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Ticks & Tax of an Icy Winter - Press Release, 2001
News release
issued February 22, 2001, effective immediately. For media inquiries, contact Caroline Booth Lara, Communications Specialist, (580)
224-6379.
email: cblara@noble.org
The Ticks and Tax of an Icy Winter: Tree Damage Might Be Deductible
ARDMORE, OK -- Everyone wishing for
a cold winter to kill the ticks and grasshoppers should be happy, since December
2000 captured the title of the second-coldest December on record across much
of Oklahoma and northern Texas. So unless a dramatic temperature change tilts
the last part of the season toward the warm side, the winter of 2000-2001 should
qualify as "cold."
"I dislike cold winters, especially
wet ones. Long underwear (or longhandles, as we Okies call them) feels pretty
good to me till about July 4 each year," said Dan Childs, an agricultural economist
with the Noble Foundation in Ardmore, Oklahoma. "I hope that we will have fewer
grasshoppers next summer because they were so thick at my place last summer,
the ground seemed to move. It would be nice to be done with mass populations
of armyworms and grasshoppers for a few years."
Although the jury is still out on
the cold winter's impact on future insect populations, the results of Old Man
Winter's ice storm are very evident across much of the region.
Many urban and rural residents have
constant reminders of what rainfall and below-freezing temperatures can do to
trees and shrubs. Many trees in south central and southeastern Oklahoma and
northeastern Texas were damaged considerably because of ice accumulation on
the limbs.
"Some of you pecan producers have
asked whether you can deduct a loss on your tax return. First, you need to determine
whether the trees have a tax basis, and there are two ways they can qualify,"
Childs explained.
"The first way is for you to have
bought land with pecan trees producing or capable of producing pecans and to
have allocated a portion of the purchase price to them. The trees receiving
a value should be individually numbered so you can determine the total number
of trees," Childs said.
"The second way is to purchase and
plant a pecan tree and grow it to a nut-bearing stage. The cost of the tree
at planting and all the expenses incurred until nut production are capitalized
or added together and not deducted annually. The sum total of the preproductive
expenses becomes the tax basis when production begins.
"Once production begins on trees
you planted or, for mature existing trees, on land you purchased, you can deduct
depreciation that year and subsequent years. Since 1986, pecan trees can be
completely depreciated in ten years. If the trees are completely depreciated,
they have a zero tax basis, and you cannot claim a loss," Childs pointed
out.
Assuming a tree does have a tax basis
and did receive damage from ice accumulation, you can claim a loss, but it is
limited to the smaller of the adjusted tax basis or the decrease
in fair market value. If a pecan tree that has a tax basis is damaged so much
that it has no salvage value, then the amount of loss is the adjusted tax basis.
If the damaged tree is salvageable,
you must determine a predamage fair market value as well as a postdamage value
to verify which is the smaller loss, the adjusted tax basis or the decrease
in fair market value.
"If you own a house in town and purchased
a landscape tree (not necessarily a pecan tree) that was damaged during the
storm, you can complete a casualty loss tax form even though the tree is not
considered business property," Childs said. "There are more limitations, such
as the $100 and 10 percent rules. The procedure for deducting casualty losses
for nonbusiness property is more complex, and the reward is often less than
expected."
However, a casualty loss may be available
for those who persevere. If you think you can qualify for a casualty loss, it
is advisable to contact your tax preparer early.
"I have mentioned only the highlights.
There are many more details your tax preparer will want to discuss with you
concerning your potential casualty loss," Childs said.
"And, by the way, keep two bricks
handy just in case you see a grasshopper next summer."
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The Samuel Roberts Noble Foundation,
headquartered in Ardmore, Okla., is a non-profit organization conducting agricultural,
forage biotechnological, and plant biology research; providing grants to numerous
non-profit charitable, educational and health organizations; and assisting farmers
and ranchers through educational and consultative agricultural programs.
To learn more, check out the Noble
Foundation Web site at http://www.noble.org.
More news releases available at www.noble.org/Press_Release
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