What's New
              Important Tax Changes for 2002
              Tax Incentives for Employers 
              
              Introduction 
              Tax Incentives for Employers provides information on how small 
                business owners can participate in both the public and private 
                effort to help move individuals with special employment needs 
                and long-term family assistance recipients into jobs in the private 
                sector. By actively recruiting from these groups, you can expand 
                your job applicant pool of entry-level workers and, at the same 
                time, make an important contribution to a national effort that 
                affects your community. By hiring and retaining these individuals, 
                you can receive tax savings with the work opportunity credit of 
                as much as $2,400 per employee for first-year wages paid. With 
                the welfare-to-work credit you can receive as much as $8,500 per 
                employee over a 2-year period.
              References 
              Publication 
                334, Tax Guide For Small Business (for individuals who use 
                Schedule C or C-EZ)
                Publication 
                954, Tax Incentives For Empowerment Zones And Other Distressed 
                Communities
                Form 
                3800, General Business Credit
                Form 
                5884, Work Opportunity Credit
                Form 
                8850,Pre-Screening Notice And Certification Request For The 
                Work Opportunity And Welfare-To-Work Credits
                Form 
                8861, Welfare-to-Work Credit
                U.S. 
                Department of Labor ETA-9061, Individual Characteristics Form, 
                Work Opportunity Credit And Welfare-To-Work Credit
                U.S. Department 
                of Labor ETA-9062, Conditional Certification, Work Opportunity 
                And Welfare-To-Work Tax Credits
              
                Work Opportunity Credit
              The work opportunity credit provides businesses with an incentive 
                to hire individuals from groups that have a particularly high 
                unemployment ratio or other special needs. Your business does 
                not have to be designated an empowerment zone, enterprise community 
                or renewal community (see Publication 954,Tax Incentives For Empowerment 
                Zones And Other Distressed Communities) to qualify for this credit. 
                You can claim the credit if you pay or incur " qualified 
                first-year wages" to a " targeted group employee" 
                who began work for you after September 1997 and before January 
                1, 2002.
              Targeted Group Employee
              A targeted group employee is any employee who has been certified 
                by your state employment security agency (SESA) as a:
              
                - Recipient of assistance under Temporary Assistance for Needy 
                  Families (TANF),
- Veteran,
- Ex-felon,
- High-risk youth,
- Vocational rehabilitation referral,
- Summer youth employee,
- Food stamp recipient or
- Supplemental security income (SSI) recipient.
Exhibit 
                5.1 pages 5-3 lists their qualifications and necessary documentation.
              State Certification 
              An employee is not considered a targeted group employee or a 
                long-term family assistance recipient without SESA certification. 
                To receive certification, submit Form 8850, Pre-Screening Notice 
                and Certification Request for the Work Opportunity and Welfare-To-Work 
                Credits, to your SESA.
              You must either:
              1. Receive the certification by the day the individual begins 
                work or
              2. Do both of the following:
               
                a. Complete Form 8850 by the day you offer the individual a 
                  job and
                  b. Submit the form to your SESA by the 21st day after the individual 
                  begins work.
              
              See 
                Exhibit 5.2, and Exhibit 
                5.3, on pages 5-6 and 5-7 for instructions and a filled-in 
                Form 8850.
              In addition, mail as soon as possible either:
              1. U.S. Department of Labor ETA-9061, Individual Characteristic 
                Form(with all supporting documentation), if the employee has not 
                been conditionally certified already by your SESA or a participating 
                agency (see filled in example Exhibit 
                5.4) or
              2. U.S. Department of Labor ETA-9062, Conditional Certification 
                Form, if provided to the applicant by a participating agency (e.g., 
                the Job Corps).
              Qualified First-Year Wages
              Qualified first year wages are qualified wages you pay or incur 
                for work performed by a targeted group employee during the 1-year 
                period beginning on the date the individual begins work for you. 
                Qualified wages are generally wages subject to FUTA tax - up to 
                $6,000 each tax year* for each employee ($3,000 each tax year* 
                for a summer youth employee). 
              *Note: The one-year period can cover two tax years. 
              Example: Your certified employee began working for you 
                on November March 26, 2001, tax year 2001. The 1-year period ends 
                March 26, 2002, tax year 2002.
              If the work performed by the employee during more than half of 
                any pay period qualifies under FUTA as agricultural labor, the 
                first $6,000 of that employee's wages subject to social security 
                and Medicare taxes are qualified wages.
              Nonqualified Wages
              Some of the most common wages that do not qualify include wages 
                you pay or incur to an employee who:
              
                -  Has worked for you more than 1 year,
- Is your relative or dependent,
- Worked for you previously or
- Does not work for you at least 120 hours.
See Form 5884, Work Opportunity Credit, for a complete list of 
                wages that do not qualify for the credit.
              Amount of Credit
              The table below shows the rate you apply to qualified first-year 
                wages you pay or incur each tax year to a targeted group employee 
                who works the number of hours shown and the maximum
                credit you can claim each tax year for each targeted group employee. 
              
              
                For more information, go to the Small 
                Business Workshop Workbook pages 5-9.
              
                Claiming the Credit
              Use Form 5884 to claim this credit (Exhibit 
                5.5) and file it with your tax return. For example, sole proprietors 
                claiming the credit on their 2000 tax returns entered the credit 
                on Form 1040, Line 49, Other Credits.
              EXHIBIT 
                5.5 - Form 5884, Work Opportunity Credit pages 5-10.
              Complete Form 3800, General Business Credit (Exhibit 
                5.6), instead of completing Part II of Form 5884 to figure 
                the tax liability limit for the credit if for this year you are 
                also claiming the welfare-to-work credit.
              Effect on Salary and Wage Deduction
              In general, you must reduce the deduction on your income tax 
                return for salaries and wages by the amount of your work opportunity 
                credit. For a sole proprietor, this is on Schedule C of Form 1040.
              Effect of Welfare-to-Work Credit
              You cannot claim both the work opportunity credit and the welfare-to-work 
                credit for the same employee during the same tax year. In some 
                cases, in may be more advantageous to claim the work opportunity 
                credit the first year and the welfare-to-work credit the second 
                year.
              More Information
                
                For more information about the work opportunity credit, see Form 
                5884 or visit the Department of Labor Web site at www.doleta.gov 
                or call 1-800-695-6879 for forms and information. 
              You can also use the Department of Labor's fax on demand service 
                by calling (703) 365-0768 (not a toll-free number) from your fax 
                machine and following the prompts.
              Checklist
              Before claiming the credit, use this checklist 
              _ Form 8850 completed and signed by:
                _ Employer and
                _ Employee
                _ ETA Form 9061,Individual Characteristics Form and
                _ Documents attached to demonstrate eligibility or
                _ ETA Form 9062, Conditional Certification Form, from an authorized 
                participating agency.
              
                IMPORTANT!
              Information must be entered on Form 8850 on or before the day 
                a job offer is made.
              Form 8850 must be postmarked within 21 days of the employee's 
                start date and have original signatures.
              ETA-9061 should be mailed as soon as possible and does not need 
                original signatures.
              Note: At the time this workbook was printed, the credit was set 
                to expire for individuals who begin working for you after Dec. 
                31, 2001.
              Welfare-to-Work Credit
              The welfare-to-work credit provides businesses with an incentive 
                to hire long-term family assistance recipients. Your business 
                does not have to be an empowerment zone, enterprise community 
                or renewal community to qualify for this credit. You can claim 
                the credit if you pay or incur " qualified wages" during 
                the first 2 years of employment to a ' long-term family assistance 
                recipient" who began work for you after Dec. 1997 and before 
                Jan. 1, 2002.
              Long-term Family Assistance Recipient
              A long-term family assistance recipient is an individual who 
                has been certified by your SESA as a member of a family that:
              
                -  Has received assistance payments from Temporary Assistance 
                  for Needy Families (TANF) for at least 18 consecutive months 
                  ending on the hiring date,
- Received assistance payments from TANF for any 18 months (whether 
                  or not consecutive) beginning after August 5, 1997, and is hired 
                  not more than 2 years after the end of the earliest 18-month 
                  period or 
- After August 5, 1997, stopped being eligible for assistance 
                  payments because federal or state law limits the maximum period 
                  that assistance is payable, and is hired not more than 2
 years after that eligibility for assistance ends.
State Certification Required
              An individual is not considered a long-term family assistance 
                recipient without SESA certification. To receive certification, 
                submit Form 8850 to your SESA.
              You must either:
              1. Receive the certification by the day the individual begins 
                work or
              2. Do both of the following:
               
                a. Complete Form 8850 by the day you offer the individual a 
                  job and
                  b. Submit the form to your SESA by the 21st day after the individual 
                  begins work.
              
              See Exhibit 
                5.2 on page 5-5 and Exhibit 
                5.3 on pages 5-6 and 5-7 for instructions and a filled-in 
                Form 8850.
              In addition, mail as soon as possible either:
              1.U.S. Department Of Labor ETA-9061, Individual Characteristic
                Form (with all supporting documentation), if the employee has 
                not been conditionally certified already by your SESA or a participating 
                agency (see filled in example Exhibit 
                5.4 on page 5-8 or
              
                2. U.S. Department Of Labor ETA-9062, Conditional Certification 
                Form, if provided to the applicant by a participating agency (e.g., 
                the Job Corps).
              Qualified Wages 
              Qualified wages are generally wages subject to FUTA taxes without 
                regard to the FUTA dollar limit, but not more than $10,000 each 
                tax year for each employee. If the work performed by the employee 
                during more than half of any pay period qualifies under FUTA as 
                agricultural labor, the first $10,000 of that employee's wages 
                subject to social security and Medicare taxes are qualified wages. 
                For this credit, qualified wages also generally include the following 
                amounts paid or incurred by the employer that are normally excludable 
                from the employee's gross income:
              
                -  Amounts received for medical care under accident and health 
                  plans.
- Employer-provided coverage under accident and health plans.
- Certain amounts excludable under an educational assistance 
                  program.
 
- Amounts excludable under a dependent care assistance program.
Nonqualified Wages 
              Some of the most common wages that do not qualify include wages 
                you pay or incur to an employee who:
              
                - Has worked for you for more than 2 years,
- Is your relative or dependent,
- Worked for you previously or
- Does not either:
 a. Work for you at least 180 days or
 b. Complete at least 400 hours of service.
For a complete list of nonqualified wages, see the general instructions 
                for Form 8861.
              Amount of Credit
              The following table shows the rate you apply to the qualified 
                wages you pay or incur during each year of employment and the 
                maximum credit you can claim each tax year for each qualified 
                employee. Go to the Small 
                Business Workshop Workbook page 5-15.
              
                Qualified First-Year Wages
              Qualified first-year wages are qualified wages you pay or incur 
                for work performed by a long-term family assistance recipient 
                during the 1-year period beginning on the date the individual 
                begins work for you.
              Qualified Second-Year Wages
              Qualified second-year wages are qualified wages you pay or incur 
                for work performed by a long-term family assistance recipient 
                during the 1-year period beginning on the day after the last day 
                of the first-year wage period.
              Claiming the Credit
              Use Form 8661 to claim this credit (Exhibit 
                5.7), on page 5-16 and file it with your tax return. 
              Effect on Salary and Wage Deduction
              In general, you must reduce the deduction on your income tax 
                return for salaries and wages by the amount of your welfare-to-work 
                credit.
              Effect of Work Opportunity Credit
              You cannot claim both the welfare-to-work and the work opportunity 
                credit for the same employee during the same tax year. In some 
                cases, in may be more advantageous to claim the work opportunity 
                credit the first year and the welfare-to-work credit the second 
                year.
              More Information
              For more information about the welfare-to-work credit, see Form 
                8861 or visit the Department of Labor Web site at www.doleta.gov 
                or call 1-800-695-6879 for forms and information. You can also 
                use the Department of Labor's fax on demand service by calling 
                (703) 365-0768 (not a toll-free number) from your fax machine 
                and following the prompts.
              
                Checklist
              Before claiming the credit, use this checklist 
              _ Form 8850 completed and signed by:
                _ Employer and
                _ Employee
                _ ETA Form 9061, Individual Characteristics Form and
                _ Documents attached to demonstrate eligibility or
                _ ETA Form 9062, Conditional Certification Form, from an
                authorized participating agency.
              IMPORTANT!
              Information must be entered on Form 8850 on or before the day 
                a job offer is made.
              Form 8850 must be postmarked within 21 days of the employee's 
                start date and have original signatures.
              ETA-9061 should be mailed as soon as possible and does not need 
                original signatures.
              Note: At the time this workbook was printed, the credit was set 
                to expire for individuals who begin working for you after Dec. 
                31, 2001.