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Tax Credit
Program$
Can Save Employer$
Thousands of Dollar$!!
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The Work Opportunity Tax Credit and the
Welfare-to-Work Tax Credit are Federal programs designed to help people move from economic dependency to
self-sufficiency by providing an incentive to employers in the private
sector to hire from among several groups of job seekers who have
consistently had the
most difficulty in securing employment. This
incentive is in the form of a substantial credit against income taxes
owed to the Federal government.
In Kentucky, the
Office of Employment and Training (OET) has primary responsibility for administering
the WOTC and WtW Tax Credit programs. Questions about the programs
should be addressed to Barbara Gilley, State WOTC Coordinator, or other
Field Support Branch staff assigned to the WOTC program at 502-564-7456.
Requests for certification and other program forms
should be mailed to Ms. Gilley at: Office of Employment and Training,
Division for Field Services, 275 East Main St., 2W, Frankfort KY 40621.
Locally, for more information about this program, you may email Christine
Settles or call her at 606-433-7721.
Work
Opportunity Tax Credit:
The WOTC
program is administered by the Office of Employment and Training. This
program provides Federal tax credits to encourage employers to hire job
seekers with barriers to employment from eight targeted groups.
Individuals who are: receiving Federal public assistance or food stamp
benefits, SSI, vocational rehabilitation services, high-risk youth and
summer youth who live in a Federal Empowerment Zone or Enterprise
Community, disabled veterans or veterans receiving food stamp benefits,
and ex-felons, are eligible to earn WOTC tax credits for
their employers.
The amount of the tax credit varies
depending upon wages paid to and the number of hours worked by the
eligible employee. For each WOTC eligible employee who works 400 hours
or more, the employer may claim a tax credit equal to 40% of the first
$6000 of qualified wages paid, except in the case of Qualified Summer
Youth Employees, for whom the tax credit is equal to 40% of the
first $3000 of qualified wages paid. For those who work at least 120
hours, employers may claim a tax credit equal to 25% of the first $6000
in qualified wages paid, except in the case of Qualified Summer Youth
Employees for whom the tax credit is equal to 25% of the first $3000
in qualified wages paid. An employee must work at least 120 hours in
order for the employer to claim any tax credit.
Welfare-to-Work:
The Office of
Employment and Training
is committed to providing a qualified workforce to help businesses be
more competitive in the global economy. At the same time, we need to
give our citizens a chance to work, raise a family, and build a future.
Some of these citizens receive public assistance. By hiring a work-ready
public assistance client, your company may be eligible to receive a
variety of services and incentives.
The Welfare-to-Work
(WtW) Tax Credit is
a tax credit for employers who hire individuals certified by OET as long-term
recipients of cash welfare assistance, Temporary Assistance to Needy
Families (TANF).
The Welfare-to-Work Tax Credit is equal
to 35% of the first $10,000 of qualifying wages paid to a certified
employee during the first year of employment and 50% of the first
$10,000 in qualifying wages paid during the second year of employment,
for a maximum $8500 tax credit over a two-year period. In addition, for
the WtW Tax Credit, wages may include certain
tax-exempt amounts relating to
accident and health coverage, educational assistance programs, and
dependent care assistance programs, which are not included in the
definition of qualifying wages for the WOTC.
The application and certification
process for the WtW Tax Credit is the same as for the WOTC. Even the
forms (IRS
8850, ETA-9061, ETA-9062, and ETA-9063) are the same.
However, in order for the employer to claim the WtW Tax Credit, the
employee must work for the employer at least 400 hours or 180 days. The
WtW Tax Credit is coordinated with the WOTC so that employers may claim
both tax credits for the same individual, but not in the same taxable
year.
Unemployment Tax Credit
The
Unemployment Tax Credit (UTC) program provides employers a credit of $100
per eligible hire against Kentucky income taxes owed for hiring residents
who have been unemployed for 60 days and remain on the payroll for at least
180 days.
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