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House

Senate Weighs Passage of Enhanced Small Business Tax Bill

Updated: July 23, 2010    A package of small business tax incentives, as part of a larger Small Business Jobs Act of 2010, H.R. 5297 is now before the Senate for possible passage during the week of July 26th. Moved forward offi cially as the Senate Substitute Amendment to H.R. 5297, the Senate bill makes signifi cant additions to the tax title that the House passed on June 15, 2010 by a vote of 247 to 170. Once the Senate approves a fi nal bill, the House will have the option of agreeing to the Senate bill and sending it directly to the President, who has already indicated his approval. Alternatively, the House and Senate can hold a conference to resolve the diff erences between their bills and put it to a fi nal vote in both chambers. Final passage before the August Congressional recess remains possible.

House

President Signs Homebuyer Credit Closing Relief With Revenue Offsets

Updated: July 2, 2010    On July 2, 2010, President Obama signed the Homebuyer Assistance and Improvement Act of 2010, Pub. Law 111-198, into law. Frustrated over the progress of general extenders legislation, the House singled out homebuyer credit extension relief and approved it 409-5 in this stand-alone bill (H.R. 5623) on June 29, 2010. The Senate followed suit on June 30, approving H.R. 5623 by unanimous consent. The new law extends the closing date deadline, from June 30, 2010 to September 30, 2010, for homebuyers who signed sales contracts prior to May 1, 2010. To off set the estimated $140 million price tag of this relief, the new law includes three revenue provisions: a delay in the transfer of Travel Promotion Board fees, clarification of the bad check penalty for e-payments, and returndisclosure authorization to prevent homebuyer credit fraud among prison inmates.

House

Senate Democrats Streamline Extenders Bill; Prune Revenue Raisers

Updated: June 17, 2010   The Senate’s Democratic leadership unveiled a streamlined version of the "American Jobs and Closing Tax Loopholes Act" (H.R. 4213) on June 16 hoping to secure bipartisan support. The revised Senate bill modifies two controversial revenue raisers: a change in the taxation of carried interest and the imposition of self-employment tax on S corps. The revised Senate bill keeps a package of tax extenders, many temporary individual, business, energy, charitable and infrastructure tax incentives which expired at the end of 2009. The Senate bill retains a package of pension funding reforms and makes some minor changes to international tax reforms. The revised Senate bill includes Code Sec. 6707A penalty relief and a taxpayer-friendly modification to the first-time homebuyer credit.

Congress

Congress Completes Overhaul Of Health Care Law; Makes Many Tax Changes

Updated: March 30, 2010  Passage of the Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act of 2010 (H.R. 4872) (Reconciliation Act) by Congress, followed by its signing by President Obama on March 30, 2010, completes a massive overhaul of the nation'S health insurance and health delivery systems. The Reconciliation Act amends the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act of 2010 (P.L. 111-148), which President Obama signed on March 23. Combined, the two new laws include more than $400 billion in revenue raisers and new taxes on employers and individuals.

President Signs HIRE Act; New Law Provides Hiring Incentives, Expensing Extension And More

President Signs HIRE Act; New Law Provides Hiring Incentives, Expensing Extension And More

March 18, 2010  The $18 billion job creation package, the Hiring Incentives to Restore Employment (HIRE) Act (H.R. 2847), is now law. President Obama signed this first major tax bill of 2010 on March 18. The Senate approved the HIRE Act on March 17, 2010, by a bi-partisan 68-29 vote, following House passage on March 4, 2010, by 217 to 201. The new law provides incentives for hiring and retaining workers, along with a one-year extension of enhanced Code Sec. 179 expensing and changes to Build America Bonds. The HIRE Act is partially offset by a package of new foreign account tax compliance rules and a further delay in the worldwide interest allocation rules. Certain corporate estimated tax payments are also accelerated to help offset the cost of the tax incentives.

Senate

Senate Passes Jobs Bill With Hiring Incentives, Expensing Extension

Updated: February 24, 2010  Confronted with stubbornly high unemployment numbers and a slow economic recovery, the Senate on February 24 voted 70 to 28 to approve a $15 billion jobs bill, the Hiring Incentives to Restore Employment (HIRE) Act, H.R.2847. The HIRE Act provides new incentives for hiring and retaining workers, along with a one-year extension of enhanced Code Sec. 179 expensing and changes to Build America Bonds. The HIRE Act is partially offset by a package of new foreign account tax compliance rules. The HIRE Act does not include extenders, COBRA premium assistance or an estate tax extension.

New Law Allows 2010 Haiti Relief Contribution Deductions On 2009 Returns

New Law Allows 2010 Haiti Relief Contribution Deductions On 2009 Returns

Updated: January 25, 2010.  Taxpayers making charitable cash contributions in early 2010 to help Haiti after the devastating January 12 earthquake can claim a deduction on their 2009 federal tax returns. The House of Representatives unanimously passed H.R. 4462 on January 20 to allow taxpayers to claim a charitable deduction on their 2009 returns for qualified Haiti disaster relief contributions made after January 11, 2010 and before March 1, 2010. The Senate approved the measure on January 21, and President Obama promptly signed it into law on January 22.

Coming Soon! CCH's Special Tax Briefing Providing Full Coverage of the New Act

Senate Passes Health Care Reform Legislation

December 28, 2009.  By a vote of 60-39, the Senate approved a massive health care reform bill on December 24, 2009 with over $390 billion in revenue raisers and new taxes on employers and individuals. The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (H.R. 3590) is a version of bills passed earlier by the Senate Finance Committee (SFC) and the Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions (HELP) Committee. Although the Senate bill is similar in scope to the House-passed Affordable Health Care for America Act (H.R. 3962) many differences remain, especially over revenue raisers.

Coming Soon! CCH's Special Tax Briefing Providing Full Coverage of the New Act

Estate Tax Extension Passes House, Fails In Senate; Carryover Basis To Be Effective January 1, 2010

December 28, 2009.  On December 3, the House approved the Permanent Estate Tax Relief for Families, Farmers and Small Businesses Bill of 2009 (H.R. 4154), which would permanently extend the top federal estate tax rate of 45 percent with a $3.5 million exclusion ($7 million for married couples who fully utilize their exclusions). The House Bill also provides for continuation of the gift and generation-skipping transfer (GST) tax provisions as they exist in 2009. However, after several year-end parliamentary maneuvers, the bill failed to win support in the Senate, as did a temporary stop-gap measure to extend the 2009 estate tax regime through March 2010.

Read CCH's Special Tax Briefing PDF For Full Coverage

House Passes Permanent Estate Tax Relief Bill; Fate in Senate Uncertain

December 4, 2009.  The House on December 3, 2009, passed long-awaited legislation, the Permanent Estate Tax Relief for Families, Farmers and Small Businesses Bill of 2009 (H.R. 4154), permanently extending the top federal estate tax rate of 45 percent with a $3.5 million exclusion ($7 million for married couples who fully utilize their exclusions). The 225 to 200 vote reflected the urgency felt by some House lawmakers to provide certainty to estate planning planning and disagreement over whether to abolish the tax entirely or provide for a lower exclusion. The House Bill also provides for continuation of the gift and generation-skipping transfer (GST) tax provisions as they exist in 2009. The $233 billion cost over 10 years of the House Bill is not offset.

Read CCH's Special Tax Briefing PDF For Full Coverage

 

Read CCH's Special Tax Briefing PDF For Full Coverage

House Passes Higher-Income Surtax,New Limits On FSAs, and More To Fund Health Care Reform

November 9, 2009.  Health care reform took a major step forward late on November 7 when the House passed, 220-215,a mammoth 2,000+ page bill overhauling health insurance coverage for Americans.The Affordable Health Care for America Act (H.R. 3962) imposes a new surtax on higher-income individuals expected to raise more than $400 billion over 10 years to help pay for nearly universal coverage.

Read CCH's Special Tax Briefing PDF For Full Coverage

 

Read CCH's Special Tax Briefing PDF For Full Coverage

Treasury Releases "Green Book" of Tax Proposals

May 14, 2009.  The Obama administration released much-anticipated details about its proposed tax cuts and revenue raisers on May 11. The Treasury Department's General Explanations of the Administration's Fiscal Year 2010 Revenue Proposals (also known as the "Green Book") describes the administration's tax agenda, including permanent Making Work Pay, American Opportunity and research credits; a package of international tax reforms; reinstatement of the 36 and 39.6 percent individual marginal income tax rates; expanded information reporting; and automatic enrollment in IRAs. According to the Treasury, the proposals would generate $736.5 billion in savings for individuals (largely aimed at middle income taxpayers) and $71 billion in long-term savings for businesses. Revenue raisers would bring in roughly $900 billion.

Read CCH's Special Tax Briefing PDF For Full Coverage

 

Read CCH's Special Tax Briefing PDF For Full Coverage

Congress Passes Emergency Pension Tax Relief/Technical Corrections

December 11, 2008.   In response to the continuing drumbeat of bad economic news, Congress passed the Worker, Retiree, and Employer Recovery Act of 2008 (H.R. 7327), suspending required minimum distributions (RMDs) from 401(k) plans, IRAs and similar retirement accounts for 2009, providing pension pension plan funding relief, and including technical corrections to the Pension Protection Act of 2006. A $14 billion automaker rescue package, passed by the House on December 10, appears to be stalled in the Senate at this time. The White House has indicated that President Bush will sign the Worker, Retiree, and Employer Recovery Act as soon as it reaches his desk.

Read CCH's Special Tax Briefing PDF For Full Coverage

Read CCH's Special Tax Briefing PDF For Full Coverage

President Signs Financial Markets Rescue Plan, AMT Patch, Extenders, Disaster Relief and More

October 3, 2008. President Bush signed the historic Emergency Economic Stabilization Act of 2008, on October 3, 2008; the same day that the House passed the legislation by a vote of 263 to 171. The House vote came just two days after the Senate passed the measure by a vote of 74 to 25, and four days after the House failed to pass a similarly title bill.

The landmark legislation gives the Treasury $250 billion immediately, and requires the president to certify if an additional $100 billion is necessary. An additional $350 billion may be disbursed subject to Congressional approval. The Treasury Department is required to report on the use of the funds and progress made in addressing the crisis. An oversight board and a special inspector general will also be created to watch over the Treasury department

Read CCH's Special Tax Briefing PDF For Full Coverage

Special Resources from CCH for Tax Legislation

For additional CCH tax legislation resources, including white papers on the sub-prime lending crisis and SEC rules on short selling, please visit: http://www.cch.com/rescue/

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Read CCH's Special Tax Briefing PDF For Full Coverage

President Signs the Housing and Economic Recovery Act of 2008

Updated: July 30, 2008.  Reacting to the continuing slump in housing sales, along with rising unemployment numbers and weakness in the credit markets, Congress passed the Housing and Economic Recovery Act of 2008 (H.R. 3221). Although the tax provisions are only one part of the larger American Housing Rescue and Foreclosure Prevention Act, they make significant changes.

The tax title includes $15.1 billion in tax incentives that are fully offset by far-reaching revenue raisers. While the tax incentives are targeted principally to home ownership and affordable housing, the offsets are collected from a variety of sources. New provisions that require credit card purchase information reporting by merchants and close a home sale exclusion loophole for vacation and rental property are among the more prominent offsets that will require a shift in tax strategies.

President Bush signed the bill into law on Wednesday, July 30, 2008.

Read CCH's Special Tax Briefing PDF For Full Coverage

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Read CCH's Special Tax Briefing PDF For Full Coverage

President signs Economic Stimulus Act of 2008 With Rebates and Business Incentives

Updated: February 13, 2008.   President Bush signed into law the Economic Stimulus Act of 2008 (HR5140). The legislation, estimated to cost $125 billion over a ten-year period, includes a recover rebate credit for 2008.

In addition to rebates, the new law includes $44.8 billion in business incentives that include generous expensing and bonus depreciation allowances, as well as additional help for homeowners facing foreclosure because of the mortgage meltdown.  

Read CCH's Special Tax Briefing PDF For Full Coverage

President Signs Doc Fix/Pension Funding Relief Bill

President Signs Doc Fix/Pension Funding Relief Bill

Updated: June 25, 2010    On June 25, President Obama signed the Preservation of Access to Care for Medicare Beneficiaries and Pension relief Act of 2010 (H.R. 3962) a package of defined benefit pension funding relief measures and the so-called Medicare "doc-fix." The pension funding measures in the bill were originally part of the American Jobs and Closing Tax Loopholes Act of 2010 (H.R. 4213), a/k/a the tax extenders bill.

House Passes Small Business Tax Relief Package

House Passes Small Business Tax Relief Package

June 16, 2010    A package of small business tax incentives was passed by the House on June 15, 2010 by a vote of 247 to 170. The Small Business Jobs Tax Relief Act of 2010 (H.R. 5486) includes a 100 percent gain exclusion for qualified small business stock, retroactive Code Sec. 6707A penalty relief and an enhanced deduction for startup expenses. The House bill is completely off set by new limitations on grantor retained annuity trusts (GRATs) and the cellulosic biofuel producer credit along with a shift in corporate estimated taxes for large corporations in 2015.

President Signs Health Care Reform; Senate Reconciliation Vote Next

President Signs Health Care Reform; Senate Reconciliation Vote Next

Updated: March 23, 2010  President Obama on March 23 signed the massive health care reform package approved by the House on March 21, 2010. The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (the Patient Protection Act), approved by the Senate on December 24, 2009, is now law. It contains over $400 billion in revenue raisers and new taxes on employers and individuals. The House also passed on March 21 H.R. 4872, the Health Care and Education Tax Credits Reconciliation Act of 2010 (the House Reconciliation Act). The House Reconciliation Act serves as a "idecar" bill, that will allow amendments to the Patient Protection Act to be passed by the Senate with only 51 votes using the budget reconciliation rules.

2010

2010 Hiring Incentives to Restore Employment Act

March 10, 2010    The Senate approved a nearly $140 billion "tax extenders" package on March 10 by a vote of 62 to 36. The American Workers, State and Business Relief Act of 2010 (H.R. 4213) extends a host of popular but temporary individual, business, charitable, and energy tax incentives through December 31, 2010. The Senate bill also extends eligibility for COBRA premium assistance through December 31, 2010, provides for pension funding relief, allows workers over age 59-1/2 to convert 401(k) distributions to Roth 401(k) plans, and adds a technical modification to the popular first-time homebuyer tax credit, among its list of changes. The Senate extenders bill is partially paid for by codification of the economic substance doctrine and reform of the cellulosic biofuel producer credit.

Obama Unveils $3.83 Trillion Budget; Tax Proposals Focus On Job Creation, Revenue

Obama Unveils $3.83 Trillion Budget; Tax Proposals Focus On Job Creation, Revenue

February 5, 2010  President Obama presented Congress with his fiscal year (FY) 2011 federal budget proposals on February 1, and the $3.83 trillion budget emphasizes job creation and deficit reduction. Tax incentives for individuals and businesses total approximately $300 billion with an additional $100 billion allocated to job creation. On the other hand, proposed tax increases would raise $1.4 trillion. Although rate increases for higher-income taxpayers would bring in the lion's share of that revenue, the budget calls for over $450 billion in other revenue raisers. Those increases impact many categories of taxpayers but, perhaps most directly, those with international operations.

Coming Soon! CCH's Special Tax Briefing Providing Full Coverage of the New Act

IRS Unveils Comprehensive Preparer Reform Blueprint

January 14, 2010.  After six months of internal study, review of hundreds of comments and a series of public meetings, the IRS has announced a sweeping reform of return preparer oversight. All paid signing preparers, regardless of credentials or licenses, will be required to register with the IRS. Unenrolled preparers will be required to complete competency testing and mandatory continuing education. On January 4, the IRS released a blueprint of its new preparer initiative and indicated that regulations necessary to implement the changes would be released in 2010.

Read CCH's Special Tax Briefing PDF For Full Coverage

House-Passed Extenders/Jobs Bills Await Senate Action in 2010

December 28, 2009.  The House of Representatives approved a package of tax extenders on December 9, 2009, by a largely party-line vote of 241 to 181. The $31 billion Tax Extenders Act of 2009 (H.R. 4213) extends more than 50 popular, but temporary, tax incentives through December 31, 2010. Two revenue raisers - a change in the taxation of carried interest and heightened information reporting and disclosure requirements for foreign bank and financial accounts - would pay for the one-year extensions.

Read CCH's Special Tax Briefing PDF For Full Coverage

 

Read CCH's Special Tax Briefing PDF For Full Coverage

House Passes Extenders Bill With Carried Interest, Foreign Reporting Revenue Raisers

December 10, 2009.  The House of Representatives approved a package of tax extenders on December 9, 2009, largely along party lines by a vote of 241 to 181. The $31 billion Tax Extenders Act of 2009 (H.R. 4213) extends more than 50 popular but temporary tax incentives through December 31, 2010. Most of the incentives would have expired after December 31, 2009. Two revenue raisers – a change in the taxation of carried interest and heightened information reporting and disclosure requirements for foreign bank and financial accounts – would pay for the one-year extensions. President Obama has indicated he will sign the extenders bill as passed by the House, but the bill's fate is uncertain in a Senate focused almost exclusively on heath care reform.

Read CCH's Special Tax Briefing PDF For Full Coverage

 

Read CCH's Special Tax Briefing PDF For Full Coverage

Senate Health Bill Calls For Excise Tax On Insurance Plans, Added Payroll Tax On High-Wage Earners

November 19, 2009.  Health care reform took another major step forward on November 18 when Senate Democratic leaders unveiled the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act. The bill is a blended version of bills passed earlier by the Senate Finance Committee (SFC) and the Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions (HELP) Committee. The $849 billion package, with $370 billion in revenue raisers, was drafted not only with an eye toward garnering the 60 votes necessary for full Senate approval but also in preparation for conference committee negotiations. Although the Senate bill is similar in scope to the House-passed Affordable Health Care for America Act (H.R. 3962) many differences remain, especially over revenue raisers.

Read CCH's Special Tax Briefing PDF For Full Coverage

 

Read CCH's Special Tax Briefing PDF For Full Coverage

Worker, Homeownership, and Business Assistance Act of 2009

November 6, 2009.  Two popular but temporary tax incentives have been given a new lease on life as part of legislation extending unemployment compensation benefits. The Worker, Homeownership, and Business Assistance Act of 2009 (H.R. 3548), signed into law by President Obama on November 6, 2009, extends those incentives and more. Following several weeks of negotiations, the new law was approved in rapid-fire succession, first by the Senate, 98-0,on November 4 and then by the House,403-12, on November 5.

Read CCH's Special Tax Briefing PDF For Full Coverage

 

Read CCH's Special Tax Briefing PDF For Full Coverage

President Signs Massive Stimulus Bill; Nearly $300 Billion in Tax Relief

February 17, 2009.  President Obama has signed the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act into law.  Moving through Congress in less than four weeks, the $787 billion new law, which contains nearly $300 billion in tax relief, sets in motion a wave of direct spending and tax incentives to jump start the U.S. economy out of recession.

Read CCH's Special Tax Briefing PDF For Full Coverage

CCH's Quick Tax Facts on the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009

CCH industry-leading books and CPE courses that cover the 2009 Stimulus Act:

Read CCH's Special Tax Briefing PDF For Full Coverage

President-Elect Obama Brings Ambitious Tax Policy Agenda to Washington

December 4, 2008.   On January 20, 2009, Barack Obama will take the oath of office as the 44th president of the United States. Federal tax policy is guaranteed to be at the forefront of President Obama's agenda. Democrats in Congress are preparing an economic stimulus package, which they hope to have ready for the new president's signature on January 20. It is likely to include significant individual and business tax incentives. The stimulus package may also include tax incentives for individuals and businesses to "go green" along with a huge infusion of federal funds for state and local infrastructure spending.

The president-elect is counting on a stimulus package large enough to jolt the economy out of what some are calling the worse slowdown since the 1930s. One way to jump start the economy in the view of the incoming administration is to get more money into taxpayers' hands, thereby increasing the consumer spending needed to drive the economy.

Read CCH's Special Tax Briefing PDF For Full Coverage

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Read CCH's Special Tax Briefing PDF For Full Coverage

Presidential Candidates Outline Tax Policies

September 18, 2008.  As the U.S. prepares to elect its 44th president, tax and accounting professionals and their clients are looking for details about the tax policies of the candidates of the two major parties. This special CCH Briefing describes the tax policies of John McCain, the Republican Party candidate for president, and Barack Obama, the Democratic Party candidate, with analysis of the potential impact of their tax policies.

Whoever is elected on November 4 will likely unveil his tax policies soon after taking office so Congress can begin holding hearings and drafting legislation. Once Congress begins its work, practitioners and taxpayers can expect to see more details about changes in federal tax policy. The track record for newly-elected presidents to get a large tax bill passed during their first year in office is good. That makes 2008 year-end tax planning especially challenging and urgent since the door may close after this year on many current tax breaks.

Read CCH's Special Tax Briefing PDF For Full Coverage

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Read CCH's Special Tax Briefing PDF For Full Coverage

Congress Enacts Farm Bill Overriding Bush Veto And Passes Military Tax Relief

May 22, 2008.  The Food, Conservation, and Energy Act of 2008 (H.R. 2419), also known as the Farm Bill, has finally been enacted into law.

The Senate on May 22 successfully overrode President Bush's May 21 veto of the bill by a convincing 82-13 vote. The House overrode the veto the day earlier immediately after the president's veto by a lopsided margin of 316-108.

Due to an enrollment error, however, the legislation contained only 14 of the 15 titles when the House and Senate adopted the conference report on the bill on May 14 and 15, respectively.

Nevertheless, the tax title was included in the legislation sent to the President and in the override votes by Congress. It is not clear at press time if the procedural mix-up will result in litigation challenging the legislation.

Read CCH's Special Tax Briefing PDF For Full Coverage

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