T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
164.1 | | COVERT::COVERT | John Covert | Mon Jul 28 1986 09:22 | 5 |
| The IRS rules are (and have been):
Meals are deductible if you are out-of-town overnight.
/john
|
164.2 | | HITECH::BLOTCKY | | Sat Aug 09 1986 17:17 | 5 |
| The DEC rule (last I checked) was that while traveling, you are expected to
pay for your lunch only if you are visiting a DEC site with a on site
cafeteria.
Steve
|
164.3 | | COVERT::COVERT | John Covert | Sat Aug 09 1986 18:24 | 7 |
| re .-1
I don't believe that rule applies to overnight travel. I think DEC will
pay for your lunch even if there is a DEC cafeteria. After all, if I
were not out of town overnight, I might have brown-bagged it.
/john
|
164.4 | | MMO01::PNELSON | Searching for Topeka | Sat Aug 09 1986 20:22 | 6 |
| RE: .3
But John, if you were out of town just for the day, you also might have
brown-bagged it. Why differentiate for overnight trips?
Pat
|
164.5 | | STUBBI::REINKE | | Sat Aug 09 1986 22:10 | 3 |
| re .4 Maybe because no one would logically expect you to pack a
lunch in your suit case?
|
164.6 | | COVERT::COVERT | John Covert | Sun Aug 10 1986 11:42 | 21 |
| Yes, Pat. That's right. When travelling, you are reimbursed for expenses
you would not have had or cannot control.
If it's not an overnight trip, you probably won't have to spend any more for
lunch than if you had not been travelling, unless you go out to lunch with
customers, in which case it becomes a business lunch as opposed to a personal
meal. If it's not an overnight trip, you could go home for lunch or you could
bring a brown bag to work.
If it is an overnight trip, brown bagging is not considered possible, and
lunch is paid.
This is the Corporate expense policy, and aligns with the IRS policy, as far
as I know. If your manager won't pay for lunches when you're out of town
and you've fulfilled the IRS requirements, be sure to keep track of it and
take it as an "unreimbursed employee expense." And find a new manager.
/john
P.S.: In Germany, if the facility you work in doesn't have a cafeteria, DEC
must provide you a daily lunch subsidy to make you socially equal to others.
|
164.7 | | ECCGY1::JAERVINEN | Intentionally not left blank | Thu Aug 28 1986 04:44 | 3 |
| ...yes, but it is only DM 1,50 (about 75 cents). Even in Germany
it's hard to get a lunch for that...
|
164.8 | | COVERT::COVERT | John Covert | Thu Aug 28 1986 09:58 | 6 |
| Well, I did say that it was a subsidy to make you "socially equal" -- not that
you got a free lunch. (Since you don't get a free lunch in the cafeteria.)
Looks like about a 15-30% subsidy, depending on how much and where you eat.
/john
|
164.9 | | ECCGY4::JAERVINEN | Intentionally not left blank | Mon Sep 01 1986 09:02 | 2 |
| Iit's rather like a 1-15% subsidy. Hard to get a meal for less than
10 DM these days (unless, of course, you choose to go to MacDonald's!)
|
164.11 | new group? | SAUTER::SAUTER | John Sauter | Fri Jan 04 1991 09:58 | 4 |
| re: .10
What's the Corporate Organizational Chart?
John Sauter
|
164.12 | New travel reports for cc managers | SMEGIT::ARNOLD | Dithering some Widgets! | Fri Jan 04 1991 11:28 | 16 |
| re .10
In the memo I saw about this, cost center managers are now also going
to be receiving a regular report, something along the lines of:
Lowest
Employee Dates Logical Paid
Name of Travel Routing Airfare Airfare Difference
------- ---------- ------- ------- ------- ----------
<name> 12/10-12/14 BOS-ORD $250 $275 $25
or something to that effect. At the bottom of the sample report, the
"difference" figure is highlighted so that the cc manager can be aware
of how much money he/she "lost".
Jon
don't_shoot_the_messenger_I_don't_make_the_news_I_only_report_it
|
164.14 | Allow early approval!!! | MUDHWK::LAWLER | Twelve Cylinders - NO LUCAS electrics. | Fri Jan 04 1991 13:08 | 16 |
|
What would be ***REALLY*** useful would be a report that said
date route Fare paid Fare_if_approved Fare_if_approved
7 days before trip 30 days before trip
1/3/91 bos-London $1100 $800 $450
For trips which could have been planned in advance, Dec wastes
a **LOT** of money by making approval so cumbersome and uncertain
that tickets can't be bought until the last minute. This is
especially true for US-International trips where VP approval
must be sought.
|
164.15 | | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Fri Jan 04 1991 13:55 | 2 |
| Note that the policy now specifically states that frequent flier bonuses
are to be used to pay for corporate travel.
|
164.16 | What an interesting form to use | BASVAX::GREENLAW | Your ASSETS at work | Fri Jan 04 1991 14:14 | 23 |
| RE:.10 and the many memos I have received on this issue
Am I the only one who thinks that the TAF (Travel Authorization Form) does not
work??
What do I mean? Well for one thing, the form appears to have started out as
a cash advance form. This all well and good but, since I have a corporate
card because I have more than 2 business related expenses, I am expected to
use the card for tickets, etc. If that is the case, how do I fill out the
form? I don't need a cash advance.
Another thing, which boxes do I fill out and which boxes are filled out by the
"approver"? There is no hint on the form.
Personal opinion, someone said "People need to authorize travel." Then some-
one said "Let's use the cash advance form, it does almost the same thing."
NO ONE LOOKED AT THE COST IN TME AND CONFUSION THIS WILL CAUSE!! I am also to
the point of sending in a DELTA suggestion that we develop a form that is
strictly an authorization form if I could only figure out how much time and
energy would be saved :-)
Lee who_is_getting_tired_of_people_not_thinking_about_the_users_before_acting
|
164.17 | re: .15, re-read .10 | DELREY::PEDERSON_PA | Hey man, dig this groovy scene! | Fri Jan 04 1991 14:24 | 7 |
| RE: .15
The policy states " Employees are *encouraged* to use..."
(my emphasis), not "Employees *are* to use....."
on the frequent flier miles.
pat
|
164.18 | I turned in my Diners Club Card | CSSE32::RHINE | A dirty mind is a terrible thing to waste | Fri Jan 04 1991 18:19 | 7 |
| I will not have a corporate credit card. If I book a flight 4-8 weeks
in advance to save the company money, I get the bill that I am have to
pay before the travel takes place and I can get my money back. I am
very willing to help to do the right thing to help save the company
money, but I am not going to be responsible for paying a corporate
credit card bill out of my own pocket and then wait possibly a month to
take the trip and get reimbursed!
|
164.19 | changing rules | CSC32::K_BOUCHARD | Ken Bouchard CXO3-2 | Fri Jan 04 1991 19:12 | 5 |
| I especially like the part about "employees are ENCOURAGED to use
frequent flier bonuses. Makes you wonder how long it'll be before those
words are replaced by "employees MUST use..."
Ken
|
164.20 | | BLUMON::QUODLING | Aussie Licensing Devo | Sun Jan 06 1991 21:37 | 5 |
| And where does the line get drawn between frequent flier mile accrued as a
result of travel incurred at the employees own expense?
q
|
164.21 | Using your time to fly
| DACT6::COLEMAN | No, this isn't Perry--it's Cheryl | Tue Jan 08 1991 08:40 | 9 |
| And to help save the company more money, you fly on your own time
(Sunday's, after hours). My husband who used to work for Digital
said that when they started making him use his frequent flyer
miles for business trips, that's when he'd start travelling
during "company" time. Maybe it's the wrong attitude, but he felt
the frequent flyer miles made up for the time he spent on his
own personal time on company business.
Cheryl
|
164.22 | Re. 10, .21 - Frequent Flyer Miles | STAR::PARKE | I'm a surgeon, NOT Jack the Ripper | Wed Jan 09 1991 14:55 | 3 |
| Also, the employee is "technically" responsible for paying the taxes on the
"benefit" of the frequent flyer award. That is IF you are a member of one
of or more frequent flyer programs.
|
164.23 | re .22, it's a bit more complex... | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Wed Jan 09 1991 17:14 | 4 |
| Only that portion which is attributed to business mileage.
There is no tax on the frequent flier bonuses received for personally paid
travel.
|
164.24 | Not on MY life! | RBW::WICKERT | MAA USIS Consultant | Wed Jan 09 1991 22:35 | 15 |
|
This should be fun with more and more airlines becoming unstable and
therefore unreliable. Those of us in our group who travel more than 1-2
a year refuse to fly certain airlines because of their "tendency" to
strand their customers. And these are the airlines that are attempting
to use very low rates as bait. I'll cancel a trip before putting my
life in their hands...
This is getting to the point where you'd like we work for Uncle Sam.
Just wait until we start getting fixed per diems...
-Ray
|
164.25 | Great idea: fixed per diems | HYEND::KPARRIS | SET HOST, then Control-P | Thu Jan 10 1991 08:07 | 7 |
| > This is getting to the point where you'd like we work for Uncle Sam.
> Just wait until we start getting fixed per diems...
I was a government employee when fixed per diems started. Since my expenses
were always low (I didn't pad the numbers) I started making a profit every
trip. And the government saved money, too. Worked out great, and was good for
my morale.
|
164.26 | Not my experience with govt. per diem 1983 - 1986 | BLUMON::WAYLAY::GORDON | Tongue firmly in cheek... | Thu Jan 10 1991 11:35 | 9 |
| When I worked with (not for) the government, the per diem (which was
supposed to be used to cover *everything* - including hotel) didn't begin to
cover a night's lodging in either Boston or Washington D.C. Those of us who
were on "reasonable & customary" charges often sprung for meals, rented the
cars, and did all the tipping for the govt folks we were travelling with so
they didn't end up with huge out-of-pocket expenses. One advantage was that
I learned a lot of good, inexpensive places to eat in D.C.
--D
|
164.27 | | BHAJEE::JAERVINEN | I can C better now. | Thu Jan 10 1991 15:44 | 12 |
| I'd prefer per diem, if the amount is reasonable. Think of the savings
in travel claim processing...
In fact, per diem is the rule almost everywhere *except* US (and many
subsidiaries of US companies in Europe). Even DEc pays per diem for
domestic travel in some European countries.
A typical per diem for, say, a German company, for someone traveling to
France, would be around US$ 70 per day, + hotel (+ any actual travel
expenses like taxis, car rentals etc. the per diem is just for meals
etc).
|
164.28 | | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Thu Jan 10 1991 16:56 | 19 |
| > A typical per diem for, say, a German company, for someone traveling to
> France, would be around US$ 70 per day, + hotel (+ any actual travel
> expenses like taxis, car rentals etc.) the per diem is just for meals etc).
That's not per diem, then. Per diem, in the U.S., means a daily allowance
for _all_ expenses except the long-distance travel getting to and from the
distant point.
You've basically described the U.S. travel policy. You claim your hotel and
actual expenses, like taxis, car rentals, etc.
You also claim your meals, up to what you actually spend, and within the limits
(which are a lot less than $70/day -- that's really too much for just meals!).
You are not required to provide receipts for meals unless a single meal is
over $25 (IRS regulation).
What's the "etc." that's covered in the German per diem?
/john
|
164.29 | "per diem" can take qualifications | TAMARA::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (381-0899 ZKO3-2/T63) | Thu Jan 10 1991 17:32 | 18 |
| re Note 164.28 by COVERT::COVERT:
> > A typical per diem for, say, a German company, for someone traveling to
> > France, would be around US$ 70 per day, + hotel (+ any actual travel
> > expenses like taxis, car rentals etc.) the per diem is just for meals etc).
>
> That's not per diem, then. Per diem, in the U.S., means a daily allowance
> for _all_ expenses except the long-distance travel getting to and from the
> distant point.
Well, perhaps there are several kinds of per diem in the U.S.
When I worked for the Mitre Corporation, a captive government
contractor, (15 years ago), we had a per diem meal
allowance, but other expenses were actual (subject to some
limits similar to current Digital policy).
Bob
|
164.30 | | BHAJEE::JAERVINEN | I can C better now. | Fri Jan 11 1991 04:55 | 21 |
| re .28: Maybe a linguistic problem... anyway, it's common in Europe to
have a per diem or whatever you call it (Tagegeld), and it's common
that this is only for meals etc. where the etc. is any other 'personal'
expenses (drinks, personal entertainment, any fares associated with
that personal entertainment, etc. etc.). Actual business-related travel
expenses are separate (hotel, taxis for business travel etc.). There's
usually also a rule that a certain percentage is deducted from the
'personal' per diem if the hotel price includes breakfast.
The background is usually the tax system ('IRS rules') in a specific
country; whatever the employer can deduct as a business expense without
receipts is usually taken as the per diem amount. At least in the
contries I know reasonably well (Scandinavia and Germany) the amounts
are split in meals and other personal expenses, hotels, and actual
fares. There's usually a similar maximum on the hotel, but I know of no
companies that pay a hotel per diem (mainly because, at least in
Germany, those rates are ridiculously low and it's mostly not possible
to get a hotel for that amount, and consequently you need the receipt
to claim the actual amount (which obviously is tac deductible to the
employer).
|
164.31 | | LESLIE::LESLIE | DEC will eat itself | Fri Jan 11 1991 15:16 | 10 |
| The per diem systems that I've heard of are of two flavours
1) fixed amount worldwide plus hotel plus car hire
2) per-city amount including hotel and car hire
1 is FAR easier and cheaper to administrate. 2 requires a list that
needs maintenance.
- andy
|
164.32 | Any new news on car plan changes? | GLDOA::LINDBLAD | | Thu Jan 30 1992 14:02 | 11 |
| To get back to the main note, has anyone heard any reliable information
regarding a change to make Plan B more attractive? I've heard that
they are going to raise the base amount of Plan B to anywhere from $350
to $450/month, and also raise the personal use amount for Plan A to $50
per month. We heard these changes may come as early as January
(getting kind of late for that) or February.
Any new news??
marti
|
164.33 | A little typo there... | KYOA::JASTREBSKI | | Thu Jan 30 1992 14:33 | 9 |
|
>> and also raise the personal use amount for Plan A to $50
>> per month.
-----
Sorry, no concrete info on plan changes, but I hope you meant "week" or
I've been making a lot of donations to DEC these last few years. ;-)
|
164.34 | Not to mention TFSO vehicle surplus. | PTOECA::MCELWEE | Opponent of Oppression | Fri Jan 31 1992 01:55 | 13 |
| RE: .32-
The car plan(s) are discussed lately in 1664.*, and the rumor
of a change in Feb. is mentioned, sans $ specifics.
IMHO, it's long overdue. We determined here that plan A has been
$30/week since '86 and plan B increased to $200/month around '89 after
the "great California uprising" over the elimination of plan A for
many, which was ultimately reversed.
Something's rumbling, and you can bet it's not the Gravy Train...
Phil
|
164.35 | | ACOSTA::MIANO | John - NY Retail Banking Resource Cntr | Fri Jan 31 1992 11:30 | 11 |
| RE: <<< Note 164.34 by PTOECA::MCELWEE "Opponent of Oppression" >>>
> IMHO, it's long overdue. We determined here that plan A has been
> $30/week since '86 and plan B increased to $200/month around '89 after
> the "great California uprising" over the elimination of plan A for
> many, which was ultimately reversed.
At least for us, Plan A was $20 a week in '87. It was raised to $30
about 2 years later.
John
|
164.36 | Whoops - wrong note and typos! | GLDOA::LINDBLAD | | Fri Jan 31 1992 16:39 | 9 |
| I goofed - I meant to post note 32 in 1664, was in a hurry, and
typed 164 instead - at least expenses and car plan are somewhat
related. Also, yes, I meant $50 a week.
I think I'd better just read the notes.
Thanks for your responses anyway.
marti
|
164.37 | How about 10 bucks a week! | SUBWAY::CATANIA | Mike C. �-� | Mon Feb 03 1992 21:59 | 11 |
| I'm Sorry,
If we are expected to drive these cars for a longer time, the
cost should be reduced after 60,000 miles to 10 bucks a week!
As it is I end up writing digital a check at least 40 of the 52
weeks per year. Wheres the benifit! (P.S. I try not to put many personal
miles on the vehicle, especially since I own one that all ready has
insurance, and needs to be run to blow the carbon out)
- Mike
|
164.38 | | JMPSRV::MICKOL | Greetings from Rochester, NY | Tue Feb 04 1992 01:44 | 10 |
| At the Mid-Year Business review today I asked about changes under
consideration for the car plans. Tom Colatosti, Eastern States VP, stated that
although some unapproved proposals have leaked out, there are no plans to
change the car plans for the remainder of the fiscal year.
Regards,
Jim
|
164.39 | NEW TRAVEL POLICIES | JACOBI::JACOBI | Paul A. Jacobi - OpenVMS AXP Development | Tue Jul 13 1993 11:18 | 71 |
| Subj: IMPORTANT - NEW TRAVEL POLICIES
[forwards deleted]
IMPORTANT NOTICE
Due to budget constraints, the following corporate policies are announced
regarding employees traveling on official business. The policies are
effective immediately.
TRANSPORTATION
Hitch-hiking in lieu of commercial transportation is strongly encouraged.
Luminescent safety vests will be issued to all employees prior to their
departure on company business trips. Bus transportation will be used
wherever possible. Airline tickets will only be authorized for purchase
in extreme circumstances and the lowest fares will be used. If, for
example, a meeting is scheduled in Seattle, but a lower fare can be
obtained by traveling to Detroit, then travel to Detroit will be
substituted for travel to Seattle.
LODGING
All employees are encouraged to stay with relatives or friends while on
company business. If weather permits, public areas such as parks and
parking lots should be used as temporary lodging. Bridges may provide
shelter in periods of inclement weather.
MEALS
Expenditures for meals will be limited to an absolute minimum. It should
be noted that certain grocery chains, such as General Nutrition Centers
and Piggly Wiggly stores often provide free samples of promotional items.
Entire meals may often be obtained in this manner. Travelers should also
become familiar with indigenous roots, berries and other protein sources
available at their destination. If a restaurant must be utilized,
travelers should seek establishments offering "all you can eat" salad
bars. This will be especially cost effective for employees traveling
together, as a single plate can be used to feed an entire group.
Employees are also encouraged to bring their own food while on company
business. Cans of tuna fish, spam, pork-n-beans and beef-a-roni can be
conveniently consumed at your leisure without the unnecessary bother of
heating or other costly preparation.
ENTERTAINMENT
Entertainment while on travel is strictly discouraged. If such
extravagances are required on customer contacts, the customer should be
encouraged to "pick up the tab." Such action will save the company money
and convince the customer that we are concerned about spending money on
providing a good product, not on useless frivolities. The hospitality
provided to customers who visit our facilities should also be tasteful,
yet cost effective. In lieu of extravagant dinners, a picnic bench will
be placed in the parking lot next to the dumpster and garden hose will be
made available so that liquid refreshment can be provided for our quests.
MISCELLANEOUS
All employees are encouraged to employ innovative techniques in our team
effort to save corporate dollars. One enterprising individual has
already suggested that money could be raised during airport layover
periods which could be used to defray travel costs. In support of this
idea, "red caps" will be issued to all employees prior to departure so
that they may earn tips for helping other travelers with their luggage
during such periods. Small plastic roses will also be made available to
employees so that sales may be made as time permits.
|
164.40 | :-) | LANDO::ODONNELL | | Tue Jul 13 1993 17:01 | 4 |
| .39
Very funny ... same as note 2197.0 this conference 4-Nov-92
Guess it was time this surfaced again ....
|