
In many municipalities, companies must obtain a business license and pay a fee to operate. Mike Patton’s flooring company, DSB Plus, does business in about 50 municipalities in the San Francisco Bay area, costing it about $5,000 a year in licensing fees. Many of the fees are based on a company’s revenues and go up as business gets better, so Patton’s license expenditures went up 20 percent in 2015 from the previous year.
“You want to be having a conversation with someone who has expertise,” he says.
A look at some financial issues companies that work in multiple locations can encounter:
SALES TAX HEADACHES
The customers for Dan Micic’s medical supply company are primarily nursing schools, more than 500 across the country. That requires Chicago-based Medical Shipment to comply with varying sales tax laws in the states, counties, cities and other municipalities. Although nursing schools don’t pay sales tax because they’re educational institutions, there’s still paperwork relating to their tax-exempt status. It’s handled by Micic’s bookkeeper, accountant and an outside consultant; Medical Shipment paid nearly $30,000 in 2015 to comply with all sales tax laws.
“That’s higher than my health insurance costs,” Micic says.
Sales taxes are particularly problematic because there are an estimated 10,000 jurisdictions that charge taxes, and governments don’t all tax the same goods. For example, clothing is taxed in many states, but isn’t in others or only garments priced above a specified amount such as $110 are taxed.
LawnStarter, which helps people contract for lawn care services, pays licensing fees and sales tax in metropolitan areas in Texas, Florida, North Carolina and Washington, D.C. Sales tax can be a moving target; a municipality might change its tax, or what it taxes, but won’t necessarily notify everyone who does business there.
“Our office manager and our accountant have a heck of a time keeping track of it,” says Ryan Farley, chief operating officer of the Austin, Texas, based company. It also subscribes to services that watch out for sales tax changes.
TAXED HERE, TAXED THERE
Ashley Hunter’s insurance company, HM Risk Group, must pay income taxes in each of the 15 states where it operates. She relies on her accountants to handle the paperwork, which can vary widely from one state to the next. Hunter describes the emails from state tax authorities as endless; when she gets an email, she immediately forwards it to one of her accountants.
“I just can’t stress out over taxes. It’s the last thing I need to be thinking about,” says Hunter, whose company is based in Austin, Texas.
Hunter pays her accountant more than $4,000 a year to keep up with the roughly $10,000 in tax she pays every quarter.
PAID SICK LEAVE
A growing number of states and cities require employers to give employees sick pay based on the hours they work. Even if a company is based outside a city that mandates sick time, if employees work in the city — for example, on a construction job — their hours must be tracked. And the requirements, including paperwork and the hours employees must work to accrue sick time, vary from one jurisdiction to another.
Mark Carpenter’s roofing company is based in Tualitin, Oregon, but does work in nearby Portland; Seattle and Tacoma, Washington; and California. Each place has its own sick time law and requirements.
“We may work only 25 hours in an area in a year, but if we do want to make sure we are perfect,” says Carpenter, owner of Columbia Roofing & Sheet Metal. He has 60 employees, and has a full-time human resources manager and a controller who work on keeping track of sick time.
“It is next to impossible to comply with all laws,” Carpenter says.
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Follow Joyce Rosenberg at www.twitter.com/JoyceMRosenberg Her work can be found here: https://bigstory.ap.org/content/joyce-m-rosenberg
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