[RP TownTalk] Fwd: New Laws Effective January 1 2020
Dwight Holmes
dwightrholmes at gmail.com
Thu Jan 2 17:48:34 UTC 2020
i thought this might be of interest to fellow Riverdalians - some of the
new national and local laws that went into effect yesterday.
---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: Jimmy Tarlau <jimmytarlau at gmail.com>
Date: Thu, Jan 2, 2020 at 12:44 PM
Subject: New Laws Effective January 1 2020
To: Jimmy Tarlau <jtarlau at gmail.com>
*Minimum wage goes from $10.15 an hour to $11 an hour (MD State Law)*
In 2019 Maryland General Assembly passed a bill that gradually increases
the state's minimum wage from $10.10 an hour to $15 over a period of five
years for companies with more than 15 employees (smaller businesses have
six years to get there). The first required increase, which boosts the rate
to *$11 for all companies*, takes effect Jan. 1.
*New Overtime Rule (National Regulation)*
Hourly workers receive time and a half pay after 40 hours of work.
Professionals, technical employees and managers had previously been
exempted from overtime rules unless they made less than $12.27/hour ($445 a
week or $23,600 annually). Starting in January the threshold for
professionals, technical employees and managers who have to be paid
overtime increases to $*17.78/hour ($684 weekly or $35,568 annually).*
This means a lot of low paid managers (e.g. at fast food restaurants),
professional (e.g. reporters at small newspapers), and technical workers
(e.g. at internet companies) will have to be paid premium pay if they work
more than 40 hours a week. This does not apply to people who are paid as
‘independent contractors’. But there are state and national laws that
prohibit employers from paying people as independent contractors if they
should be really classified as employees. (Email me if you are in that
situation and want some guidance about whether you’re being incorrectly
classified.)
*New Law Affecting Retirement Income (Federal Law)*
A part of the huge budget deal recently passed by Congress and signed into
law last month was the Secure Act. This bill makes a number of changes
affecting retirees. A few of the significant provisions of the law are
Increases the age that a required minimum distribution (RMD) must start
from 70½ to 72. Currently, people reaching 70½ must begin taking RMDs from
their Individual Retirement Accounts (IRAs) and workplace retirement plans.
The new rule applies to people who turn 70 1/2 after Dec. 31.
Repeals the maximum age for making traditional IRA contributions, which is
currently 70½. Workers will now be able to contribute to their IRAs past
this age as long as they have earned income.
Another provision allows parents to withdraw up to $5,000 from their
individual 401(k) or similar workplace plans for each new child without
incurring a 10 percent additional tax for early retirement plan
distributions. However, you still have to pay ordinary income taxes on the
withdrawal, which has to be done within a year of the birth or adoption of
a child. Parents can later put the money back into their retirement
accounts.
*Mandatory rape kit testing (MD State Law)*
This bill requires that law enforcement agencies submit sexual assault
evidence collection kits to forensic laboratories for testing within 30
days of receipt and calls for kit tests to be processed in a timely manner.
*Beer franchise agreements (MD State Law)*
Previously, a Maryland brewery that produced 20,000 or fewer barrels of
beer per year had to provide distributors with 180 days' notice before
moving to terminate or renew a franchise agreement. Further, breweries were
obligated to show good cause and provide distributors with 180 days to
rectify deficiencies. This bill cuts the notice to 45 days and relieves
sellers from having to show good cause or give a franchisee an opportunity
to fix any problems.
*Insurers banned from penalizing organ donors (MD State Law)*
Insurers of life, disability and long-term care can no longer hike
premiums, enforce surcharges, cancel policies or flat-out reject someone
from coverage based on their status as an organ donor.
*Reduction on Fees on Food Trucks (Prince George’s County Law)*
Eliminates fees for businesses apply for food truck licenses. Previously
food truck owners had to pay $500 if they operated for few than two months
and $3,400 if they operated for more than two months. There is still a fee
(reduced from $75 to $35) for inspections performed for the fire department.
*Happy New Year Everyone *and email me if you have any questions about any
of these new laws!
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