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Edited version of your private ruling

Authorisation Number: 1012438870603

Ruling

Subject: FBT Childcare on business premises

Question 1

Will a fringe benefit arise from the benefit provided to your employees under the salary sacrifice arrangement?

Answers

No

This ruling applies for the following periods:

Year ended 31 March 2014

Year ended 31 March 2015

Year ended 31 March 2016

The scheme commences on:

1 April 2013

Relevant facts and circumstances

This ruling is based on the facts stated in the description of the scheme that is set out below. If you circumstances are materially different from these facts, this ruling has no effect and you cannot rely on it. The fact sheet has more information about relying on your private ruling.

You have entered into a contract with the Supplier for the provision of child care services located in the CBD.

You lease the premises in the CBD.

You have provided copies of the following documentation:

You will provide childcare services to your employees as part of a wider remuneration and retention of staff strategy through a salary sacrifice arrangement (SSA).

Relevant legislative provisions

Fringe Benefits Tas Assessment Act 1986 Section 45

Fringe Benefits Tax Assessment Act 1986 Subsection 47(2).

Fringe Benefits Tax Assessment Act 1986 Subsection 136(1)

Reasons for decision

Question 1

Will a fringe benefit arise from the benefit provided to your employees under the salary sacrifice arrangement?

Answers

No

Detailed reasoning

Subsection 47(2) of the FBTAA provides an exemption from fringe benefits tax for the provision of childcare when certain conditions are satisfied. It states:

Therefore, the provision of child care will be an exempt benefit under subsection 47(2) if the following conditions are satisfied:

1. Is the benefit a residual benefit?

Section 45 of the FBTAA defines a residual benefit as:

As set out above under the proposed arrangement you will enter into a:

Under the terms of these agreements:

In such a situation the benefit to be provided to your employees will be the care of their children. As this does not come within divisions 2 to 11 of the FBTAA it will be a residual benefit.

2. Will the benefit be provided to a current employee?

Under the terms of the above Agreements you will only pay for the cost of providing childcare to children of your current employees.

3. Will the benefit consist of the care of children?

As discussed above, the benefit consists of the care of the children of the employee.

4. Will the children be cared for in a child care facility?

A childcare facility is defined within subsection 136(1) of the FBTAA as:

This requirement is satisfied as the facility will provide care for more than two children under the age of six in a non residential childcare centre.

5. Will the childcare facility be located on the business premises of the employer (or a related company if the employer is a company)?

The term business premises is defined in subsection 136(1) of the FBTAA as being,

The question of what constitutes business premises for the purposes of the FBTAA was considered in Taxation Ruling TR 2000/4 Fringe Benefits tax; meaning of 'business premises'.

Paragraph 4 of TR 2000/4 states there are two requirements that need to be met for premises to be business premises of a person. The first requirement is that the premises or part of premises are of the person. Secondly, the premises or part of premises must be used by the person, in whole or part, for the purposes of their business operations.

Paragraphs 11 and 12 of the ruling provide that there is no absolute or conclusive test of whether premises are business premises. In determining whether the premises are premises of the employer and are used for the business operations of the employer, it is relevant to consider:

Paragraph 13 of the ruling states:

Will the premises, or part of the premises, be premises of the employer?

Paragraph 48 of TR 2000/4 states:

The employer must have a right of possession and control over the use of the premises during the course of its business operations. The absence of a right of possession and control may indicate the premises are not 'of the person', or the activities being carried on the premises are not truly 'business operations' of the person.

Merkel J in Esso Australia Ltd v. FC of T 98 ATC 4953 at 4958; (1998) 40 ATR 76, at 80-81; 157 ALR 652, at 656-657 considered this issue and stated:

You have entered a lease agreement with the owner of the building for the area occupied by the child care centre which will be used for the care of your employees' children.

Paragraph 7 of TR 2000/4 states that where a person has ownership of premises or exclusive occupancy rights as lessee, the premises would ordinarily be described as premises of the person.

You have a lease for the premises on which the childcare centre is located, as lessee you have exclusive occupancy rights and therefore have the necessary right to possession of the premises.

Will the premises be used for the business operations of the employer?

Although the premises are premises of the employer, it is also necessary for the premises to be used for the business operations of the employer.

Paragraph 17 of TR 2000/4 states:

Paragraph 20 of TR2000/4 states;

…What is important for an employer seeking to establish that premises are its 'business premises' is that the employer's child care activities amount to its 'business operations' on its premises…

In determining whether the child care activities amount to your business activities' paragraph 53 of TR 2000/4 states:

There are also questions as to whether the premises or any part of the premises are being used for the business operations of the employer. It may be that the activities actually taking place on the premises would more properly be described as business operations of the service provider. Consequently, the facts may give rise to the inference that the premises are not the 'business premises' of the employer.

In situations where an employer engages an independent child care operator under a management agreement to care for employee's children, paragraph 57 of TR 2000/4 provides the minimum requirements to be incorporated into the arrangement for the operations to be considered the business operations of the employer.

The management agreement with the child care operator operate on an ordinary and arm's length basis

The MA between you and the Supplier details:

In considering these factors it is accepted that the agreement operates in a manner that would be expected where an employer engages a child care operator to manage the employer's child care centre.

The management agreement be able to be terminated on normal commercial grounds

The MA details the grounds on which the agreement can be terminated. These grounds are accepted as being on normal commercial grounds.

Where the management agreement is terminated, there is no impediment to another child care operator being engaged to manage and operate the facility on the particular premises

This condition is met.

The document granting the employer or employers tenure or occupancy rights operate on normal commercial grounds

This condition is met your lease over the premises is with a third party and is separate to the MA you have with the Supplier.

The termination of the management agreement should not require termination of the employer's or employers' tenure or occupancy rights, nor should the rights under the tenure or occupancy rights agreement (for example, amount of rental, conditions of occupancy) be affected in any way

There are no clauses in the MA that require the termination of the lease in the event of the termination of the MA, or that affect the conditions of the lease.

The management agreement and tenure or occupancy rights agreement operate independently of each other

This condition is met as the Management Agreement and the Lease will operate independently of each other.

The calculation of rentals under the tenure or occupancy rights agreement, management fees and child care fees be commercially based and independent of each other

This condition is met. the MA sets out the child care fees and the conditions in which the fees will be adjusted. The lease agreement and the MA are separate documents independent of each other.

The risks held by the various parties be consistent with the relevant premises being those of the employer or employers (for example, risks in respect of flow of funds, insurance, etc)

Under the terms of lease you are liable for the lease expenses and maintaining public liability insurance.

You are also liable to pay for all the committed child care places under the MA.

The tenure and occupancy rights as they affect the child care facility come from the employer or employers, rather than the operator

Your occupancy rights are from the lease agreement, not from the Supplier.

The composite rights of control over the service provider, e.g., the right of termination, be on a normal commercial basis. For example, clauses in management agreements that have the effect that an operator may only be removed in the most extraordinary or extreme circumstances give rise to the inference that the activity is not 'business operations' of the employer or employers.

Paragraph 5 of TR 2000/4 states it is a question of fact and degree as to whether particular premises are business premises of a person. In making a conclusion it is necessary to consider all of the relevant facts.

In applying TR 2000/4 to the facts of your situation it is accepted you will have the necessary control over the premises. However, as indicated in paragraph 19 of TR 2000/4 for the premises to be accepted as your business premises it is necessary to be able to distinguish your circumstances from the circumstances that exist where a member of the public approaches a community or commercial child care centre and enrols one or more of their children.

In seeking to distinguish your circumstances, the following factors support the childcare activities being part of your business operations:

Therefore no fringe benefit will arise from the provision of childcare to the children of your employees.


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