By Peter N. Calcara, vice president – government relations
With the 2018-2019 Pennsylvania budget in the books and elections on the horizon, this summer has been unusually quiet around the Capitol. The tranquility is a welcomed change considering the last few chaotic summers. It’s been years since unresolved budget matters haven’t dominated the summer legislative landscape. State lawmakers have been out of session since the end of June, and they are not scheduled to return until early September. While the pace of legislative activity may have ground to a halt, the PICPA government relations team continues to plow ahead on a couple critical issues that we hope to get on the General Assembly’s abbreviated fall session calendar. Here’s an overview of the issues the PICPA is working on.
Topping our agenda is getting a fix for the 1099-MISC nonresident withholding requirements. The law enacted last year (Act 43 of 2017) requires withholding, at a 3.07 percent rate, on nonwage Pennsylvania source income payments made to nonresidents. Compliance with the new requirements has been challenging and costly as taxpayers have had to implement new procedures and modify systems. The Department of Revenue nonresident withholding website is a great starting point for a fix, but certain provisions in Act 43 need to be addressed through corrective legislation.
House Bill 2413, sponsored by Rep. Keith Greiner, CPA (R-Lancaster), is pending in the House Finance Committee. This bill seeks to provide greater clarification and guidance to last year’s 1099-MISC nonresident withholding requirement. HB 2413 addresses three major problem areas for practitioners and taxpayers:
A second PICPA-supported bill deals with income tax reporting for estates and revocable trusts. House Bill 2303, sponsored by Rep. Michael Corr (R-Montgomery), was unanimously reported by the House Finance Committee on June 20, but lawmakers adjourned before a vote on the bill.
The bill would allow the executor of an estate and the trustee of a qualified revocable trust the option to treat the trust as part of the estate for all taxable years after a decedent's death, rather than as two separate entities. Currently, the state Tax Reform Code requires a decedent's estate and revocable trust to file a separate Form PA-41 to report income earned by each during the year. Federal law allows the estate of a decedent with a revocable trust to elect to file a single annual income tax return that reports income earned by both the estate and the trust on federal Form 1041.
The Pennsylvania House is scheduled to return on Sept. 12, and the state Senate on Sept. 24. With only a handful of legislative days scheduled, PICPA’s window of opportunity to get these proposals through both chambers and on the governor’s desk is narrow. Notwithstanding the abbreviated fall session schedule, PICPA members are urged to use what remains of the summer to reach out to their state lawmakers to share their thoughts on one or both bills.
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