hague Treaty. (more…)

Posted in: Payroll Processing, Rules, Regulations and Laws

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No-No’s for Nonprofits

Administration of payroll can be a daunting task with complex rules to follow and unpleasant penalties for not following those rules. But when you talk about payroll for a nonprofit organization, things can be even more complicated. There are some practices that are perfectly acceptable for a for-profit company but not for a nonprofit organization.   (more…)

Posted in: Churches and Non-Profit Employers, Operating a Small Business, Rules, Regulations and Laws

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Veterans Make Successful Small Business Owners

After serving their country, veterans often apply the leadership skills they have learned in the military in running small businesses. In fact, according to the U.S. Census Bureau, veterans own about 2.4 million U.S. businesses – that’s about 9% of all American companies. Additionally, veterans employ nearly 5.8 million people and manage $210 billion in payroll – a sizeable chuck of change!
(more…)

Posted in: Operating a Small Business, Payroll, Payroll Processing

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Assess the Danger of Payroll and Tax Errors

For thousands of Americans, the dream of being your own boss is alive and well. But of course, there are many vital aspects involved when you successfully open and operate a small business. And intense attention has to be paid to every aspect of running the business. (more…)

Posted in: IRS and Tax forms, Payroll, Payroll Processing, Payroll Taxes

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Be Confident in Your Smile When You Give Employees Pay Raises

Pay raises make employees happy, don’t they? Not only do raises make employees happy, most small business owners are very proud of their ability to not only provide employment, but also to increase wages. (more…)

Posted in: Operating a Small Business, Payroll Taxes, Rules, Regulations and Laws

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