59476.
Yes.
Lisa
Jimmys
Go to Brother Jimmys.
She is a Nurse.
A Watch
If you paid wages to your employees, even if they are family, you must file Form 941, with two exceptions. If you're employees are household employees or farm employees, then you file a different form.
So long as ALL of the following criteria are met:The vehicle is registered and plated as a farm vehicle. It cannot be plated as a commercial vehicle.The vehicle remains within a 150 mile radius of the farm to which it belongs.The vehicle is operated by the farmer, immediate family members of the farmer, or direct employees of the farmer (direct employees are W-2 employees; 1099 employees are contractors, not direct employees)The vehicle is used solely for the purposes of that farm, and is not contracted to provide a third-party service to anyone else (which is illegal to do with a farm vehicle, even if the driver has a CDL).
If it's a registered farm vehicle which wouldn't be considered a Commercial Motor Vehicle without the farm exemption, any licenced driver can operate it. In the case of vehicles which would normally require a CDL, the farmer, immediate family members of the farmer may operate it within a 150 mile radius of that farm, only for purposes directly supporting that farm, without requiring a CDL. However, anyone operating it more than 150 miles from the farm, and anyone who isn't either immediate family members of the farmer or direct employees (W-2 employees, not 1099 employees) must have a CDL.
kooies was bad
The number of people working on a dairy farm can vary greatly depending on the size and scale of the operation. Small dairy farms may be managed by a single family or a handful of employees, while larger commercial dairy farms can employ dozens of workers for tasks such as milking, feeding, and managing the herd.
A "collective" is a single farm that has been made up of several nearby individual farms. There were two types of collectives. The "kolkhoz" which was a collective farm where the land was owned by the government but operated by the farmers themselves as they saw fit provided they met their quotas of crops. The second was the "sovkhoz" which was a collective farm where the land was owned by the government, the farmers were paid employees and the operation of the farm was in the hands of other government employees.