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CLA merges in Dembo Jones CPAs and Advisors

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CliftonLarsonAllen LLP, a Top 10 Firm, has added Dembo Jones CPAs and Advisors, a firm with offices in North Bethesda and Columbia, Maryland, expanding CLA’s presence in the U.S. Capital region, effective May 1.

Financial terms of the deal were not disclosed, but CLA earned over $2 billion in revenue in 2024, while Dembo Jones earned $24 million. CLA has nearly 9,000 people and more than 130 U.S. locations, while Dembo Jones has over 80 team members and two locations. CLA ranked No. 10 on Accounting Today‘s 2025 list of the Top 100 Firms.

The deal is part of CLA’s plan to grow by $1 billion through the addition of new partner firms over the next five years.

“This is such a great time for us to embrace Dembo Jones into the CLA family,” said CLA chief development officer Scott Engelbrecht in a statement. “At CLA, we understand that independence is key to innovation and growth. Our unique partnership model allows firms to retain local identity while accessing our global resources and our exceptional professionals across the country. This approach ensures that the firms that join us can continue to thrive in their markets while benefiting from the strength of a larger firm. Our friends at Dembo Jones talk about how their clients get all of Dembo Jones when they are working together. That is exactly how CLA operates, bringing all of CLA to our clients.”

Dembo Jones has offered accounting, auditing, tax, and consulting services to businesses, government agencies, organizations and individuals for over 70 years. 

“Joining CLA presents an incredible opportunity for both our team at Dembo Jones and the numerous clients who depend on our specialized services,” said Dembo Jones managing partner Brent Croghan in a statement. “Our shared values and mutual dedication to serving individuals, businesses, government entities and nonprofit organizations make this partnership a natural fit. With access to CLA’s extensive national footprint, we are now better equipped to provide enhanced resources to our clients.”

Last year, CLA added Axiom CPAs & Business Advisors, based in Albuquerque, New Mexico, Engine B, a London-based AI company, and Ronald Blue and Co, a firm with offices in Atlanta; Tempe, Arizona; Knoxville, Tennessee; and Santa Ana, California. 

In 2023, CLA acquired Richard, Witt & Charles in Garden City, New York; Frost & Co. in Tacoma, Washington; and Gilmore Jasion Mahler in Toledo and Findlay, Ohio. In 2022, it did a number of mergers and acquisitions, including with Hayashi Wayland in Salinas, California, Concannon Miller in Florida and Pennsylvania, and Price CPAs in Nashville, Tennessee.

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Accounting

In the blogs: Breathing room

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Private equity in the profession; green cards and exit taxes; governance for preparers; and other highlights from our favorite tax bloggers.

Breathing room

  • Current Federal Tax Developments (https://www.currentfederaltaxdevelopments.com/): The critical updates of Notice 2025-33, which impacts digital asset brokers and their compliance obligations under IRC Sections 6045, 3406 and related penalty provisions, extend and modify previously granted transitional relief, “offering much-needed breathing room.”
  • Sovos (https://sovos.com/blog/): The IRS will decommission the Filing Information Returns Electronically system in January 2027; all 2026 returns will need to use the new IRS Information Returns Intake System. The window for preparation is closing fast. 
  • Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy (https://itep.org/category/blog/): State legislatures are enjoying a quiet time now, a temporary calm before the storm of the federal tax and budget debate begins raging again.
  • Tax Foundation (https://taxfoundation.org/blog): Illinois policymakers should think twice before taxing GILTI.

Simplify, simplify, simplify

  • Mauled Again (http://mauledagain.blogspot.com/): Why hasn’t the blogger been commenting on the federal legislation that would extend and enlarge tax cuts and tax breaks for wealthy individuals and corporations? The answer is simple. 
  • TaxProf Blog (http://taxprof.typepad.com/taxprof_blog/): The contours of the Supreme Court’s dormant Commerce Clause doctrine of internal consistency, which asks whether a state tax intrinsically overreaches in imposing a burden upon interstate commerce, are difficult to understand. A recent paper examines how uncertainty is suggested again by Zilka v. Tax Review Board
  • The Rosenberg Associates (https://rosenbergassoc.com/blog/): Private equity entered the accounting profession with promises of creating value and fixing many of the pain points in the profession. A recent survey shows that while PE is already delivering on some of those promises, mixed feelings (and warning signs) abound.
  • Wiss (https://wiss.com/insights/read/): The recent Tax Court decision in Soroban Capital Partners LP v. Commissioner has rippled through the financial and legal communities and reinforced the importance of functional roles over formal titles when determining tax liability under self-employment tax.
  • Virginia – U.S. Tax Talk: (https://us-tax.org/about-this-us-tax-blog/): When a foreign national works in the U.S. and is granted stock options, taxation of these options can become complex if the individual later leaves the U.S. and becomes a nonresident alien for tax purposes. 

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Oil industry gets $1B tax tweak in GOP’s Senate bill

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Senate Republicans included a tax break estimated to be worth more than $1 billion for oil and gas producers in their version of President Donald Trump’s sprawling fiscal package. 

The provision would allow energy companies subject to a 15% corporate alternative minimum tax to deduct certain drilling costs when calculating their taxable income. Companies including ConocoPhillips, Ovintiv Inc. and Civitas Resources, Inc. lobbied in favor of it.

The change, included in the legislation released Monday by Republicans on the Senate tax writing committee, is nearly identical to a bill by Republican Senator James Lankford. His home state of Oklahoma is among the top oil and gas producing states.  

Lankford’s bill, called the Promoting Domestic Energy Production Act, would cost the US government $1.1 billion over 10 years, according to the non-profit Tax Foundation, which cited an estimate from the non-partisan Joint Committee on Taxation. 

A representative for Lankford declined to comment. 

Earlier this year, Lankford told CNBC that his bill was necessary to prevent independent oil and gas producers from being squeezed by the Corporate Alternative Minimum Tax, enacted under former President Joe Biden to prevent corporations from using deductions and credits to pay little or no taxes.

“If we can’t get rid of that entirely we at least need to give some relief to those folks who are independent producers,” Lankford said. “We need to be able to get some relief to them so they’re not constantly worried about it.”

Environmental and watchdog groups including Friends of the Earth and Public Citizen panned the provision included in the Senate bill as a giveaway to fossil fuel companies. 

“This proposal would introduce a massive new loophole for oil and gas companies,” said Lukas Shankar-Ross, deputy director for climate for Friends of the Earth.

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Rich colleges would face lower tax hike under Senate tax bill

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Wealthy U.S. colleges scored a win on Monday with the release of Senate Republicans’ tax bill, which would institute a lower tax increase on endowments than what GOP House members have backed. 

Private universities with at least 500 students that have endowments of $2 million per pupil or more would pay an excise tax of 8% under the new bill released by the Senate Committee on Finance. The levy would be placed on net-investment income earned by the endowments. That’s much lower than the 21% rate that was included in the House proposal, which passed the chamber in May.

The endowment tax would raise revenue to offset President Donald Trump’s tax cuts and it would punish universities that are “woke,” in the words of the House tax-writing committee. The White House has frozen federal funding to a number of schools including the Ivy League’s Harvard, Princeton and Columbia. 

Under the new proposal, institutions with endowments of $750,000 to $1,999,999 per student would face a tax of just 4%. Under the House plan, colleges with endowments over $1.25 million per student but below $2 million would pay 14%. Colleges have warned that the House plan would be extremely costly for the schools and take away from financial aid provided to students. 

Religious schools would be exempt from the tax in both the House and Senate proposals. The current levy of 1.4% on the richest colleges was instituted as part of the 2017 Trump tax cuts.

Karin Johns, director of tax policy for the National Association of Independent Colleges and Universities, said the tax should be eliminated and not expanded.

“The tax remains purely punitive, unfairly impacts one sector of higher education, disincentivizes charitable giving, and siphons funds to the federal government used to support students and their families,” she said in an emailed statement. 

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