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Jim Weir wrote:
To make a long story mercifully short, RST is looking for a person to do the accounting function....and at the end of the fiscal year get the tax forms (Fed and California) filled out ready for signature. From a fully credentialed bean counter with a tax practice: You didn't say whether out-of-state help is OK, but doing that for tax prep can be a bit problematic in general even for federal. From my understanding of Kaliforneeah and their increasingly whimsical ways of regulating return preparers, I wouldn't do it due no experience beyond a few nauseating CA returns and inability to spread my costs of compliance around to other CA clients, unless you want to pay for it. there are darned few that understand that all small airplanes aren't yellow with a small bear painted on the side...somebody that speaks airplane and that understands the manufacturing environment. There are some biz' requiring specialized knowledge for the accountant, but not yours. I do work for a genuine Part 145 instrument shop, but my knowledge in related matters has been worth no more than social chit-chat, for which you'll never know whether you're being billed. And manufacturing is 2nd semester of Accounting 101 with later immersion in brain-frying perpetual cost and LIFO, for Pete's sake! Important also for small business is someone with experience in IRS practice, because if nuthin' much has happened yet, strange gov't behaviour is only a matter of time ("Hear me now; believe me later!"). Just a few tips to help you find the right guy or gal. Fred F. |
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Sorry. The answer to your question is that out of state help is just fine with
me. I have absolutely no idea of how Californicate regulates return preparers; I didn't even know they were regulated. You are right; manufacturing accounting is the second semester of Accounting 101. Similarly, transistor circuit design is the second semester of Engineering 101. If that isn't your bent, more better you come to somebody like me who speaks Hfe (and hfe as well) and Miller capacitance as a second language. It is far better to do what you do well and let somebody else do what they do well. I have found that to be the optimal combination for preserving income -- and that's what I'm trying to do. Jim "TaxSrv" shared these priceless pearls of wisdom: - -From a fully credentialed bean counter with a tax practice: You didn't -say whether out-of-state help is OK, but doing that for tax prep can -be a bit problematic in general even for federal. From my -understanding of Kaliforneeah and their increasingly whimsical ways of -regulating return preparers, I wouldn't do it due no experience beyond -a few nauseating CA returns and inability to spread my costs of -compliance around to other CA clients, unless you want to pay for it. Jim Weir (A&P/IA, CFI, & other good alphabet soup) VP Eng RST Pres. Cyberchapter EAA Tech. Counselor http://www.rst-engr.com |
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