Monthly Archive for January, 2010

Fraternizing with the Enemy: Tips From an Employee-side Attorney

Curt Surls, Employment Attorney

Curt Surls, Employment Attorney

by Curt Surls, Employment Attorney

I am an employment lawyer. I represent employees who have been discriminated against, harassed, improperly compensated or wrongfully terminated. As a small business owner, you would undoubtedly prefer to keep me and my colleagues at bay. This will be the first of a series of posts outlining common – and expensive — mistakes I have seen small employers make in my 20 plus years of practice.

Mistake Number One: Misclassifying non-exempt employees as exempt. Picture this: business is picking up again, and your hourly bookkeeper has been working 10 hours a day to keep up with the workload (paying bills, sending out invoices, etc.). You already know that unless an employee is exempt from wage and hour laws, you have to pay overtime (time and a half) after 8 hours in one day and 40 hours in one week. Your hourly bookkeeper is getting rather expensive, and – truth be told – he’s kind of slow and may just be milking it for the overtime. What if you put him on straight salary and gave him a lofty title like Supreme Executive Financial Control Officer (or “SEFCO”) with a gold-embossed business card? Problem solved, right?

Not so fast. In California, all employees are presumed to be nonexempt; that is to say, a sometimes confusing array of wage and hour laws apply, including overtime and meal break regulations. Therefore, the burden of establishing that an employee is exempt, such as your newly-exalted SEFCO, rests with you, the employer.

There are three exemptions under California law: Executive, Administrative and Professional. A salary and a really impressive title is not enough. Under both state law and the federal Fair Labor Standards Act, all employees, including the SEFCO, must meet both the “salary” and “duties” tests to be considered exempt. Under the “salary” test, to be exempt, the employee must earn a wage of at least double the minimum wage (currently $8.00 per hour in California). Under the “duties” test, your employees must spend at least 50% of their time engaged in “exempt” duties (for example, supervising employees, managing the business, performing work requiring advanced training and/or otherwise exercising “independent discretion and judgment”). So, title and salary notwithstanding, the SEFCO is still doing routine bookkeeping tasks and is entitled to overtime.

The consequences of misclassification can be serious, including back wages and penalties. Even the big dogs get this wrong. Wachovia recently settled a class action for $39,000,000 brought by a group of stockbroker trainees improperly classified as exempt. So be very careful before you decide that an employee is exempt from California’s wage and hour laws.

For more information, contact the California Department of Industrial Relations’ website at www.dir.ca.gov. Next time, we’ll discuss whether you can hire that bookkeeper as an “independent contractor” and avoid paying him overtime and benefits.

Small Business Tax and Filing Deadlines

Deadlines for end of January are fast approaching ….

(January 15 – 4th quarter Federal and State estimated tax payment)
January 31 – W-2 to Employees
January 31: EDD (California) Payroll Form DE-6 due for 2009 4th Quarter
January 31: Federal Payroll Form 941 due for 2009 4th Quarter
January 31: Annual FUTA Form 940 (Federal Unemployment Tax Return)
January 31: Annual EDD Form DE-7 (unemployment and training tax)
February 28: Form 1099s due to vendors and independent contractors
February 28: Employer W-3 (transmitting W-2s to IRS)
February 28: Form 1096 (transmitting Form 1099s to IRS).
February 28: San Francisco Business License renewal
February 28:  Oakland business license renewal
April 15:  Sole proprietorship tax return, file return or file extension
April 15:  Estimated tax payment for 1st quarter 2010
April 15:  Deadline to make 2009 ROTH/IRA contribution
April 15: Pay corporation tax (Form FTB 3522)
October 15:  Extension for Sole Proprietorship tax return
California Sales Tax:  monthly quarterly, fiscal year or yearly, depending on sales.  Quarterly returns due:  April 30, July 31, October 31, January 31); Yearly return due January 31; Fiscal Yearly return due July 31.

T2 Participates in UCB Externship Program

Mina Park, UC Berkeley Externship, T2.com in San Francisco

Mina Park mentored with Helen Thompson for six hours through University of California, Berkeley, Career Center Externship Program for business majors. Mina said “90% of what you taught, I did not know.”  She added, “I now have a better understanding of how businesses are managed and run, how to file a business tax report, how to obtain a business license, and the costs involved in hiring and firing an employee. I plan on having my own business, and I thank Ms. Thompson for taking time away from her work to be my mentor. I also thank her for giving me the valuable information that I need to run and manage my business.”