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Coinciding with the end of tax season, House lawmakers last month passed a bill that promises to make tax preparation easier, while also repealing the Internal Revenue Service’s often controversial Private Debt Collection Program.By a margin of 238-179, the House approved the Taxpayer Assistance and Simplification Act of 2008, which repeals the outsourcing program. The program had come under heavy fire — particularly from Democrats — for spending $75 million to collect just $35 million for the IRS. Under the agreement, three private firms took a 24 percent cut of the taxes they collected.
May 18 -
IRS COMMITTEE SEEKS ADVISORSWashington, D.C. — The Internal Revenue Service is looking for new members to apply for its Information Reporting Program Advisory Committee, including tax preparers. The committee offers recommendations on information reporting and administration issues to the IRS.
May 18 -
While the Internal Revenue Service has had an informant program for years, only recently have legislation and administrative developments put significant teeth into it. Most notable are the mandatory monetary awards now required for significant information equal to between 10 percent and 30 percent of the tax, interest and penalties collected.“The new rules have the potential to bring billions of dollars into the Treasury,” predicted Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, on the passage of the enabling provision within the Tax Relief and Health Care Act of 2006. At least several law firms that specialize in Federal Claims Act litigation are now branching out into whistleblower representation, reporting several billion dollars in suits already pending.
May 18 -
The House Ways and Means Committee has passed a bill that contains a provision advocated by the American Institute of CPAs equalizing the tax return reporting standards.
May 18 -
The Internal Revenue Service has released a revenue procedure dealing with the tax effects on securitized mortgages that have been modified to avoid foreclosures.
May 18 -
The Senate Finance Committee has proposed a new tax bill that seeks to prevent the Alternative Minimum Tax from spreading to more taxpayers next tax season.The bill, sponsored by committee Chairman Max Baucus, D-Mont., and ranking member Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, increases the AMT exemption amount to $46,200 for individuals and $69,950 for joint filers. It allows the use of personal credits to keep taxpayers who don’t currently pay the AMT from being snared by the tax.
May 18 -
Section 7216, a part of the Internal Revenue Code since 1971, imposes criminal penalties on tax return preparers who knowingly or recklessly make unauthorized disclosures or uses of information furnished in connection with the preparation of an income tax return.A violation of the section is not to be taken lightly — it comes with a penalty of up to a year’s imprisonment or a fine of not more than $1,000, or both.
May 18 -
The New York State Society of CPAs installed Sharon Sabba Fierstein as its new president.
May 15 -
The Internal Revenue Service has published the 2009 inflation-adjusted deduction limits for health savings accounts.
May 14 -
Authorities indicted a former UBS banker on charges of helping a real estate billionaire and other clients avoid taxes.
May 14