yellow pages ad/James

Tom Sivak tvaktvak at sbcglobal.net
Tue May 30 07:23:53 MDT 2006


Furthermore, if she has no income you can claim her as a deduction.  I think that would garner more than $400 in savings at tax time.  I think I'll leave things as they are.
   
  Tom Sivak

BobDavis88 at aol.com wrote:
        In a message dated 5/29/2006 7:04:23 AM Pacific Daylight Time, deanmay at pianorebuilders.com writes:
  Going from a one man operation to having an employee adds a huge amount of paper work, withholding forms, etc. with associated penalties if you don’t get everything just right. DAMHIK. That’s a lot of work and risk for $400.
  It sure is, and in addition, if you are going to conform to the law, you are subject to Workers' Comp insurance, must post all sorts of advisories on your wall, have (and document!!) safety meetings for OSHA, and file more quarterly reports (as Dean said). It definitely isn't worth it, and we no longer have employees because of it.
   
  My wife works full-time as a rebuilder. We have set up as a partnership, which requires almost no extra paperwork. I does not shelter us from liability like a corporation does, though, so we have to keep our fingers crossed that no one will sue us. Sigh.
  
Bob Davis

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