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HAYES BRIAN, CPA

STAFF ACCOUNTANT

601-898-8875 Ext 269
hbrian@mclcpa.net
License #6141

Hayes Brian joined the firm as a spring intern during the 2010 busy season and began full-time with the firm in June of 2010. He provides audit and attestation services for a variety of organizations, specializing in construction accounting and 401(k) audits. He has a background on Housing and Urban Development and Rural Development multi-family housing projects, including an array of non-profit organizations. He also practices in the area of taxation preparing individual, non-profit, partnership and corporate tax returns.

He earned his Bachelor of Science with a Concentration in Finance along with his Master’s Degree in Accountancy from Millsaps College. He is a licensed CPA in the State of Mississippi. His professional memberships include the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants and the Mississippi Society of Certified Public Accountants.

Hayes is a native of Baton Rouge, LA and now resides in Brandon, MS and attends Pine Lake Baptist Church. While at Millsaps, Hayes played on the baseball team. In his free time he enjoys hunting and spending time with his family.

Hayes's Solution:

1. Compost needs three ingredients in order for it to work: green material, brown material, and moisture.

2. Green material is high in nitrogen. It is usually kitchen scraps like coffee grounds, peelings, fruit cores, and eggshells. Any kitchen waste that is not greasy or meat can be composted. Grass clippings, leaves, and weeds you have pulled are also green materials.

3. Brown material is high in carbon. Paper, sawdust, small branches and twigs, and straw are examples of brown material.

4. Water is the final key ingredient in a compost pile. Without moisture, your pile will take months to do anything, and if dry enough, will not break down at all.  It should be damp, but not dripping wet. If you do not get enough rain, dump a bucket over it once a week. You will know that your compost pile is working if it becomes hot in the middle.

5. Turn your pile from the outside in about once a week until you have rearranged it so that fresh compost is now exposed. If your pile heats up, gets moisture, and gets turned regularly, you should have a good, dark compost pile in about one to two months.

 
 
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Our Certified Public Accountants hold current Mississippi State CPA licenses.

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