Business & AGLIFE The Observer & Baker City Herald B Thursday, November 10, 2022 LIZ WESTON ASK LIZ What are employee benefits worth? B enefits make up more than 30% of the typical compensation package, but companies aren’t always clear about how much value they add for employees. Know- ing what benefits are worth can help you evaluate job offers or better negotiate your next raise. When reviewing your em- ployer’s current offerings, start by checking your pay stub for health insurance contributions. Next, evaluate your retirement plan and company match. Fi- nally, consider other benefits like dental insurance, disabil- ity insurance and tuition assis- tance. After you’ve reviewed your benefits, weigh what they’re worth to you and your personal situation. Benefits make up more than 30% of the typical job’s com- pensation, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. But figuring out what your benefits are worth isn’t always easy. You may need to do a little digging to find how much your employer contributes toward health insurance, retirement plans and other perks. Some benefits also have nonmonetary value, and people can value the same benefits in different ways. For example, people with health conditions are likely to appreciate guaranteed access to disability or life insurance that could be hard to get or pro- hibitively expensive otherwise. Someone with student loans may value a program to help with education debt far more than someone without student loan debt. Now that open enrollment season is upon us again, it’s a great time to review your em- ployer’s current offerings. Un- derstanding what your benefits are worth could renew your commitment to your current job — or make you realize it’s time to seek out a better deal. If you’re thinking of becoming self-employed, you can better understand how much more you’ll need to earn to replace your current benefits. Here are some of the most common benefits, along with typical employer contribution amounts, according to Mercer, an employee benefits consul- tant. Health insurance: $5,000 to $20,000 Employer-provided health insurance plans range from bare bones to fairly extravagant. On average, though, employ- ers paid 83% of the $7,739 pre- mium last year for single cov- erage and 73% of the $22,221 premium for family coverage, according to KFF, a health in- surance research organization. You can find what both you and your employer paid for your health insurance last year on your 2021 W-2, says Paul Fronstin, director of health ben- efits research at the Employee Benefit Research Institute, or EBRI. The annual figure is of- ten reported using a “DD” code. Your employer also may break out its contribution on your pay stub. A pay stub is a document that provides the de- tails of your gross and after-tax pay along with various deduc- tions. You often can access your pay stub through your compa- ny’s online payroll system; ask your human resources depart- ment for details. Premiums are just one factor in evaluating your health care coverage, of course. Deduct- ibles, co-pays and provider net- works matter as well. Having access to different types of plans can make open enrollment more confusing, but it also can help you tailor your coverage to your situation. See Weston / B2 Bill Bradshaw/Wallowa County Chieftain James and Emilia Barnum pose outside their new Big Tooth Family Dentistry in Wallowa on Thursday, Nov. 3, 2022. The Barnums’ oldest son designed the office’s logo. Filling a need James Barnum brings dental care to Wallowa with Big Tooth Family Dentistry BY BILL BRADSHAW • Wallowa County Chieftain W ALLOWA — It’s no circus, but Wallowa has a dentist of its own now that James Barnum opened shop downtown Monday, Sept. 26, in Big Tooth Family Dentistry. “No, we’re not part of the circus,” said James, in a joking reference to his distant relative P.T. Barnum, the famous American showman of the 19th cen- tury. This Barnum is a general dentist who provides cleanings, advanced cleanings, composite fillings, crowns, bridges and dentures. He’s planning to be- gin doing denture realigns, where he re-bases a den- ture to give it a better fit. But that’s hardly ev- ident now, since she worked really hard to get rid of her Romanian accent. “Now when I see people with an accent, I think, ‘Oh man, it’s nice’ (not to have one),” she said. “It was a teenage The Barnums thing, wanting to fit in. It Wallowa’s new dentist moved to Wallowa County was pretty life-changing for with his wife, Emilia, and their five children. They me. I was pretty shy and timid.” came from Milwaukie, a Portland suburb, where The couple’s five children they operated a dental practice range in age for 12 years and she worked for a “We like taking the time to get to from 4-15. corporate pharmacy. know people. That’s the beauty They ho- meschool They first came to visit and of a small community, you get the kids, then decided to make the move 14 months ago. to know them by name and run who are also able to “We visited here and the peo- into them at the grocery store take part in ple here are so friendly,” Emilia said. “We saw there wasn’t a sports pro- and whatever.” grams at Wal- dental office here and the doors — Emilia Barnum, pharmacist at lowa schools. seemed to just open.” Big Tooth Family Dentistry Their oldest son Both adult Barnums got their is on the high school respective degrees at Oregon Health & Science University. James earned a doctor basketball team. of medicine in dentistry. He said it’s a little different The office than the usual DDS in that its focus is on whole- Located right downtown, Barnum’s office is body health. housed in a building built in 1890 that’s gone Emilia earned her degree in pharmacology. through several incarnations. James is a native Oregonian, but Emilia has a The building has “a fairly rich and weird history,” different tale to tell. She was born in Romania and he said. came to the U.S. with her parents at age 10. “It’s housed almost everything under the sun,” “I spoke zero English,” she said. Emilia said, adding a tie to her profession. “One of the last things was a phar- macy.” The building was one of the few that didn’t lose all its windows during the di- sastrous Aug. 11 hailstorm that pummeled Wallowa. However, the Barnums did have to replace the roof. The practice So far, the dentistry is at- tracting customers locally. He said they’re getting calls from Union and Umatilla counties, but they are primarily inter- ested in keeping their clientele limited to Wallowa County. “We want to keep it on a local level,” Emilia said. James agreed. “We’ve been saying no,” he said. “We want to just stay loyal to this little community.” Emilia works alongside James — when she’s not homeschooling the kids — putting her knowledge as a pharmacist to work. “She comes in really handy when it comes time to talk medical histories and medications with pa- tients,” he said. James said he hopes to bring to Wallowa dental services that residents have had to leave town for in the past. See Dentistry / B2 Oregon business taxes middle of the pack BY MIKE ROGOWAY The Oregonian SALEM — Oregon’s business taxes, long among the nation’s lowest, have risen considerably over the past few years and now place the state near the middle of the pack, according to a prominent annual survey. The Tax Foundation is a think tank that ranks state tax policies each year. The organization advocates for lower taxes and publishes its ranking as part of its campaign to push for more busi- ness-friendly tax policies, so it oper- ates with a clear agenda. Because it applies a consistent methodology across states, though, and because the Tax Foundation has published its results for many years, its ranking is a widely watched ba- rometer of how states measure up against one another. Oregon ranks No. 24 in the Tax Foundation’s most recent tally, down two places from last year’s survey. Among neighboring states, that puts Oregon roughly on par with Wash- ington (No. 28), well ahead of Califor- nia (No. 48), and behind Idaho (No. 15). As recently as 2019 Oregon ranked eighth. The state’s favorable ranking reflected the absence of a sales tax, a rare thing in the United States and a major boon to businesses. So what’s changed? Oregon’s ranking fell in large part because of the state’s new corporate activity tax, which the Legislature ap- proved in 2019 to fund education and early childhood programs. It gener- ates more than $1 billion a year by taxing companies’ gross revenues. Employers are also paying more for Oregon’s new paid family and medical leave program. The Tax Foundation notes a suc- cession of new taxes in the Portland area, the state’s population and com- merce center. Those pay for homeless services, clean energy programs and other government functions. And the organization says tax cuts in other states reduced Oregon’s relative plac- ing. Curiously, the Tax Foundation docks Oregon for reforms to its un- employment insurance taxes. The foundation reduced the state’s ranking in that category in 2021 and 2022 and now ranks Oregon No. 36. Oregon businesses, though, roundly hailed the reforms, passed by lawmakers last year with resound- ing bipartisan support. The state es- timates they will save businesses $2.4 billion over 10 years. The Tax Foundation didn’t respond to questions last year or this year about its methodology, but the un- employment taxes don’t appear to be among the leading factors in Oregon’s falling ranking. Oregon is beginning the process of taking a broad look at its tax climate. Tax breaks created for factories in the 1980s now go overwhelmingly to wealthy tech companies for data cen- ters and warehouses. In their upcom- ing session next winter, lawmakers plan to consider reforms that could reduce the scope of those incentives. Additionally, state leaders plan to examine the competitiveness of its tax incentives and business climate in hopes of luring chipmakers to build billions of dollars in new fac- tories in Oregon. Some legislators and gubernatorial candidates want to take the opportunity for a broader assessment of the state’s business climate.