Tax Strategies

  • The House Ways and Means Committee voted along mainly party lines to repeal the ability of the Internal Revenue Service to enter into private debt collection contracts, with a vote of 23 to 18 on the Democratic-backed bill.Under current law, the IRS can use private debt collection companies to find and contact taxpayers who owe outstanding tax liabilities and arrange payment. The companies can keep up to 25 percent of the amount collected, and the IRS can retain another 25 percent for additional enforcement activities. The Tax Collection Responsibility Act of 2007 would repeal that authority, which critics fear could lead to abusive tax collection practices.

    July 18
  • Former construction worker and Coast Guard employee Rhiannon O’Donnabhain is suing the Internal Revenue Service after she was disallowed from deducting $25,000 in medical expenses for her sex change operation.The IRS claims the operation was cosmetic surgery and not a medical necessity. In another case in 2005, the IRS Chief Counsel made a similar determination. However, the United States Tax Court has not ruled on any similar cases, and its decision could set a precedent.

    July 18
  • The United States Tax Court has decided that wages earned in Antarctica are still subject to taxation.

    July 17
  • A tax manager who left her firm in Hawaii and moved to South Carolina was the subject of a very interesting article in the July 2007 Boomer Bulletin from Boomer Consulting Inc. What was so interesting was that not much changed for the Hawaiian firm, as she continues to work for it remotely from South Carolina.

    July 16
  • A federal judge has dropped the charges against 13 defendants in the KPMG tax shelter case.Judge Lewis A. Kaplan of the U.S. District Court in Manhattan blamed prosecutors for forcing the Big Four accounting firm to stop paying the legal fees of the 13 defendants and said their constitutional rights had been violated.

    July 16
  • The Internal Revenue Service said it plans to simplify the signature process for electronically filed individual tax returns by allowing tax practitioners to avoid the need to send a paper signature document in support of their clients' e-filed returns.

    July 16
  • The American Institute of CPAs wants Congress to modify a little-noticed provision in the recently passed Iraq war-funding bill that the institute fears may put tax preparers at odds with their clients.

    July 15
  • The Internal Revenue Service said it has begun mailing educational letters this month to more than 650,000 small tax-exempt organizations to let them know they need to start submitting a new annual electronic notice known as an e-Postcard.Form 990-N, the electronic notice they have to send, is intended for tax-exempt organizations with gross receipts of $25,000 or less. Until the passage of the Pension Protection Act of 2006, charities of that size weren't required to submit either the Form 990 or 990-EZ.

    July 15
  • CCH has integrated its CertiTax software and Sales Tax Load Utilities with Microsoft Dynamics GP 10.0.The company's CertiTax Plug-in for Dynamics GP 10.0 provides an interface from CertiTax, CCH's hosted sales tax calculation system, to the Dynamics GP 10.0 sales order process module.

    July 15
  • Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus, (D-Mont.), and fellow committee member Chuck Grassley, (R-Iowa), are calling on the Internal Revenue Service to do a better job of publicizing the Saver's Credit to encourage more low-to-middle-income workers to save money for retirement.The credit applies to up to 50 percent of the first $2,000 of retirement contributions for families earning up to $50,000 a year. First created in 2001, the credit became permanent in the Pension Protection Act of 2006.

    July 15