The Job Accommodation Network
(JAN) is an international, toll-free, consulting service that provides
information regarding job accommodations. This publication summarizes
tax incentives related to accessibility and the employment of people
with disabilities.If you need further assistance, please contact an
accountant or tax attorney. You can also visit "JAN on the Web"
at: http://www.jan.wvu.edu.
For information on specific
agencies and organizations, please look in your local area phone directory,
specifically in the Blue Pages, for government contacts and the Yellow
Pages for other organizations.
Disabled Access Credit (DAC)
P.L. 101-508, The Omnibus
Budget Reconciliation Act of 1990, (OBRA '90), contains a tax incentive
to encourage small businesses to comply with the ADA. The DAC is found
in Section 11611 of OBRA '90, which establishes Section 44 of the
Internal Revenue Code of 1986. DAC is available to an "eligible
small business" and is equal to 50% of the "eligible access
expenditures" which do exceed $250 but do not exceed $10,250,
for a maximum credit of $5,000 a year. DAC became effective on the
date of enactment of the law, November 5, 1990, and applies to expenditures
paid or incurred after that date. It is included as part of the General
Business Credit and is subject to the rules of current law which limit
the amount of General Business Credit that can be used for any taxable
year. DAC can be carried forward up to 15 years and back for three
years but not back to a taxable year prior to the date of enactment.
An "eligible small
business" is "any person" whose gross receipts did
not exceed $1,000,000 for the preceding taxable year, or who employed
not more that 30 full-time employees during the preceding year. A
full-time employee is defined as one who is employed at least 30 hours
per week for 20 or more calendar weeks in the taxable year. In general,
all members of a controlled group of corporations are treated as one
person for purposes of credit eligibility, and the dollar limitation
among the members of any group will be apportioned by regulation.
In the case of a partnership, the expenditure limitation requirements
will apply to the partnership and to each partner. Similar rules will
apply to S corporations and their shareholders. "Eligible access
expenditures" are defined as "amounts paid or incurred by
an eligible small business for the purpose of enabling small businesses
to comply with applicable requirements" of ADA.
Included are expenditures
for:
1. Removing architectural,
communication, physical or transportation barriers which prevent
a business from being accessible to, or usable by, individuals with
disabilities;
2. Providing qualified interpreters or other effective methods of
making aurally delivered materials available to individuals with
hearing impairments;
3. Providing qualified
readers, taped texts, and other effective methods of making visually
delivered materials available to individuals with visual impairments;
4. Acquiring or modifying
equipment or devices for individuals with disabilities; and
5. Providing other similar
services, modifications, materials or equipment.
All expenditures must be
"reasonable" and must meet the standards promulgated by
the
Internal Revenue Service (IRS) with the concurrence of the Architectural
and Transportation Barriers Compliance Board. Expenses incurred for
new construction are not eligible. For the purposes of DAC, disability
is defined exactly as in the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990.
An eligible small business
under Section 44 may deduct the difference between the disabled access
credit claimed and the disabled access expenditures incurred, up to
$15,000, under Section 190 provided such expenditures are eligible
for the Section 190 deduction.
For additional information
on the Disabled Access Credit, contact a local Internal Revenue Service
Office: http://www.irs.gov/businesses
or call 800-829-4933 (V) 800-829-4059 (TTY).
Architectural and Transportation Barrier Removal Deduction
In 1986, Congress amended
Section 190 of the Tax Reform Act to extend permanently the annual
$35,000 tax deduction for the removal of architectural and transportation
barriers. P.L. 101-508, the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1990,
amended Section 190 and reduced the deduction from $35,000 to $15,000,
effective for tax years after 1990. Under Section 190, businesses
may choose to deduct up to $15,000 for making a facility or public
transportation vehicle, owned or leased for use in the business, more
accessible to and usable by individuals with disabilities. A facility
is all or any part of a building, structure, equipment, road, walk,
parking lot, or similar property. A public transportation vehicle
is a vehicle such as a bus or railroad car, that provides transportation
service to the public, or to customers. The deduction may not be used
for expenses incurred for new construction, for a complete renovation
of a facility or public transportation vehicle, or for the normal
replacement of depreciable property. In the case of a partnership,
the $15,000 limit applies to the partnership and to each partner.
Amounts in excess of the $15,000 maximum annual deduction can be added
to the basis of the property subject to depreciation. In order for
expenses to be deductible, accessibility standards established under
the Section 190 Regulations must be met.
For additional information
on Section 190, contact a local Internal Revenue Service Office: http://www.irs.gov/businesses
or call 800-829-4933 (V) 800-829-4059 (TTY).
Rehabilitation Act of 1973
The Vocational Rehabilitation
(VR) Program has a 73-year history of assisting people with disabilities
to prepare for and enter the competitive work force. This is a Federal-State
program and the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, as amended, authorizes
annual funding to state VR agencies in order that they can achieve
the goals of the program. An On-The-Job Training Program can be set
up by VR with an employer for an individual client of VR. VR can share
in the payment of the wages for the employee for a limited time on
a negotiated schedule. The position must be permanent full time, and
pay above minimum wage.
The VR staff can act as
a recruiter and consultant for employers. They can conduct job analyses,
and provide rehabilitation engineering services for architectural
barrier removal and worksite modifications.
Also, they can conduct
awareness training for a company's management and supervisory personnel.
For more information, contact
your local state
vocational rehabilitation agency.
Work Opportunity Tax Credit (WOTC) Program
On October 4, 2004, the
President signed into law the Working Families Tax-Relief Act of 2004
(P.L. 108-311). Congress extended the WOTC tax credit through December
31, 2007, applied retroactively to January 1, 2006. The WOTC authorized
by the Small Business Job Protection Act of 1996 (P.L. 104-188), is
a federal tax credit that encourages employers to hire nine targeted
groups of job seekers by reducing employers' federal income tax liability
by as much as $2,400 per qualified new worker; $750, if working 120
hours or $1,200, if working 400 hours or more, per qualified summer
youth. For additional information, see: http://www.doleta.gov/business/incentives/opptax/
Individuals with disabilities
can contact their local state-Federal Vocational Rehabilitation Office
to receive a voucher. This is presented to the employer who completes
a small portion, and then mails it to the nearest local Employment
Service Office. That agency will send back to the employer a certificate
which validates the tax credit, and which the employer uses when filing
Federal tax forms. Statements from rehabilitation services are allowable,
as is mail in documentation.