United States Department of Agriculture

U.S. Department of Agriculture

Quality of Work Life Division

 

 


USDA Transit Subsidy Benefit Program – Guidance Letter


United States
Department of
Agriculture

Office of the
Assistant Secretary
for Administration

Office of
Human Resources
Management

1400 Independence
Avenue
SW
Washington
, DC
20250-9600

February 28, 2002

TO:                Deputy Administrators for Management

FROM:          Donna D. Beecher/signed by Joseph Colantuoni
                      Director

SUBJECT:     Pre-Tax Parking

The Office of General Counsel has provided guidance that clarifies the authority and eligibility for employees to exclude certain parking expenses from their taxable income (pre-tax parking).  This benefit is provided for by Executive Order 13150, Code of Federal Regulations 1.132.9, and 5 United States Code 7905.

Based on the above, any mission area/agency/staff office may authorize pre-tax parking for their eligible employees.  Where there is bargaining unit representation, mission areas/agencies/staff offices must fulfill any labor/management obligations.

For simplicity, we are providing this guidance in the attached questions and answer format.  If you have any questions please contact James A. Stevens at (202) 720-8248 or e-mail:  jamesa.stevens@usda.gov

 

Attachment



PRE-TAX PARKING FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS


Q: Which employees are eligible for pre-tax parking?

A: Employees who park at eligible parking locations and who also meet any of the additional qualifying criteria as presented here.

Q: What are eligible parking locations?

A: A metro-parking lot, commercial lot, privately owned parking lot, parking garage, parking meter, or employer provided parking.

Q: What are the additional qualifying criteria?

A: An employee must either take mass transportation, or ride in a vanpool, or in a carpool of two or more persons from the parking location to work.

Q: Can an employee driving a vanpool or carpool and parking in an eligible location be authorized pre-tax parking?

A: Yes.  Example:  The primary driver of a vanpool or carpool that parks in a commercial lot (or other eligible parking location), and whose members then walk to work is eligible for pre-tax parking.

Q: Can a single occupant of a vehicle who drives to work, parks at an eligible parking location, and does NOT take mass transportation, and does NOT ride in a vanpool or carpool from that location be authorized pre-tax parking?

A: No.  The intent of the program is to encourage employees to use mass transportation, a vanpool, or carpool and to discourage the use of single occupancy vehicles to travel to work.

Q: How do employees apply for pre-tax parking?

A: Eligible employees should submit an application to their designated transit subsidy coordinator.  The transit subsidy coordinator will submit the approved application to the servicing personnel office for inputting into the National Finance Center personnel/payroll system.

Q: Is a written policy required to implement pre-tax parking?

A: No.

Q: Is proof of the cost of parking required?

A: Yes.  It may be in the form of a parking lot receipt or, if no receipt is provided, the application itself will suffice.

Q: Is the National Finance Center able to process pre-tax parking applications?

A: Yes.  NFC instructions were previously provided to operating personnel offices
on August 31, 1999, and remain in effective.  The entry is done through the Allowance Screen of PRES (Payroll/Personnel Remote Entry System).

Q: What document is used to report the amount of an employee’s pre-tax parking to the Internal Revenue Service?

A: The W-2 Form.

Q:  How is the pre-tax parking benefit computed in the personnel/payroll system?

A:  The answer is based on an example of a GS-15, Step 5 in the 30% Tax Bracket and claiming $180.00 a month for pre-tax parking.

You would take $180 x 12 (months) divided by 26 pay periods.  This would equate to $83.07.  The GS-15, Step 5 gross salary is $3,881.60 (depending on locality).  Subtract the $83.07 from the $3,881.60 ($3,798.53).  Taxes are then calculated on the $3,798.53, if this was the only allowance the employee had.