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| Problem Solver: Advice from the Experts Editorial Staff |
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Q: How can I help an employee who is under a lot of stress stemming from problems outside work? Libby Anderson, a Naples-based human resources consultant and trainer, answers: Consider providing an Employee Assistance Plan. EAPs have become popular because they provide confidential help to troubled employees, which reduces absenteeism and improves work performance. Employers who have sponsored an EAP program also indicated that they have experienced reduced health, disability and worker’s compensation costs. The EAP can provide assistance with everything from addiction recovery to resolving mental health, work-life balance or domestic issues. The employee can request the services without any involvement from the employer, who establishes an EAP arrangement with a provider. Some employers contract directly with EAPs for a variety of services and pay fees based on the number of employees, regardless of how many actually use it. Other employers only pay when employees use the services. And large corporations often employ an EAP site to work on-site with employees. An EAP results in a win-win for a business and its staff. Anderson can be reached via e-mail at edahrsvcs@aol.com. Her Web site is www.edahr.com. Q: Nearly 99 percent of my business is local. Why would I need a Web site? William Earnest Waites, former chairman and co-creative director of Spiro & Waites Advertising, Marketing & Public Relations, answers: Do you print a brochure? If you do, you recognize the need to tell the story about your company and its services to current and potential customers. A Web site is like a printed brochure, except that it is less costly (nothing to print), more flexible (you can change it every day, if you want), and it can appear in front of people who never visit your store or office yet are looking for a local vendor. More than half a billion people worldwide have online access. Tens of thousands of them live within your service area. A Web site lets you reach these people the moment they want to know about you with information that is colorful and up-to-date. A Web site even gives the customer the opportunity to reach you instantly and cheaply—through e-mail. Spiro & Waites can be reached at (239) 481-5511. Q: I've filed an extension on my tax return. Can any new laws give me additional tax breaks? David Schultz and Richard Shield, certified public accountants with Schultz, Chaipel & Co., answer: Yes. The Job Creation and Worker Assistance Act of 2002 contains several generous tax breaks for businesses. Among these new provisions is a special first-year depreciation “bonus” on eligible property placed in service on or after Sept. 11, 2001. Under the new rules, businesses must claim an additional 30 percent depreciation amount on eligible property. Eligible property includes tangible property with a useful life of 20 years or less, certain water utility property, leasehold improvements and computer software. Additionally, the maximum first-year depreciation deduction allowable for luxury autos has been increased from $3,060 to $7,660. This bonus depreciation is in addition to the $24,000 expensing allowance for the 2001 and 2002 tax years. This additional depreciation is not optional. All businesses must either take the additional depreciation or elect out. If an election is not filed, the business is deemed to have taken the additional expense and must reduce the depreciable basis of each qualifying asset accordingly, whether or not the expense was actually deducted on the return. For returns that have not yet been filed, the IRS Web site www.irs.gov/ pub/irs-pdf/f4562.pdf has a new Form 4562, which includes a special line for the additional depreciation. However, for returns that have already been filed and contained eligible property but which did not account for the new law, the IRS has not yet determined how to correct the problem. We hope that they will establish procedures so that a failure to take the additional depreciation on returns already filed will be deemed an election out of the new provision. If not, many businesses will be required to amend their returns to avoid unfavorable treatment. Businesses that have already filed their 2001 returns may wish to review this situation and amend if it could be beneficial. Schultz, Chaipel & Co. can be reached in Fort Myers at (239) 939-5333. | ||