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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: telecommuting, Most Recent at Top [Help]
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1. “Lame Duck” session of Congress should pass Multi-State Worker Tax Fairness Act

There is a reason that Congress’s post-election meetings are called “lame duck” sessions. They often aren’t pretty. Senators and representatives not returning to Congress (because they retired or were defeated for re-election) may not have strong incentives to legislate responsibly. Senators and representatives who will be part of the new Congress starting in January may feel that the lame duck session is an imposition on them since they will be returning to Washington in the new year.

Nevertheless, it is sometimes possible for “lame duck” convocations of Congress to be productive. Some observers, for example, thought that the legislative session following the 2010 election was constructive. Among other accomplishments, that session of Congress abolished Don’t Ask-Don’t Tell and extended President Bush’s tax cuts – though, of course, opponents of those decisions would have preferred that Congress hadn’t legislated on these matters.

Can the “lame duck” congressional session following the 2014 election be productive? In the hope that it can be, I suggest that the 113th Congress enact in its final days the Multi-State Worker Tax Fairness Act, previously known as the Telecommuter Tax Fairness Act.

The Multi-State Tax Worker Tax Fairness Act has been introduced in the House by Representatives Himes, DeLauro, and Esty as H.R. 4085. In the Senate, the Act has been introduced as S. 2347 by Senators Blumenthal and Murphy.

The Act is aimed at the pernicious tax practice by which New York (and other states) impose income taxes on nonresident telecommuters for days such telecommuters work at their out-of-state homes and never set foot in the Empire State. New York’s extraterritorial taxation results in double taxation of nonresident telecommuters as New York taxes the income earned on these days while the state in which the telecommuter lives and works legitimately taxes this day also since the home state is providing public services to the telecommuter on the day she works at home.

Sunrise at the George Washington Bridge. Photo by  Anthony Quintano. CC BY 2.0 via quintanomedia Flickr.
Sunrise at the George Washington Bridge. Photo by Anthony Quintano. CC BY 2.0 via quintanomedia Flickr.

Telecommuting is growing because, in a modern economy, it can entail significant benefits. Telecommuting extends job opportunities to individuals for whom traditional commuting is difficult, for example, the disabled, parents of small children, persons who live far from major employment centers. Telecommuting is also good for the environment, reducing the carbon footprints of employees who spend some of their work days at home and need not physically commute to work on those days.

Our concerns about Ebola reinforce the benefits of telecommuting. In an earlier time, a firm combating contamination simply had to shut its operations. Today, modern technology – the internet, email, cell phones, social media – can instead permit individuals to work and communicate with each other from their homes.

The benefits of interstate telecommuting explain why a diverse coalition supports the Multi-State Tax Worker Fairness Act to avoid double state income taxation of telecommuters on their days they work at home. Among the groups supporting the Act are the American Legion, the Christopher and Dana Reeve Foundation, the National Taxpayers Union, The Small Business & Entrepreneurship Council, the Association for Commuter Transsportion, The Military Spouse JD Network, and the Telework Coalition.

It is, in short, anomalous for New York to double tax the income of nonresident telecommuters on the days such telecommuters work at their out-of-state homes and never enter the Empire State. New York engages in this double taxation throughout the country. In one instructive case, New York taxed Mr. Manohar Kakar of Gilbert, Arizona on the income he earned working at home in the Grand Canyon State. New York engages in such double taxation despite the long-term costs to New York of chasing from its borders firms which embrace interstate telecommuting. Thus, the Multi-State Worker Tax Fairness Act would be good, not just for telecommuting, but for New York itself by encouraging firms which rely on out-of-state telecommuters to stay in the Empire State.

The upcoming “lame duck” session of Congress might fit the dominant pattern of post-election convocations of the House and Senate which accomplish little. But maybe not. If members of the 113th Congress choose to spend their final days in office productively, a productive place to start would be the Multi-State Worker Tax Fairness Act. Passing the Act would be good for the country by making state income tax systems safe for interstate telecommuting.

The post “Lame Duck” session of Congress should pass Multi-State Worker Tax Fairness Act appeared first on OUPblog.

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2. Make the tax system safe for interstate telecommuting: pass H.R. 4085

EZ Thoughts

By Edward Zelinsky


Telecommuting benefits employers, employees, and society at large. Telecommuting expands work opportunities for the disabled, for those who live far from major metropolitan areas, and for the parents of young children who value the ability to work at home. Telecommuting also removes cars from our crowded highways and enables employers to hire from a wider and more diverse pool of potential employees.

It is thus anomalous that New York State’s personal income tax discourages interstate telecommuting by taxing the compensation non-resident telecommuters earn on the days such telecommuters work at their out-of-state homes. Under the misleading label “convenience of the employer,” New York subjects telecommuters to double income taxation by their state of residence as well as by New York – even though New York provides non-resident telecommuters with no public services on the days such interstate telecommuters work at their out-of-state homes outside of New York’s borders.

Some of New York’s elected officials profess interest in making New York tax policy more rational and family-friendly. These officials, however, have shown no willingness to repeal the “convenience of the employer” rule to stop New York’s double state income taxation. Taxing non-resident, non-voters for public services they do not use is just too politically tempting for Albany to resist.

Fortunately, federal officials have begun to recognize the unfairness and irrationality of the double state income taxation inflicted on non-residents by New York’s “convenience of the employer” rule. Most recently, US Representative Jim Himes, joined by his House colleagues Elizabeth Esty and Rosa DeLauro, introduced H.R. 4085, The Multi-State Worker Tax Fairness Act of 2014.

Representative Himes, and his colleagues, are to be commended for introducing this much needed legislation. If enacted into law, H.R. 4085 would make the tax system safe for interstate telecommuting.

Metro-North EMD FL9 leaving Stamford, CT. Public domain via Wikimedia Commons.

In previous incarnations, legislation along these lines was denominated as The Telecommuter Tax Fairness Act. The legislation’s goal remains the same. For Congress, using its authority under the commerce clause of the US Constitution, to forbid New York and other states from double taxing no-nresidents’ incomes on the days such non-residents work at their out-of-state homes.

Consider in this context the spate of service stoppages experienced by MetroNorth railroad commuters this winter. During these stoppages, public officials quite sensibly urged MetroNorth commuters to work from home rather than clog the already crowded highways to reach Manhattan. However, no public official spoke candidly about the tax penalty such commuters triggered by working at their Connecticut homes.

New York’s double taxation of non-resident telecommuters is not limited to those who live and work at home in the northeast. Under the banner of employer convenience, New York projects its taxing authority throughout the nation. In widely reported cases, New York imposed its personal income tax on Thomas L. Huckaby for days he worked at his home in Tennessee, on Manohar Kakar for days he worked at his home in Arizona, and on R. Michael Holt for days he worked at his home in Florida.

Nor is the threat of double taxation limited to New York’s personal income taxes imposed on non-resident telecommuters. Fortunately, many states recognize that double taxing non-resident telecommuters is ultimately self-destructive, driving telecommuters and the firms which employ them to states with more welcoming tax policies. However, other states emulate the Empire State’s tax hostility to interstate telecommuting. For example, Delaware taxed Dorothy A. Flynn’s income for the days she worked at her Pennsylvania home, even though Ms. Flynn did not set foot in Delaware on these work-at-home days.

The unfairness and inefficiency of the double state income taxation of interstate telecommuters has led a broad national coalition to favor federal legislation like H.R. 4085. Among those supporting such legislation are the American Legion, the Christopher and Dana Reeve Foundation, the National Taxpayers Union, The Small Business & Entrepreneurship Council, the Association for Commuter Transportation, The Military Spouse JD Network, and the Telework Coalition.

Representative Himes, along with Representatives Esty and DeLauro, are to be commended for introducing H.R. 4085. If enacted into law, this much needed legislation would make the tax system safe for interstate telecommuting by forbidding double state income taxation of non-resident telecommuters.

ZelinskiEdward A. Zelinsky is the Morris and Annie Trachman Professor of Law at the Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law of Yeshiva University. He is the author of The Origins of the Ownership Society: How The Defined Contribution Paradigm Changed America. His monthly column appears on the OUPblog.

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Image credit: Metro-North EMD FL9 leaving Stamford, CT. Public domain via Wikimedia Commons.

The post Make the tax system safe for interstate telecommuting: pass H.R. 4085 appeared first on OUPblog.

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3. The Telecommuter Tax Fairness Act: Stopping New York’s Tax Attack on Telecommuters

Edward A. Zelinsky is the Morris and Annie Trachman Professor of Law at the Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law of Yeshiva University. He is the author of The Origins of the Ownership Society: How The Defined Contribution Paradigm Changed America. In this article, Professor Zelinsky criticizes New York’s “convenience of the employer” doctrine for double taxing telecommuters at a time when public policy should be encouraging, rather than hindering, telecommuting. He calls on Congress to pass the Telecommuter Tax Fairness Act to stop such double taxation. Read his past OUPblog posts here.

A gallon of gas today costs $4.00 or more in most parts of the country. The public is concerned, as perhaps never before, about the impact of human activity on the global environment. In this setting, telecommuting has emerged as an environmentally sensitive and economically sensible lifestyle.
By permitting individuals to work at home for part (often much) of the work week, telecommuting removes telecommuters’ cars from the roads, thereby reducing traffic congestion, gas consumption, and automotive pollution. Telecommuting from home also opens job opportunities for persons for whom a conventional, daily trip to the work place is difficult or undesirable – parents’ of small children, disabled individuals, persons who live far from major employment centers. Telecommuting allows employers to hire these individuals who might otherwise withdraw from the labor force.

For all of these reasons, public policy should encourage, or at least not hinder, the growth of telecommuting. Unfortunately, the tax policies of the State of New York discourage telecommuting by double taxing out-of-state individuals who telecommute for New York employers from their out-of-state homes. In particular, New York’s so-called “convenience of the employer” rule imposes nonresident New York income taxes on out-of-state telecommuters on the days they work at home, often hundreds – if not thousands – of miles from New York.

Consider, for example, the recent case of Mr. R. Michael Holt, a human resources compensation consultant who lives in Naples, Florida. In 1999, Mr. Holt worked at his home in Florida for the New York offices of KPMG, LLP and William M. Mercer, Inc. Under the employer convenience rule, New York imposed nonresident income taxes upon Mr. Holt for the income he earned working at home in the Sunshine State, thousands of miles from New York.

When the state in which a telecommuter lives also imposes an income tax, the result of New York’s tax policy is double taxation as the out-of-state telecommuter who works at home must pay tax both to New York and to the state in which she lives. The result is an unfair and inefficient tax penalty for telecommuting, namely, the double taxation of the income earned by the telecommuter on the days she works at her out-of-state home.

New York’s policy is bad, not only for out-of-state persons who telecommute to the Empire State, but potentially for telecommuters throughout the nation and for the employers who employ such telecommuters. If New York can get away with double taxing out-of-state telecommuters, other states will be tempted to emulate New York and likewise tax nonresident telecommuters who work at their out-of-state homes. The upshot will thus be double taxation of telecommuters nationwide when public policy should instead be supporting telecommuting.

Unfortunately, New York’s courts have refused to stop New York’s double taxation of nonresident telecommuters on the days such telecommuters work at their out-of-state homes. In Huckaby v. Tax Appeals Tribunal, New York’s highest court, by a narrow but decisive margin of 4-3, upheld New York’s income taxation of Thomas Huckaby on the days Mr. Huckaby worked at his home in Nashville, Tennessee.

Pending in Congress is legislation which would prevent New York and other states from using the “convenience of the employer” doctrine or any similar artifice to double tax nonresident telecommuters on the days they work at their out-of-state homes. The Telecommuter Tax Fairness Act has attracted bi-partisan support from members of Congress who recognize the importance of telecommuting-friendly public policy.

It is unreasonable for New York to punish telecommuting by double taxing workers who telecommute for New York employers from their out-of-state homes, particularly at a time when sound public policy should encourage telecommuting. There is, however, no sign that New York will alter its irrational “convenience of the employer” rule. Congress should accordingly adopt the Telecommuter Tax Fairness Act to eliminate the ability of New York and other states to double tax nonresident telecommuters on the days they work at their out-of-state homes.

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4. Very Short Introductions: Kabbalah

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By Kirsty OUP-UK

A very Happy New Year to you all from OUP-UK. My maiden post for 2008 is the latest in the Very Short Introductions column. This month Joseph Dan, author of Kabbalah: A Very Short Introduction, has kindly answered some questions for me. Joseph Dan is a renowned expert on Kabbalah, and is the Gershom Scholem Professor of Kabbalah in the Department of Jewish Thought at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. His many books include The Heart and the Fountain: Jewish Mystical Experiences, The Early Kabbalah, and The Teachings of Hasidism. He resides in Jerusalem and in Cambridge, Massachusetts, where he is a visiting professor at the Harvard Divinity School.

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