It has been a good year in Ohio for CPAs, as some long-sought reforms have come to pass, but there is still work to do to improve Ohio’s business climate.
OSCPA members were interested in a smorgasbord of news in August, as the topics ranged from the emergence of new skills in education to the latest legislative action.
Getting optional centralized collection of municipal net profits taxes enacted in Ohio’s biennial budget was a difficult task, but one that will improve the state’s business climate.
An OSCPA member recently contacted us with a cautionary tale about a client who last year was required to take the Ohio Department of Taxation’s ID Confirmation Quiz.
The end of 2016 brought with it the likely end of proposed U.S. Department of Labor overtime rules – and plenty of interest in that story by OSCPA members.
Two topics were dominant in 2016 when it came to the news OSCPA members were interested in, and the first focused on a point of discomfort: Ohio’s broken municipal income tax system.
House Bill 9 is a part of OSCPA’s continuing effort for sensible tax policy and transparency, accountability and efficiency at all levels of government.
Legislators along with business and labor leaders on Tuesday unveiled a set of short-term concessions as they pledged to reach a full solvency plan for Ohio’s unemployment system by April 1.
If it seems like the Dec. 15 due date for municipal 4th quarter estimated tax payments is arriving quickly, it’s because it is – and it’s because it’s nearly seven weeks earlier than in previous years.
The Ohio Senate on Wednesday voted 30-0 to approve a bill to simplify the complex process and streamline the calculation, remittance and tracking of tax paid on behalf of nonresident owners of Ohio-operating pass-through entities.
The Ohio Supreme Court today ruled the state can impose its CAT on three out-of-state companies for selling products and services to Ohioans, even though they have no physical presence in the state.