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remflight | 3 years ago

The company has obligations to the state in terms of additional taxes, unemployment etc. They need to themselves up in order to conduct business in every state and they may fall under the jurisdiction of the laws of that state. There are tons of things that states impose on companies if they register to work in that state so yes they have a right to know.

For example, NY state had VERY different laws and obligations when it comes to a money transfer service. If you transfer money and you aren’t registered in NY state then you obviously don’t need to obey the regulations. For example all board member of the money transfer company need to submit financial documents.

However if an employee moves to NY, then the entire company would fall under the blanket of that because the company would need to register itself in NY. This is just 1 example. Colorado has laws regarding giving pay ranges on job postings. Many jobs no longer advertise in Colorado now because of it because they don’t want to fall under that blanket.

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ckdarby|3 years ago

I'm a Canadian, not an American, not questioning your arguments but instead asking for the information because I don't know.

How does NY state enforce their regulation on a company that isn't an entity in that state? If the company is not physically there with an office and has no registered entity there why do they have to comply to anything when they hire someone from that state? Would the employment contract not have a section saying that the contract will be governed by the state of the company entity located in X state (Non-NY)?

sneak|3 years ago

States have the ability to render “foreign” (out of state) entities unable to enforce contracts in their state.

They can also issue tax warrants that can seize your out of state entity’s money from an out of state bank account.

These are commonly issued without any burden of proof and banks are legally required to obey them, so it allows any tax authority in any state to rob your account at any time without any evidence of wrongdoing.

This happened to me once; the state of Indiana whole-cloth fabricated nonexistent tax liability because I didn’t file a form with them, and stole all of the money I had in the world out of my Chase bank account in New York. I almost lost my home. Every claim they made was fictitious. Chase charged me $150 or so on top for carrying out the robbery.

Months later, after spending dozens of hours on the phone and filing many forms, I got most of the money back, less $700 or so in “collection fees” (printing and mailing letters is apparently extremely expensive in Indiana), and of course the bank fees.

Now I don’t keep money in banks.