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Content about Employment

June 15, 2011

NEW YORK — Trade shows are great for bringing together the industry’s most important players and prospects. But all that product-seeking and hand-shaking comes at a cost. Airfares, hotels and restaurant meals represent a hit to your bottom line.

Uncle Sam does offer some respite for the trade-show traveler, however. Prudent and thorough deductions of travel expenses on your income-tax returns can help soften the financial blow.

As attractive and necessary as these deductions are, though, you must be careful how you proceed. Experts advise deducting only those expenses permitted by law.

“Travel expenses are red-flag audit triggers for the IRS—particularly in the areas of meals and entertainment,” says Suzette Flemming, president of Flemming Business Services, a financial-management company based in Great Falls, Mont. “Unfortunately, the burden of proof for these deductions is on individuals, not the IRS. And the proof must be in the form of documentation.”

January 10, 2011

AUSTIN, Texas —The Texas Workforce Commission (TWC) has sent payments totaling $259,391 for back wages owed to 46 former Washex Inc. employees, the agency reports.

Recovery of the money was the result of a TWC Labor Law Department investigation followed by administrative liens placed on the Wichita Falls-based company’s assets after it filed for bankruptcy in January 2010.

September 6, 2010

CHICAGO — Have you ever gotten up in the morning fighting with yourself over how you or your team could receive additional compensation for your work? Or maybe your team is threatening to go elsewhere and you are caught in the middle.

An AmericanLaundryNews.com Exclusive

CHICAGO — Have you ever gotten up in the morning fighting with yourself over how you or your team could receive additional compensation for your work? Or maybe your team is threatening to go elsewhere and you are caught in the middle.

July 28, 2010

I have had numerous discussions with my fellow laundry managers in recent years about job security. This certainly has been a hot topic around the country. Can you stay at a job too long? Is the concept of working for just one or two employers during your career a thing of the past?

Our discussions revealed three key issues:

ASCERTAINING MARKET VALUE

July 28, 2008

WASHINGTON — Now that the second of three planned increases in the federal minimum wage has passed (as of July 24), all U.S. businesses are required to raise eligible employee wages to $6.55 and display the proper labor law notice at each business location. To be compliant, all businesses with at least one employee must display the new regulation, regardless of whether employees are hourly, salaried or compensated at more than the minimum wage.

March 19, 2008

One of my tasks that always seems to fall through the cracks is updating the job descriptions for all the positions that report to me.

There are numerous distractions to hold my attention each day and keep me from doing this important task. There may be an unhappy customer to satisfy, an account with linen handling and distribution issues to assist, employee conflicts to moderate and budget meetings to attend.

The task of updating these job descriptions waits patiently for me to decide that I have the time and the interest to perform it.

January 4, 2005

Over the past five years, I’ve had many discussions with fellow laundry managers about job security. This certainly has been a hot topic around the country. Several managers have asked, “Can you stay in a job too long?” and “Is the concept of working for just one or two employers during your working years a thing of the past?”

Here are the main issues that always come up in our chats:

MARKET VALUE