Connect with us

Accounting

M&A watch: Crete and Level Four expand

Published

on

Crete Professionals Alliance, a group of accounting and professional services firms based in Tampa, Florida, has partnered with Reid Tax & Advisory Services LLC, a firm with offices in Long Island, New York, New York City, and Boca Raton, Florida.

Crete Professionals Alliance was established last year to provide an alternative to the traditional exit options for accounting and professional services firm owners. As is typical with earlier Crete PA partnerships, Reid CPAs transferred its tax and advisory business to a new entity called Reid, which is owned by Crete PA and the Reid partners and is not a CPA firm, to provide tax and advisory services to clients. Reid CPAs, which is separately owned and governed and remains a licensed CPA firm, provides audit and attest services to clients. Reid and Reid CPAs will operate in an alternative practice structure. 

The deal took effect in February. Financial terms were not disclosed, but Reid earns approximately $25 million in revenue.

“Crete PA’s partnership model offers significant benefits and services to our clients while also creating opportunities and providing additional resources for our team members,” said CEO Jason Reid Saladino in a statement Tuesday. “Our partnership with Crete PA allows us to continue to manage and grow our firm while leveraging Crete PA’s capabilities to continue our growth. In particular, we believe that our next-generation leadership will benefit from this partnership as we think about Reid’s long-term potential.”

Koltin Consulting Group CEO Allan Koltin advised both firms on the deal. “Reid was approached by numerous suitors but chose Crete PA based on the opportunities for professional growth that their associates would have,” he said in a statement. “Crete PA is quickly becoming one of the fastest-growing accounting platforms in the country. They have the entrepreneurial flare and skills that many first-generation founders and high-performing partners and leaders are looking for in a strategic and capital partner.”

This is the sixth partnership for Crete since it was established in 2023. Other firms that have joined since last year include RRBB Accountants and Advisors in Somerset, New Jersey; Mendonca Partners in Union, New Jersey; Skwiersky, Alpert & Bressler LLP in New York City; AbitOs in Coral Gables, Florida; and Savastano, Kaufman & Co. in Fair Lawn, New Jersey.

Continue Reading

Accounting

Chicago passes 2025 budget without property tax hike

Published

on

The Chicago City Council approved an approximately $17 billion budget for 2025 that raises levies and fees by more than $180 million after Mayor Brandon Johnson removed his proposed property tax hike. 

The spending plan comes after weeks of contentious talks between the Johnson administration and aldermen over how to close a nearly $1 billion deficit with higher taxes or cuts. The depth of disagreements had raised concerns about whether a budget would pass by the Dec. 31 statutory deadline. The budget passed 27 to 23 on Monday.

“I know this was a long and arduous process,” Johnson said in remarks in the council chamber after the votes. “The budget we passed today is yet another down payment on securing a better, stronger and a much safer future for the people of this fine city.”

To win approval, the first-term progressive mayor had to revise his plan amid vigorous pushback from council members. His original proposal in October included a $300-million property-tax increase that aldermen unanimously rejected. He scaled that down before nixing it completely to get enough support for passage. 

The spending plan won approval after Johnson and his team used a series of piecemeal items, including other taxes and fees to fill the nearly $1 billion deficit in the city’s more than $5 billion operating fund, known as the corporate fund. That fund pays for public safety, streets and sanitation among other services. The revenue measure also includes $128 million from higher cloud computing levies. 

Before the vote, Alderman Carlos Ramirez-Rosa, an ally of Johnson, said he supported the budget. He highlighted the critical investments in youth employment and mental health services as well as the supplemental pension payment.

Johnson’s budget uses about $54 million in savings from a municipal-bond refinancing earlier this month to help plug the deficit. While officials had considered using those funds to repay debt related to a loan for the 2009 purchase of the former Michael Reese Hospital, the city is now deferring that repayment.

The revised budget also cut vacant positions including positions in the mayor’s office. The budget passed even though some city council members complained about the lack of cuts and transparency. Chicago’s business community has voiced opposition to tax levies as they fear any hikes will curb economic growth and further raise the cost of living in the third-largest U.S. city.

“We cannot continue to spend beyond our means, but we do,” Alderman Marty Quinn said before the vote. “While there’s no longer a property tax increase on the table, there are a number of nickel and dime revenue generators.”

Continue Reading

Accounting

6 ways to keep your and your clients’ tax data secure

Published

on

If there’s a sucker born every minute, the birthrate of scammers seems to keep pace.

“Abundant scams and rip-offs being seen by the IRS and the Security Summit partners include ever-evolving and increasingly sophisticated phishing emails and related attacks,” the partners in the Security Summit initiative announced at the kickoff of the recent National Tax Security Awareness Week. The group includes the Internal Revenue Service, states, the tax industry and tax pros. (Summit members have launched a related group, the Coalition Against Scam and Scheme Threats.)  

Throughout the week, they shared the latest ways crooks are attacking — and how tax pros can defend themselves and their clients.

Continue Reading

Accounting

M&A roundup: From Minnesota to Memphis

Published

on

DSB Rock Island merges with fellow Minnesota firm Meuwissen, Flygare, Kadrlik and Associates; Smith + Howard adds Richmond-based consultancy Fahrenheit Advisors; Reynolds, Bone & Griesbeck adds fellow Memphis firm Scott and Pohlman; and GBQ expands its credit union practice with Lillie & Co.

Continue Reading

Trending