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1 month ago |
jdsupra.com | Michele Borens |Jeffrey Friedman |John Ormonde
In November 2024, voters approved Proposition M which provided for an overhaul of San Francisco’s gross receipts tax. (See our prior coverage here.) Proposition M changed the allocation and apportionment rules for most industries, generally requiring that three quarters of a taxpayer’s total receipts are allocated to the city on a market basis and one quarter are apportioned to the city using a payroll factor.
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2 months ago |
jdsupra.com | Todd Betor |Michele Borens |Elizabeth Cha
February 17, 2025
Todd Betor, Michele Borens, Elizabeth Cha, Jonathan Feldman, Jeffrey Friedman, Ted Friedman, Timothy Gustafson, Charles Kearns, Daniel Schlueter, Maria Todorova, Eric Tresh, W.
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2 months ago |
jdsupra.com | Michele Borens |Jeffrey Friedman |Timothy A. Gustafson
The California Franchise Tax Board (FTB) has proposed amendments to its regulations that govern how sales of services and intangibles are sourced for income tax purposes. The changes to this income tax apportionment regulation will apply to nearly every corporation that pays California tax. Comments regarding these proposed changes are due no later than February 5, 2025.
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May 8, 2024 |
jdsupra.com | Michele Borens |Jeffrey Friedman |Timothy A. Gustafson
On May 6, 2024, the San Francisco Controller and Treasurer released their proposed final tax reform ordinance language. To become effective, San Francisco voters will have to pass a measure on the November 5, 2024 ballot by a 50% vote. The changes would apply to tax years 2025 forward.
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Mar 7, 2024 |
lexology.com | Todd Betor |Michele Borens |Elizabeth S. Cha |Jonathan Feldman |Jeffrey Friedman |Ted Friedman | +6 more
This year’s Georgia’s legislative session is quickly progressing, with some major tax legislation moving towards passage. Last Thursday, February 29, 2024 was “Crossover Day”—the 28th legislative day of 40 total legislative days—the day by which all bills must have passed one legislative chamber to cross over for consideration by the other chamber.
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Feb 26, 2024 |
lexology.com | Todd Betor |Michele Borens |Elizabeth S. Cha |Jonathan Feldman |Jeffrey Friedman |Ted Friedman | +6 more
On February 14, 2024, the California Office of Tax Appeals (OTA) denied the California Franchise Tax Board’s (FTB) request for rehearing in the Appeal of Microsoft Corporation and Subsidiaries (OTA Case No. 21037336). Microsoft is allowed to include 100 percent of its foreign dividend income in its sales factor denominator. This is a huge opportunity for similarly situated California water’s-edge taxpayers.
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Nov 21, 2023 |
lexblog.com | Michele Borens |Cyavash Ahmadi |Meriem El-Khattabi
The sales taxation of software has long been controversial. When sales of software became commonplace in the 1970s and 1980s, it was largely available and commercially distributed on a tangible medium. Today, software is provided in ways that do not constitute the transfer of title or possession of tangible personal property, such as the Software-as-a-service (SaaS) distribution model.
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Nov 2, 2023 |
lexology.com | Todd Betor |Michele Borens |Elizabeth S. Cha |Jonathan Feldman |Jeffrey Friedman |Ted Friedman | +22 more
This is the third edition of the Eversheds Sutherland SALT Scoreboard for 2023. Since 2016, we have tallied the results of what we deem to be significant taxpayer wins and losses and analyzed those results. Our entire SALT team hopes that you have found the SALT Scoreboard’s content useful. This edition includes discussions of forced combined reporting and a state False Claims Act, as well as a spotlight on Ohio cases.
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Sep 7, 2023 |
lexblog.com | Michele Borens |John Ormonde |David Patterson
There has been an alarming expansion of local taxes. In some localities, this includes new local taxes imposed on businesses. In other localities, this includes aggressive interpretations of existing local ordinances by local tax agencies. In this installment of A Pinch of SALT in Tax Notes State, Eversheds Sutherland attorneys Michele Borens, John Ormonde and David Patterson examine a relatively old local tax — San Francisco’s gross receipts tax. Read the full article here.
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Aug 10, 2023 |
lexology.com | Todd Betor |Michele Borens |Elizabeth S. Cha |Jonathan Feldman |Jeffrey Friedman |Ted Friedman | +20 more
On August 9, 2023, the New York State Department of Taxation and Finance (Department) submitted its draft corporate franchise tax regulations for publication in the State Register – a significant and necessary step in the State Administrative Procedure Act (SAPA) process to formally adopt regulations related to the sweeping reform of the state’s Corporation Franchise Tax that was enacted nearly a decade ago.