SALT partners Zachary Atkins and Evan Hamme will speak at COST’s upcoming Spring Conference.

This three-and-a-half day conference will bring multistate tax professionals together and will provide updates on key SALT issues and insights regarding state tax trends and opportunities. Join Zack and Evan as they speak on the following panels:
Zack will speak on

The California Franchise Tax Board (FTB), California Department of Tax and Fee Administration (CDTFA) and California Employment Development Department (EDD) announced tax relief for certain California counties affected by severe winter storms.

The FTB automatically extended the filing and payment deadlines for businesses and individuals in San Diego County (only), until June 17, 2024.  This

SALT attorney Aruna Chittiappa will speak at TEI’s 2024 Midyear Conference on March 19.

Join Aruna as she presents on the topic “Local Tax Update” on March 19 at 10:00am, joined by Nicole Johnson of Blank Rome, Chris Streit of Tax Advisors Group and Howard Grindle (moderator) of ISS.
TEI is hosting its 74th Midyear

SALT partner Carley Roberts will moderate a panel at this year’s ABA-IPT Advanced Sales and Use Tax Seminar.

The Advanced Sales and Use Tax Seminar is one of three seminars hosted annually by the Institute for Professionals in Taxation and the ABA Section of Taxation. Featuring practitioners from around the country, the events cover sales

SALT partner Evan Hamme will speak at PLI’s Hot Topics in State and Local Tax 2024.

During this half-day program, presented by PLI, leading state and local tax practitioners will address the developments and trends currently impacting the state/local tax landscape.
Join Evan Hamme and Jessica Morgan (EY) at 9:15am as they present “Another Year

A California trial court denied the Franchise Tax Board’s (FTB) motion to vacate and modify the judgment declaring FTB Technical Advice Memorandum (TAM) 2022-01 and FTB Publication 1050 invalid underground regulations adopted in violation of the Administrative Procedure Act.
 

Seeking to limit the scope and effect of the court’s judgment, the FTB’s motion to

The New York State Tax Appeals Tribunal (Tribunal) held that a taxpayer’s distributive share income from a partnership was intangible income properly sourced to the taxpayer’s residence and not to the location of the partnership’s underlying operations.  In the Matter of Greenberg, the taxpayer was a New York resident partner in a partnership operating an

A New York nonresident taxpayer, Edward Zelinsky, recently filed a notice of exception to a Division of Tax Appeals’ (DTA) determination that he must allocate all his wages to New York under the so-called “convenience of the employer” rule.[1]  Zelinsky, a Connecticut resident who had previously challenged New York’s controversial sourcing rule, petitioned