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- <text id=93TT2396>
- <title>
- Feb. 01, 1993: The Price of Obeying the Law
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Feb. 01, 1993 Clinton's First Blunder
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- COVER STORIES, Page 34
- The Price of Obeying the Law
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By JOHN GREENWALD - With reporting by Kathryn Jackson Fallon and
- Jane Van Tassel/New York
- </p>
- <p> For millions of Americans who hire even occasional
- household help, the rules that tripped up Zoe Baird can be the
- laws from hell. The requirement that immigrants have U.S.
- working papers is just part of the problem. The real burden for
- people hiring anyone, from nannies and baby-sitters to
- once-a-week household help, for more than $50 in a three-month
- period is the taxes and the blizzard of paperwork that also come
- through the door. So stringent are the legal requirements that
- the Internal Revenue Service estimates that no more than
- one-quarter of American families with household help bother to
- obey the law--and that assessment is probably generous.
- </p>
- <p> Such honor-bound people typically pay more for help than
- their tax-dodging neighbors, and their workers pocket less
- money. For example, a family that pays a nanny $250 a week must
- add $15.50 for Social Security taxes. The worker would likewise
- pay $15.50, plus $3.62 in Medicare taxes, not to mention
- federal and state income taxes. "It's very expensive to be on
- the books," says a New York City mother who does not pay the
- Social Security taxes. "I already pay $1,200 a month in child
- care. How can I pay more?"
- </p>
- <p> Paying the taxes is only part of the hassle. Conscientious
- families must fill out five federal forms a year on behalf of
- each worker. State and local filings can add to the burden.
- Overwhelmed families may seek help from accountants, who will
- gladly handle the paperwork for about $500 a year for a
- child-care worker. But even professionals can find the task
- grueling. Says Donald Rocen, a tax manager in the Washington
- office of accounting firm Coopers & Lybrand: "I wanted to do the
- right thing, and when I hired a cleaning person for $50 a day
- once every two weeks, I complied with all the regulations. But
- it was such a pain that I decided to use a cleaning service
- instead."
- </p>
- <p> The IRS acknowledges that the red tape has got out of
- hand. Former IRS Commissioner Fred Goldberg called in 1991 for
- a single federal form to replace the five documents that are
- required. And instead of having to write out separate checks,
- he said, families with household help should be able to pay the
- taxes through their own withholding schedules or estimated-tax
- payments. But while Goldberg predicted that such changes would
- "result in a significant improvement in voluntary compliance,"
- the proposals have languished in Congress.
- </p>
- <p> Catching cheaters is another problem for the IRS because
- the agency does not ask citizens whether they employ household
- workers. But tax dodgers are sometimes snared when domestics
- retire and apply for Social Security benefits, only to find that
- they cannot collect because their employers never paid the
- taxes. The dismayed workers then often turn in their miscreant
- bosses. The penalty for cheating can be twice the amount of the
- overdue taxes plus interest.
- </p>
- <p> Like the tax laws, the immigration statutes that regulate
- the hiring of household help are frequently flouted. In Los
- Angeles whole neighborhoods are filled with Mexican and Central
- American maids, nannies and gardeners. "There are probably close
- to 1 million undocumented people here," says Madeline Janis,
- executive director of the Central American Refugee Center.
- "Whatever the reason, it makes it almost impossible for people
- from friendly governments to acquire legal papers." Yet the
- nanny business is booming. "Immigrant women have the most
- experience with taking care of children," Janis says. "And
- working mothers have a need for nurturing, flexible and
- trustworthy child care."
- </p>
- <p> Nevertheless, the immigration laws impose stiff penalties
- on families that hire undocumented workers. Under the 1986
- statutes, employers and foreign workers must sign a declaration
- that the employees have proper working papers. The punishment
- for knowingly hiring illegal aliens can include fines and six
- months in prison.
- </p>
- <p> Under certain circumstances, parents can sponsor aliens
- for working papers through an arduous process that requires
- filing forms with the Department of Labor and the Immigration
- and Naturalization Service. Employers then must pay Social
- Security and other taxes under a special IRS number during the
- 10 or more years that it can take for the government to approve
- the application.
- </p>
- <p> Critics say the laws simply make it harder for families to
- find help at home. "Look at the roadblocks the law sets out for
- somebody who has a need for child care and cannot find qualified
- U.S. workers," says Ted Ruthizer, a Manhattan attorney who
- specializes in immigration law. "The law hasn't discouraged
- unauthorized employment--it's just made people go
- underground."
- </p>
- <p> Perplexed parents who want to obey all the laws can always
- turn to professional nanny agencies. "All my families sign a
- contract that says they will take full responsibility for paying
- taxes just as the law requires," says Marianna Bagge, director
- of the Denver-based National Academy of Nannies. "I have turned
- down families who are not willing to comply." Bagge trains up to
- 70 nannies a year, and their services aren't cheap. The
- graduates, who are all U.S. citizens, typically earn from $1,200
- to $1,500 a month to start, and the academy collects a one-time
- $1,200 fee from the employer. Lesson: in the frantic search for
- child care, a parent's choices are seldom both cheap and legal.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-