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1 - Your state’s wage and hour laws and the federal Fair Labor Standards Act regulations issued by the U.S. Department of Labor;
2- IRS and your state’s income tax reporting and withholding requirements; and
3 - Reasons why you must protect yourself and your in-laws, and their caregiver, with unemployment insurance and workers’ compensation coverage.
Domestic workers are household employees, not independent contractors. The employer must withhold the employee’s Social Security and Medicare contributions and pay a matching portion. At the end of the year, the employer is responsible to provide their employee with a Form W-2 reporting wages paid and taxes withheld.
Violations of the FLSA can surface when the IRS or your state's Department of Revenue catches a family’s failure to file employment taxes. You may find an ideal caregiver, who assures you she will take care of taxes on her own, using a Form 1099 issued by a family member.
But when the caregiver goes to her accountant the following year, he may say she was mis-classified as an Independent Contractor, and then file a Form 8919, which reports the individual’s share of uncollected Social Security and Medicare taxes. The Form 8919 gives the caregiver credit for Social Security quarters corresponding to her wages and names the family member as the responsible employer.
This is only one of the risks that you take if you decide to hire "under the table."
An Elder Law Attorney and/or accountant in your state can help you spot the issues. There are also nationally recognized online payroll services that help people comply with the wage and hour laws governing caregiver employees.
Instead of graciously accepting the truth of their lives, the cultural and/or generational PRIDE & Need to CONTROL kicks in....they are angry-bitter-blaming because it's easier for them to DENY than to accept & change. (They're in shock that their hopes of a quick death: heart attack, accident, etc. didn't happen!!....so they're NOT prepared mentally, emotionally, spiritually & sadly financially).
My story: quit corporate career to be primary caregiver to my 91 yr old mom & dad. I'm married 20 yrs with no children. Husband/I welcomed my parents into our home; gave them downstairs master bedrm suite (King bed; 2-person reclining leather sofa; 6-drawer dresser w/ 32"cable TV lots of windows/light....bedroom has private bathrm (walk-in shower) & walk-in closet.
After they arrived, husband/I experienced "daily steep learning curves" & "kick-in-the teeth reality trials".
Dad-91: COPD; oxygen 24/7, mild heart issue, ungrateful, demanding, prideful, selfish, insomnia, claustrophobic, curses like a sailor, picky re: food, critical & complaining all the time. Right eye blind; barely can read w/left eye, angry I won't let him drive & wants to be driven around; out of house, but can walk, shower, toilet, eat & mentally ok.
Mom-91: Dementia past 15+ yrs,
needs 24/7 care = toilet, bathe
/brush teeth, dress, walk, fed 3 meals, exercise....everything. Like a child; grateful except when she suffers with "Sundowners / Sundown syndrome" at dusk or cloudy, rainy days. (I never heard of Sundowners until I started
caring for my parents!... reason I'm mentioning it here).
**Hard learned realities:**
-my efforts to serve/care for my parents almost ruined marriage. 1st=God - 2nd=husband - 3rd=parents / family - etc.
-family dysfunctions (we all have them!) will be "magnified" with stress of circumstances. Prepare yourself to be hurt, criticized, judged & feel isolated...but your faith will get stronger & although you 'think you'll die" from the weight of responsibility + learning "stuff" you never wanted to know...don't give up - you will survive & if you can really forgive all (including yourself), you will be "free" in ways you never imagined possible!!
-I lost 20 lbs... got 3 hrs sleep daily / exhausted. Changing diapers every 2+ hrs, cooking, laundry, driving / doctor visits / shower / dress / brush teeth / feed mom & fight with dad 24/7.
-get mental competency tests / evaluations!! (2) different doctor letters required depending on the state. Your loved one may look the same, but they are NOT who you (or even they) remember them to be...they can't make sound, logical decisions. I used to give my parents $500.00 /mo... .I later find they spent $250.00 / mo on Publisher's Clearing Hse "Crap"!!
..a total SHAM as previous person posted; PCH preys on the elderly!!
-get legal & medical POA asap
-become their Soc Sec "payee"
so you can step in & are in position to help them.....when they make hateful statements & say horribly hurtful words to you, forgive them & help them anyway.
Very hard to do!
-Have integrity! Stand out; Don't fit in or just get away with things like others may
-A previous post listed harsh realities about elder care...hard to read, yet words were honest.
-Don't isolate yourself!! Love & be kind to yourself. (I said things & acted out from frustration, exhaustion, resentment, etc - talk about it! You can't help anyone if you're not "whole/healthy"
And, you just might get caught. What happens when the aide loses her job with you? She files for unemployment...bang..you are caught. Or..she is injured and files workers comp? Again you are caught.
There is no incentive for the aide to not file for those benefits. If you haven't been doing payroll withholding...you are the only person paying all the back taxes and the fines. Your employee has no reason to not file.
Go read the IRS website...all domestic help are employees...not contractors.
Overall, you should do thorough investigation on your choice of agencies and private hire. Involve background checks, check references, interviews and resumes. In this healthcare field it's all about who you know and referrals. When you find a great agency or private hire pay them fair and don't be cheap. The term under the table is reference phrase to cash only. Most agencies have this option cash payment. Private hire mostly would prefer cash payment but personal checks are accepted also. Information provided by a Homecare agency owner in Michigan.
I also privately hired one of my mother's aides from her rehab center (I asked her to slip me her number). She was great, because she already knew how to be a good and SAFE caregiver, so I didn't need to train her.
I realize this is referencing a very specific and local resource center in my neck of the woods, but you may want to look into something like it in your area.
PS. Because I wanted to avoid the scenario of ever finding that any of my mother's valuables were missing, I purchased a security deposit box at our bank and stored ALL jewelry, cash and small valuables in it BEFORE anyone started working in the house. It turned out that the people I hired were upstanding and honest, but there was no way of knowing that in advance of them working in my mother's house.
Of course most of private caregivers have worked for agencies or carelinx can hook u up with experienced and reliable caregivers, my grandma private caregiver never left us wondering who will look for her, as the person who has worked for agencies she have so relable fill ins
Now caring for my own mom
".. than the work itself ... when it comes to taxes and legal issues."
(I don't mean to imply that we're just covering a$$. Frankly, to me, that's the LEAST of my concerns. I know it's a huge issue for a lot of people and must be considered. The IRS has no heart. What we're really concerned with is quality life and care.)
.. They provide you with an invoice for services rendered
.. They provide all their own supplies to accomplish the 'work'
.. They get to determine their own schedule or when to complete the 'work'
.. You supply a 1099 at the end of the year
Where most caregiving would encounter issues, is with the timing factor. It's going to be pretty difficult to cover all the 'shifts' necessary for longterm care.
I can envision several scenarios where it ~might~ work:
You engage the contractor(s) for XX hours or to provide services and they tell you when they're available and you get to juggle the schedule. This might actually work well for the stay-at-home family caregiver who is simply looking for chunks of time to be relieved of caregiving responsibilities, the person who comes in to bathe, the one who comes in to help with housekeeping and 'keep an eye on mom' while you go off shopping, a hairdresser/manicurist who comes in once a week, and you get to peacefully work in the garden, or even someone who does all your shopping for you. Make it a mix and match kind of thing. (Hint: these could all be the same person. Just make sure the billing reflects the separate jobs for which they were engaged/hired.)
The very valid reasons for going through an agency:
.. Their staff should be screened for ability and training (and certification, if desired), as well as complete background checks
.. The agency will cover all the expenses related to health insurance and taxes for the worker
.. The agency will also carry liability insurance
.. The agency should provide relief staff
.. Some agencies even offer bonded staff
For most of us, covering the proverbial a$$ is more important than the work itself.
If so - my state (IL) has Dept of Health website with CNA and other medically certified person registered in this state. I can simply place an ad in local paper, get someone's info and a "feel" for the person by interviewing, then check credentials online.
I would start by seeing if your state has something similar to this.
Illegal and bad for all.
We had a woman that worked for an agency, my Mom adored her. But she constantly wanted us to tell the agency that she was working for 4 hours, but she would work for 8, then we would just pay her for the extra 4. She earned more money this way. It always worried me because the fines for doing this were steep. But we never got caught. It also just seemed wrong. We did sign an agreement with the agency.
But as for hiring privately instead of going through an agency, their are some very good people who work independently, just as there are some very good people who work for agencies. For independent workers you'll have to check references and do your own screening. Independents have sick children and get colds and have dental appointments, too, so hiring independently isn't a sure-thing solution to no-shows.
We hired someone to give baths to my father. He first met him through our home care company. He was glad to have the extra work and the company was fine with it. Many of the home health workers don't make a lot of money, so it may be a good source for you if it is okay with their agency.