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CPP/FPC Fall Study Group. Please sign in. WELCOME !. Any Questions ? Concerns ? Review Quiz/Break Group Questions. Section 9: Other Deductions From Pay. Involuntary Deductions. Employer and employee have no control over the deduction
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CPP/FPC Fall Study Group Please sign in WELCOME !
Any Questions ? Concerns ? Review Quiz/Break Group Questions
Involuntary Deductions • Employer and employee have no control over the deduction • Employer is required by law to deduct amounts from the employee’s check and remit those funds to satisfy the employee’s debt.
Priority of Multiple Orders • Bankruptcy Order (except Child Support Order) • Child Support Order prior to Federal Levy • Federal Tax Levy • Child Support • Administrative Wage Assignment (AWG) including government ordered student loans of 15% • State Tax Levy • Student Loan (state ordered 10%) • Creditor Garnishment • Voluntary Deduction
Tax Levy • Used to collect unpaid taxes after all other means have been exhausted by a state or federal agency. • Take precedence over all other garnishments except for child support orders already in effect and bankruptcy. • If more than one tax levy, then first come first served.
Form 668-W Notice of Levy on Wages, Salary, and Other Income Has 6 parts • Part 1 is the employer’s copy • Parts 2-5 send to the employee (Parts 3-4 should be returned to Employer in 3 days) • Part 6 is for the IRS • If forms are not returned then the employee should be treated as married filing separately with one exemption.
Figuring the amount to deduct and remit for levy Wages exempt from levy • Unemployment compensation benefits* • Worker’s compensation benefits* • Annuity and pension payments under the Railroad Retirement Tax Act * • Certain armed service-connected disability payments • Certain public assistance payments * • Amounts ordered withheld under a previously issued court order for child support Note: * can now be attached for 15%
Levy Take Home Pay Gross Earnings less: • Taxes • Deductions (voluntary or involuntary) in place before levy is received • Increases in deductions beyond the employees control (medical premiums) • Deductions added after a levy is received that are a condition of employment (union dues)
When to make payments/Stop Withholding • 668-W says pay same day • Penalties – full amount to be withheld plus interest, and penalty of 50% of the amount recoverable by the IRS • Form 668-D – Release of Levy / Release of property from Levy • Notify IRS when EE terms
Child Support • Wage withholdings become automatic if non-custodial parent is late one month in paying support • Joint Federal/State responsibility for enforcement • Withholding laws are based on the Consumer Credit Protection Act (CCPA) • Take precedence over all other garnishments except for levies that are already in effect and bankruptcy court orders that include child support obligations. (p. 9-11)
Order/Notice to Withhold Income for Child Support • Standard form (see 9-16 & 9-17) • Some information varies by state • One centralized disbursement unit per state • Employer allowed to withhold an administrative fee in most work states • Must withhold for employee and independent contractors
CCPA Limits • 50% if employee is not in arrears and is supporting another family • 55% if employee is in arrears by 12 weeks and is supporting another family • 60% if the employee is not in arrears and is not supporting another family • 65% if the employee is in arrears by 12 weeks and is not supporting another family
Uniform Interstate Family Support Act (UIFSA) (p. 9-15) • Must honor orders from other states that are “regular on its face” • Duration and amount of periodic payments • Person or agency who will receive payments • Medical support (40 business days to state if employee has a plan) • Amount of payment fees and costs for the enforcement agency • Amount of arrears payments and interest
Multiple Orders • Follow the laws in the state where the employee works • Most states require child support to be fulfilled before medical insurance premiums are paid. • Pro-rate • Equal funds • 1st come 1st served (Montana only)
Child Support Continued… • Employee attempt to avoid withholding • Handling child support for employees serving in the military • Employers must withhold from independent contractors. • Medical child support orders (9-28 – 9-29)
Creditor Garnishments CCPA limits Garnishments cannot exceed the lesser of: • 25% of disposable earnings; or • Amount that the employees disposable earnings for the week exceed 30 times the federal minimum wage. • Prohibited from terminating an employee because the employee’s “earnings have been subject to garnishment for any one indebtedness” • One creditor garnishment at a time
Bankruptcy Orders • Employer must stop withholding on any other garnishments against the employee (if included in the bankruptcy) • Chapter XIII bankruptcy orders take priority over levies • 2005 Act and child support
Student Loans • To repay a loan granted under the Federal Family Education Loan Program • Max amounts • The lesser of 15% disposable earnings • Or the excess of the employee’s disposable earnings over 30 times the federal hourly minimum wage – • Multiple student loans the max increased to CCPA limit of 25% of disposable earnings. • If terminated and rehired within 12 months, student loan withholding can start 12 months after rehire date.
Federal Agency Debt Collection aka Administrative Wage Garnishments (AWG) • For payment of government, non-tax debts (FHA, VHA, HUD) • If employee involuntarily terminates and is re-employed, deduction can start after 12 months of re-employment • Max amounts • The lesser of 15% disposable earnings • Or the excess of the employee’s disposable earnings over 30 times the federal hourly minimum wage –
Voluntary Deductions • Wage Assignments • Voluntary agreement to a deduction • Not covered under the CCPA • Employer can decide to honor or not • Union Dues • In addition to mandatory dues • Need a written signed authorization • Can not be revoked for 1 year
More About Deductions Charitable Contributions • $250 threshold for substantiation (single check) • Substantiate contributions by providing the following: • Pay stub, W2, a pledge card from the charity FLSA Can my net pay fall below minimum wage?
Resources • Payroll Source • Family Support Registry • National Web Site • Actual Support Orders • State Tax Levy
Record keeping and Record Retention Section 10
Recordkeeping and Retention • FLSA • IRC • Title VII • IRCA • FMLA • State
FLSA…….Required by DOL • 2 years from last date of entry • Basic employment and earnings records • 2 years from last effective date • wage rate tables and piece rate schedules, work time schedules establishing hours and days of employment
FLSA…….Required by DOL • 3 years from last date of entry • SS Card Name – home address – date of birth < 19 – gender and occupation – workweek begin – regular rate of pay for each week – hours worked – earnings (regular & OT) – additions to and deductions from pay – total wages paid – date of payment & pay period covered. • 3 years from last effective date • collective bargaining agreements – certificates – records showing total sales volume and goods purchased
FLSA…….Required by DOL White Collar/Exempt Employees Hospital Employees Tipped Employees
IRC – TAX 4 years after the due date of the tax, or 4 years after the date the tax is actually paid if later • Maintenance of Records • Penalties for non-compliance • Penalties for Faulty Recordkeeping IRS Goal: make it easy for IRS to calculate the correct tax liability
Title VII of the Civil Rights Act ADEA – Age Discrimination in Employment • 3 years for employee records • 1 year for applicant records IRCA – Immigration Reform and Control Act I9 – Know this one! 72 hours: time available to produce records for inspection by DOL or EEOC
FMLA • Records in addition to Master Control Items • Exception for Exempt Employees • Medical Records – CONFIDENTIAL • Record format is flexible
State Taxes, Orders and Escheat Wage & Hour: MI 3 yrs, Federal 4 yrs Child Support/Wage Attachments: Preserve for 3 yrs after last withholding from employees wages IRS Levies: 4 yrs from last withholding or until any related legal action is concluded Escheat: MI 10 yrs
Retention and Storage Obtainable Readable Easy to calculate liability No law dictating form of retention and storage Retrieval and Destruction Have a clear, written policy and implement it
MISC Important Information Direct Deposits: no retention requirements after Direct Deposit is discontinued Master File – Table 10.4 (pg 10-17) Records needed from new employees: I9 and W4
Cheat Sheet Data ADA = 1 year (1st letter in the alphabet) Time Sheets = 2 years (2 letters) HR = 3 years (2 letters + 1) TAX = 4 years (3 letters +1) OSHA = 5 years (4 letters + 1)
Discussion Time Any questions on: • Prior Topics • Topic this week