Or. Admin. R. 150-316-0185
(2) For purposes of ORS 316.127(10) and this rule:
(e) "Passenger" is a person on board a vessel other than:
(h) "Waterway worker" is a nonresident who is:
(B) An individual who performs regularly assigned duties while engaged as a master, officer, or member of a crew on a vessel operating on the navigable waters in two or more states.
Example 1: Ben, a resident of Washington, is a crew member and works on a dredging vessel on the Willamette River in Oregon and the Cowlitz River in Washington six months of the year. The other six months of the year Ben works in the company’s office in Portland, Oregon. Only six months of compensation from his employer is exempt because it’s for services Ben performed on the dredging vessel and is not taxable by Oregon. The remaining six months of compensation is taxable by Oregon.
Example 2: Kirk, a nonresident, works for a log mill located on the Oregon shore of the Columbia River. He spends 6 hours a day piloting a tugboat on the river carrying logs to the mill. For the remaining 2 hours of his shift, he works in the mill doing maintenance on mill equipment as well as other tasks. Kirk’s compensation for his time working on the tugboat is not subject to Oregon tax. However, the time he spent working in the mill in Oregon is Oregon-source income and subject to Oregon tax. Kirk may exclude 75 percent (6 divided by 8) of his total compensation from this employer from Oregon taxation. He will only report 25 percent of his wages in the Oregon column of his nonresident return.
Example 3: Remy, a nonresident, is a crew member and works on a vessel plying the Columbia and Willamette rivers. Remy makes weekly trips from Hood River to Tualatin and back, hauling cargo on the vessel. Each trip entails three days on the Columbia River and two days on the Willamette River. All of Remy’s income is exempt and is not taxable to Oregon.
Example 4: Jim, a nonresident, works in Oregon for a water transportation company that plies the waters of the Columbia River. On occasion, he is called upon to work as a member of a crew for a full day on one of the company's vessels when they are short-handed. His income is taxable by Oregon, even for the days he works on the vessel, because his work on the vessel is on an as-needed, sporadic, or intermittent basis.
Example 5: Ken, a Washington resident, works in Oregon as a manager for a water transportation company whose two vessels traverse the Columbia River. Once every quarter, Ken boards the company's vessels to check on the employees working on the vessel. Ken's income is taxable by Oregon, even for the days that he spends on board a vessel because he is not a pilot, master, officer, or crew member of the vessel.
ORS 305.100
ORS 316.127
Renumbered from 150-316.127(10), REV 62-2016, f. 8-15-16, cert. ef. 9-1-16
REV 10-2013, f. 12-26-13, cert. ef. 1-1-14
REV 11-2007, f. 12-28-07, cert. ef. 1-1-08