Prepared for: Luis Lomba & Edwin · Codamere LLC · Confidential
At scale: 1,300+ clients, a minimum of five filings each, Puerto Rico tax code and US federal requirements on every single one. More than 6,500 annual filings. The bottlenecks aren't capacity — they're in the assembly. Return review time. Status call interruptions. Carryover detection that requires looking back at prior years on every file.
Edwin's requirement was direct: every flag must show the reasoning chain. Not a summary — the actual IRC section, the PR code article, the court case. The system has to be auditable at the citation level. That requirement shapes the architecture of Tier 2.
Luis raised two more. The system must carry HBL's interpretation of contested positions and update automatically when case law changes — not generic output, the firm's actual positions. And it must be fully transparent: documentation, direct access, no black box, so that if anything changes about the people involved, HBL can continue operations without depending on Codamere.
The fourth signal was the framing. HBL isn't looking for a SaaS vendor or a consultant. The ask was for a long-term intelligence partner — building the infrastructure alongside the firm.
HBL PR operates at a scale that manual processes can't absorb cleanly: 1,300+ clients, a minimum of five filings per client, Puerto Rico compliance requirements layered on top of federal obligations. The volume is there. The bottlenecks are in the assembly — the review time, the status interruptions, the repeated research, the knowledge that walks out the door when a partner steps back.
MERIDIAN is the intelligence infrastructure layer that removes the assembly burden without removing the CPA. Every filing, every research memo, every tax position HBL has ever taken deepens the knowledge graph. The next return is faster because the last one already happened. The firm's 30 years of judgment becomes the final gate — not the first pass.
Three tiers. Each is a complete deployment. HBL picks where to start and expands from there. Rate steps are fixed at contract signing — no renegotiation at each phase.
Before evaluating what the Terminal costs, it's worth quantifying what the current state already costs. These numbers are drawn from the volumes Luis described and the bottlenecks Edwin walked us through. None of them are forecasts — they are happening now, every filing season.
Five staff members losing 60–90 minutes per day to inbound status calls during peak season. At a conservative midpoint, that is ~1,250 hours per year — six full weeks of one accountant doing nothing but answering "where is my return, what do you still need, was the extension filed?" At fully-loaded billable rates, the recoverable capacity is $187,500–$250,000 per year.
Senior review of a return takes 4–6 hours because the reviewer is rebuilding the analysis from scratch each time. Across the portion of HBL's 6,500+ filings that flow through senior partner review, that locks 8,000–12,000 partner hours per cycle into first-pass scrutiny. At partner-level billable rates, the trapped capacity is $2.0M–$3.0M per year. Thirty years of judgment is being spent on rework that should land at the principal as the final gate, not the first pass.
Every return requires looking back at prior years for carryover items — losses, depreciation, credits, basis. The lookup is mechanical, the cost is human. Even at a conservative 20–30 minutes per return across 6,500 filings, that is 2,200–3,250 hours per year of senior accountant time spent re-deriving what the firm already knows. Annualized: $330,000–$500,000.
This is the bleed Luis named directly. Three decades of contested-position interpretations, gray-area calls, client-by-client risk posture, and Puerto Rico precedent live inside the heads of a small group of people. The cost of losing that knowledge cannot be measured until after it happens — and by then it is unrecoverable. It is the most expensive asset HBL owns and the only one without a backup.
Conservative roll-up: $2.5M–$3.7M per year in recoverable capacity, plus an unbounded continuity risk. Every tax season HBL operates on the current process is a season the bleed compounds.
"File extension for all these clients." — Luis Lomba, on the recurring batch ask that swallows hours of senior accountant time at peak.
Tier 1 turns the entire client-facing layer — status calls, document intake, batch extensions, deadlines, and standard correspondence — into a single pipeline that runs without HBL staff picking up the phone. The 60–90 minutes per day each accountant loses to triage moves into the Terminal. The capacity stays. The intake is on day one.
Payback math: at the conservative $200K/year of recoverable status-call capacity quantified above, Tier 1 pays back its annualized cost inside the first 60 days of the engagement.
Deposit
$7,500
Monthly
$5,500
Term
12 months, renewable
Deployment
7 days from deposit
"Show how the machine reached the conclusion." — Edwin, defining the non-negotiable for any system that gets near a return.
Senior review of a return takes 4–6 hours because the reviewer is rebuilding the analysis from scratch. Tier 2 delivers a return that is already pre-reviewed: anomalies flagged, gray-area positions surfaced, and every flag carrying its reasoning chain — the actual IRC section, IRS notice, PR tax code article, or court case. Edwin sees flagged items only. The 30 years of judgment becomes the final gate, not the first pass. Includes everything in Tier 1.
Payback math: reducing senior partner review from 4–6 hours to 45–90 minutes per return recaptures partner-level capacity worth multiples of the engagement annually. The first quarter of any filing cycle clears the year's cost.
Deposit
$10,000
Monthly
$9,500
Term
12 months, renewable
Deployment
14 days from deposit
"What happens if the team changes?" — Luis Lomba. The answer at this tier is not a promise. It is documentation, direct access, and a portable architecture HBL owns end-to-end.
At enterprise scale — and for a firm handling high-net-worth clients and regulated work — the quality gate, the security posture, and the long-term continuity of the system are decision-level concerns. Luis raised all three. Tier 3 addresses them structurally: a SOC2 Type II audit track that opens institutional doors, an HBL-owned knowledge graph where the firm's 30 years of judgment lives, and a continuity package that means HBL never depends on Codamere to keep the lights on. Includes everything in Tiers 1 and 2.
Deposit
$15,000
Monthly
$14,500
Term
24 months (SOC2 requires ongoing commitment)
SOC2 Year 1
Est. $35k–$60k pass-through at actuals
If HBL signs by mid-May 2026, the Terminal goes live well before the next filing cycle. Here is what the firm looks like by the time tax season opens.
Luis opens his terminal at 7:30 AM. The morning briefing is already there — every client status, every missing document, every deadline that lands this week, organized by partner. He spends ten minutes on it. The status calls that used to swallow his first hour are answered before they reach a human; Maria Santos has already had her question handled by the system, drawing from her file. Luis's staff is doing returns, not triage.
A return that used to require four to six hours of senior partner review now arrives pre-flagged. Edwin sees only the items the system could not resolve — anomalies, gray-area positions, optimization opportunities — and every flag carries its citation chain. Section 199A inconsistency. IRC §199A(b)(2). Rev. Proc. 2019-38. No summaries. The actual reasoning. He clears the return in 45 minutes. Thirty years of judgment is the final gate, not the first pass.
A new advisory client enters the firm. The onboarding terminal walks them through structured intake: documents, prior returns, entity structure, jurisdictions, ownership. By the time the file lands on Edgardo's desk, the client profile is initialized, the carryover items are flagged, and the engagement scope is drafted. He spends the first hour on judgment, not data entry.
Three decades of HBL's contested-position calls, gray-area interpretations, and Puerto Rico precedent are no longer locked in the heads of senior partners. They are encoded in HBL's knowledge graph — owned by the firm, applied consistently across every return, updated automatically when a new ruling lands. The intelligence is institutional, not personal. When a partner steps back, the judgment does not go with them.
Every component of this scenario is what the three tiers above deliver, deployed in sequence. The question is not whether the system can do it. The question is when HBL wants to start operating that way.
HBL can start at any tier and upgrade. Rate steps are fixed at contract signing — no renegotiation at each phase. Upgrade deposit is the difference between tiers (e.g., Tier 1 → Tier 2 = $2,500 additional).
| Phase | Tier | Monthly | When |
|---|---|---|---|
| Start | Tier 1 — Foundation | $5,500/mo | Month 1 |
| Upgrade | Tier 2 — Intelligence | $9,500/mo | Any time — typically month 3–4 |
| Upgrade | Tier 3 — Enterprise | $14,500/mo | Any time — SOC2 track starts at upgrade |
Codamere is not building a product to sell to a hundred accounting firms. The model is: identify the best partner in a vertical and build the deepest possible intelligence infrastructure for them. HBL is the accounting partner for Puerto Rico.
That means the knowledge graph, the citation layer, the firm interpretation policies, and the institutional memory are built specifically around how HBL works — not a generic tax product.
When you are 12–18 months into compounding knowledge, competitors who start later will not close the gap by hiring or cutting prices. The graph depth, the pattern recognition, the HBL interpretation layer — none of that is acquirable by spending more. It has to be built over time.
Luis raised this directly: "What happens if the team changes?" The answer is structural, not a promise.
The knowledge graph belongs to HBL. The intelligence belongs to the firm. Not a black box.
| Milestone | Target |
|---|---|
| Proposal delivery | 2026-04-28 |
| Scoping call — workflow mapping | 2026-04-29 to 2026-05-02 |
| SOW + MSA to HBL | Within 5 business days of scoping call |
| Legal review — HBL | 1–2 weeks |
| Deposit + signature | Target: 2026-05-15 |
| Terminal deployment | 7–14 days from deposit (per tier) |
| HBL PR | CODAMERE LLC |
| Luis Lomba | Michael Bitler |
| Date: _____________ | Date: _____________ |
This document is confidential and intended solely for HBL PR. It does not constitute a binding agreement. Engagement terms are subject to execution of a formal services agreement.