Tax planning

  • The Internal Revenue Service is calling for nominations to its Internal Revenue Service Advisory Council, a group that provides an organized public platform for IRS officials and public representatives to discuss relevant tax issues. Applications will be accepted from May 1, 2007, through June 15, 2007. The IRSAC is comprised of up to 30 members, who are appointed to three-year terms by the commissioner. Nominations are currently being accepted for five to seven appointments that will begin January 2008. IRSAC membership includes representation from the tax professional community such as tax attorneys, CPAs, enrolled agents, enrolled actuaries and appraisers, as well as members of the large and small business communities. More information is available on the tax professional's page at www.irs.gov.

    April 30
  • Accounting firms are getting more creative and innovative, and many see the value in receiving independent recognition for their efforts and publicizing that fact. The innovations help improve the firm’s bottom line, and the recognition and publicity aids in attracting and retaining top talent. It also substantially enhances the firm’s brand, as existing and prospective clients see increased value in being associated with an innovative firm.

    April 30
  • Former Internal Revenue Service district director Jesse Ayala Cota pleaded guilty to conspiring to defraud the United States through his involvement in a tax fraud scheme promoted by the Topeka, Kansas-based organization "Renaissance, The Tax People Inc."Cota admitted in his plea agreement that from 1997 through April 2002, the conspirators, through Renaissance, operated a scheme to defraud the government by marketing a program designed to sell illegal tax deductions through false and misleading representations.

    April 29
  • The Internal Revenue Service has granted further relief for taxpayers in New York State in the Presidential Disaster Area of Orange, Rockland and Westchester Counties that was struck by severe storms and flooding during the period from April 14-18, 2007. Deadlines for affected taxpayers to file returns, pay taxes and perform other time-sensitive acts falling on or after April 14, 2007, and on or before June 23, 2007, have been postponed to June 23, 2007. In addition, the IRS will waive the failure to deposit penalty for employment and excise deposits due on or after April 14, 2007, and on or before April 30, 2007, so long as the deposits are made by April 30.

    April 26
  • After learning that more than 450,000 federal workers and retirees owe a whopping $3 billion to the Internal Revenue Service in back taxes, the Senate Finance Committee is urging the president to step up efforts to collect from those delinquent employees.According to the Washington Post, Senate Finance Committee chairman Max Baucus, D-Mont., and ranking Republican member Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, sent a letter to President Bush requesting that he remind the delinquent federal employees and warn them of the consequences of non-compliance.

    April 26
  • Distilling the nation's complex tax code is the key to reducing the $290 billion tax gap, the American Institute of CPAs told lawmakers. In a hearing before the House Small Business Committee, James Brennan, chair of the AICPA's IRS Practice and Procedures Committee, said simplification should be the foundation to begin stripping away the mammoth deficit.

    April 26
  • Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, ranking member of the Senate Finance Committee, has sent a letter to his chamber colleagues in an attempt to blunt what he termed "inaccurate claims" about the private collectors employed by the Internal Revenue Service. In a "Dear Colleague" letter, Grassley pointed out that the IRS's own collection infrastructure is better set up for placing liens and garnishing wages than making initial phone calls to delinquent taxpayers to set up a payment plan. Grassley wrote that the private debt collection program consists of having contractors make basic phone calls to taxpayers, contrary to the images of thuggish collection agents using questionable tactics, as has been portrayed by opponents of the program. As evidence, he said that of 24,000 cases of collection just 36 inquiries have been registered. Grassley said there is roughly $90 billion in unpaid taxes that is languishing instead of being collected. His letter said that some of that money is best collected by the "tough cops" of the IRS, fully empowered to seize property, garnish wages, freeze bank accounts and sell the family home or business. However, a large percentage, typically the smaller, newer debts, is better obtained by a modern outbound calling system -- a system that the IRS currently doesn't have, nor are its employees trained for it.

    April 25
  • I’m a sucker for financial calculators -- you know, those little widgets that help you find out how much you’ll pay monthly on your 30-year mortgage, how long it’ll take to pay off your student loans, or what you can save when you switch your balances to a new credit card.So it was with some interest that I came across a little application last week, courtesy of journalist Kay Bell’s “Don’t Mess with Taxes” blog (http://dontmesswithtaxes.typepad.com), that allows users to calculate what their income tax liability would have been under the original Form 1040 -- issued in1913. (The calculator can be accessed directly at http://politicalcalculations.blogspot.com/2007/04/income-tax-original-form-1040.html).

    April 24
  • Liberty Tax Service reported a 20 percent increase in the number of tax returns prepared at its franchises for the 2007 fiscal year.

    April 24
  • According to Vertex Inc.’s annual Sales Tax Rate Report, the average number of U.S. sales tax rate changes per year has grown by 28 percent since the late 1990s.Based on a comparison of the number of state, county, city and district sales tax rate changes during the six-year periods between 1995 and 2000, and 2001 and 2006, the study found that the average number of rate changes per year was 610 and 779, respectively. According to the report, the number of rate changes decreased for the earlier period, while the number of yearly rate changes fluctuated for the later period.

    April 24
  • At first glance, the recent testimony of Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, Jr. before the Senate Finance Committee on ways to reduce the tax gap was fairly typical, in that he urged Congress to approve the Presidential-submitted budget with increased IRS funding, and to pass 16 legislative proposals aimed at narrowing the tax gap.

    April 23
  • The leaders of the Senate Finance and the House Ways and Means Committees have reached agreement on a tax package aimed at providing nearly $5 billion in tax relief for small businesses.

    April 23
  • A Greenwich, Conn., investment banker was convicted on charges of evading millions of dollars of taxes, according to the U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York.A jury found Richard Josephberg guilty on a total of 21 charges, including three counts of tax evasion, four counts of failure to file tax returns, five counts of failure to pay taxes, two counts of subscribing to false tax returns, and single counts of conspiracy to defraud, health care fraud and obstructing the due administration of the Internal Revenue Service.

    April 23
  • The Senate Finance Committee didn’t get the answers it was hoping for during a hearing this week with Treasury Department representatives on how to reduce the tax gap.In testimony before the committee, Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson said that Congress should focus its efforts on reducing the complexity of the tax code, as well as approving the entire budget request from the Internal Revenue Service and enacting the Treasury’s February legislative proposals that are backed by President Bush. Paulson said that in developing more than a dozen proposals to minimize the gap, the Treasury focused on changes that would come with minimal additional burdens.

    April 19
  • Taxpayers frustrated by delays in Intuit Inc.’s tax-processing capabilities will have until midnight on April 19 to electronically file their returns.The Internal Revenue Service and Intuit said that as many as several hundred thousand last-minute tax filers were affected by Intuit’s server problems Tuesday night -- meaning that they, or their accountants, may have been unable to electronically file returns.

    April 18
  • The Internal Revenue Service will grant a six-month tax filing and payment extension to those affected by the shootings at Virginia Tech.The relief applies to the victims, their families and emergency responders, as well as university students and employees.

    April 17
  • The Brookings Institution has issued a new report, “A Local Ladder for Low-Income Workers: Recent Trends in the Earned Income Tax Credit.”Prepared by research analyst Elizabeth Kneebone, the report contains an analysis of Internal Revenue Service data on low-income working families who received the federal EITC for the 2000 and 2004 tax years. Among the report’s findings:

    April 17
  • If Democrats are serious about rolling back the alternative minimum tax, then they should be happy to have gotten a little more fodder last week to use in whatever PR campaign accompanies the unveiling of their plan.The White House released copies of the tax returns for both the Bushes and the Cheneys last Friday, and both families somehow found their way to avoiding the AMT.

    April 17
  • Internal Revenue Service Commissioner Mark Everson will leave the agency to become president and chief executive of the American Red Cross next month.Everson, 52, has served as IRS commissioner since May 2003. During his time with the agency, he has publicly focused his attention on efforts to better serve taxpayers, continue the agency’s modernization of its systems and enhance its enforcement activities. In recent months, Everson has heard increased clamoring from Congress over how the agency and the Treasury Department should best work to address the nation’s growing tax gap -- estimated at $345 billion for the 2001 tax year.

    April 17
  • Like crocuses, Justice Department press releases detailing prosecutions for tax evasion seem to proliferate in early spring, usually just before the the bulk of tax returns are to be filed. This year was no different.

    April 16