The Neighborhood Accountant
A Productivity in Practice Feature
From the Oct. 2007 Issue
When Tim Miller walks home from work in the evening, he can look up into the windows of artists’ lofts on the streets around his Portland, Oregon office and nearby home. And the air starts to fill with eclectic grooves, the sounds of free spirited artists and the aromas of restaurants drawing in their evening catch. This collective creative energy, wafting through Portland’s Mississippi neighborhood, is part of what drew Tim from the East Coast. And its ever-changing artistic and cultural diversity is what keeps him there, for both personal and professional reasons.
This enclave of entrepreneurial Bohemians and more traditional businesses turn to Tim for his tax and accounting expertise. But before you picture a suited man in the midst of hip urbanites, please understand that he is a part of this community, too... even if his primary art may be that of a tax professional with a law degree. For it is through these services that his practice helps clients be more successful at developing their own crafts, whether oil on canvas, sculpture, music, culinary or retail in nature. Not that he is lacking in his own creative artistic abilities, however. Tim and his girlfriend, Anjali LeBoeuf, study oil painting under the tutelage of their “maestro,” nationally renowned artist Alexander Rokoff (www.rokoffstudio.com), who teaches “a classic Rembrandt style of painting that is subdued yet strikingly beautiful.” Tim also studies acrylic painting under Daniel Work and participates in multiple ecstatic dance groups.
With
an office on the banks of the Willamette River, the practice Tim started in
2000 has developed a core constituency of artists, alternative businesses and
individuals, and other creative types who rely on Affiliated Tax Pros (www.ataxpros.com)
and its staff of similarly minded professionals for tax compliance, business
consultation, entity formation and real estate services. Tim is a J.D. (Juris
Doctor), a Licensed Tax Consultant and an Enrolled Agent (EA). Other professionals
in the practice include business partner and office manager Marian Slakie, licensed
tax preparer Jill Ciolli, CPA Vera Jagendorf, and Anjali, who specializes in
real estate investing and mortgages.
But how and why did this Midwestern boy turned East Coast law student become a tax and accounting practitioner on the West Coast? Certainly not through intent, and, even more curiously, by way of the IRS. After earning a B.S. at the University of Indiana and completing legal studies at the D.C. Law School in Washington, D.C., wanderlust led Tim through Minnesota, Virginia, South America and eventually to Oregon, where he freelanced as a legal researcher for immigration attorneys and then joined the IRS where he taught tax law internally for the agency. Tim received his EA credential while working for the IRS and, with his friends in the creative community frequently asking for assistance with their tax issues, he realized there was an opportunity to develop a practice by helping these non-traditional businesses.
“Artists and musicians have the same compliance issues that other businesses have, but their work is often so engrossing that they can’t find the time to properly manage their finances,” Tim says. “We help them take care of the business aspects of their art so that they can concentrate on their creative passions.” His services have no doubt helped the March Fourth Marching Band (www.marchfourthmarchingband.com), which is embarking on a national tour this fall. This motley troupe of about 25 musicians and performers includes a full horn section, a bass guitarist, stilt walkers, fire performers and dancers. Another client, Vermilion Films (www.vermilionpictures.com), recently won the Audience Award at the 2007 Sundance Film Festival for its new movie, “Hear and Now.”
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