National Taxpayer
Advocate Releases Report to Congress;
Identifies Priority Issues for Upcoming Year
WASHINGTON - National
Taxpayer Advocate Nina E. Olson today delivered a report to
Congress that identifies the priority issues the Office of
the Taxpayer Advocate will address in the coming fiscal
year. These issues include the rules governing the use or
disclosure of tax return information by return preparers, a
recently imposed requirement that taxpayers submitting
lump-sum offers in compromise make a down payment of 20
percent of the amount of the offer, IRS guidelines in
evaluating “non-hardship effective tax administration”
offers, and the importance of safeguarding taxpayer rights
as the IRS rolls out its private debt collection initiative.
Olson also released a report, presented as Volume II, that
examines the role the IRS plays in facilitating the refund
anticipation loan (RAL) industry, and makes recommendations
to improve refund delivery to taxpayers, including the “unbanked.”
The Advocate’s report, which is required by law, notes that
the IRS is under significant pressure both to reduce the tax
gap and to maintain and improve taxpayer services. The
report commends the IRS for adopting a more strategic
approach to these objectives. “I am concerned, however, that
the IRS is approaching its taxpayer service and enforcement
initiatives on almost entirely separate tracks,” Olson
writes. “[I]n the IRS today, enforcement employees work on
enforcement initiatives and taxpayer service employees work
on taxpayer service initiatives, and never the twain shall
meet.” Citing the offer in compromise as an example, Olson
maintains that incorporating high quality service within
enforcement initiatives will ultimately help bring
noncompliant taxpayers into compliance and thus reduce the
tax gap.
The report sets out the objectives of the Office of the
Taxpayer Advocate for the upcoming fiscal year and provides
substantive analysis of issues as well as statistical
information. The report identifies four areas for particular
emphasis in FY 2007:
1. Rules Governing the Use or Disclosure of Tax
Return Information by Return Preparers. The statute
and regulations governing what tax preparers may do with
confidential tax return information they receive from their
clients were written in the 1970s. To make the rules more
applicable to e-filing and other changes that have occurred
over the past 30 years, the IRS issued proposed regulations
late last year. Olson states that the proposed regulations
provide more protection to taxpayers than the existing
regulations. She acknowledges that some improvements to the
proposed rules can be made, and she advocates for limiting
the use and disclosure of tax return information solely to
instances where it is necessary for tax-administration
purposes.
2. New Partial Payment Requirement with Submissions
of Offers in Compromise. A taxpayer who is unable
to pay his or her tax liability in full may seek to
compromise the debt by submitting an “offer in compromise.”
The offer program is a good deal for both the government and
the taxpayer. The government benefits because it frequently
collects more than it would in the absence of the program
and the taxpayer is induced to pay taxes on time and in full
in the future; a taxpayer whose offer is accepted must
remain fully compliant for 5 years into the future or face
reinstatement of the compromised tax debt. The taxpayer
benefits because he or she is able to make a fresh start.
Legislation enacted this year will require taxpayers who
submit “lump sum” offers to make a down payment of 20
percent of the amount of the offer with the submission.
Olson writes that this requirement “will reduce the number
of viable offers the IRS receives, increase the number of
accounts not resolved, and reduce the amount of revenue
collected.” Her office is working with the IRS and the
Treasury Department to implement the requirement, and she
intends to make a legislative recommendation to repeal the
requirement in her year-end report to Congress.
3. Guidance on Non-Hardship Effective Tax
Administration Offers. In 1998, Congress expanded
the authority of the IRS to compromise tax debts by
directing it to consider equity, public policy, and hardship
in cases where doing so would promote effective
administration of the tax laws. The Advocate has criticized
the IRS in prior reports for reading this authorization too
narrowly. In 2004, the IRS developed unsigned and
unpublished internal guidance that it has been using to
evaluate non-hardship offers. The Advocate writes that the
IRS should make this guidance public to assist taxpayers and
their representatives in determining whether they may
qualify for relief and to make clear what standards they
need to meet. The Advocate also believes that this guidance
should be made more widely available within the IRS. This
year, she will push within the IRS for broader dissemination
of the guidance.
4. Private Debt Collection Initiative. In
2004, Congress granted IRS the authority to use private debt
collectors to collect certain tax debts, and the IRS is now
working actively to implement the initiative in the coming
months. Olson has previously stated her opposition to this
initiative, citing risks to taxpayer privacy and confidence
in the federal tax system. In FY 2007, Olson’s office will
monitor the initiative closely – with respect to both
specific cases and systemic issues – and will immediately
share any significant observations or concerns with the IRS
and the Congress. Olson’s office will also try to track the
amount of “re-work” the initiative creates for the IRS and
taxpayers to help facilitate comprehensive and accurate
return-on-investment calculations to assist in evaluating
the program.
In Volume II of the report, Olson states that the IRS
facilitates RALs by not conducting sufficient oversight of
Electronic Return Originators (EROs) that retail RALs, by
not promulgating stricter protections for taxpayer privacy
with respect to the Debt Indicator, and by failing to
develop a fast, secure, and free refund delivery option for
“unbanked” taxpayers. Moreover, she states that the IRS’s
rule permitting an ERO to purchase up to a 49 percent
ownership interest in RALs creates a conflict between the
ERO’s and the taxpayer’s financial interests.
The National Taxpayer Advocate is required by statute to
submit two annual reports to the House Committee on Ways and
Means and the Senate Committee on Finance. The statute
requires these reports to be submitted directly to the
Committees without any prior review or comment from the
Commissioner of Internal Revenue, the Secretary of the
Treasury, the IRS Oversight Board, any other officer or
employee of the Department of the Treasury or the Office of
Management and Budget. The first report, due on June 30 of
each year, must identify the objectives of the Office of the
Taxpayer Advocate for the fiscal year beginning in that
calendar year. The second report, due on December 31 of each
year, must identify at least 20 of the most serious problems
encountered by taxpayers, discuss the 10 tax issues most
frequently litigated in the courts during the prior year,
and make administrative and legislative recommendations to
resolve taxpayer problems.
About the Taxpayer Advocate Service
The Taxpayer Advocate Service is an independent
organization within the IRS, led by the National Taxpayer
Advocate. Each state has at least one Local Taxpayer
Advocate, who is independent of the local IRS office and
reports directly to the National Taxpayer Advocate.
The Taxpayer Advocate Service helps individual and business
taxpayers resolve problems with the IRS by:
• Ensuring that taxpayer problems not resolved through
normal IRS channels are promptly and impartially handled;
• Assisting taxpayers who are facing hardships;
• Identifying issues that impact taxpayer rights, increase
taxpayer burden, or otherwise create problems for taxpayers
and bringing these issues to the attention of IRS
management; and
• Recommending administrative and legislative changes
through the National Taxpayer Advocate’s Annual Report to
Congress.
Taxpayers who have tried to resolve tax problems with the
IRS and are still experiencing delays or facing economic
harm may request the assistance of the Taxpayer Advocate
Service.
In the TAS program, taxpayers will receive free,
independent, confidential, and personalized service from a
knowledgeable Taxpayer Advocate. The Advocate will listen to
their circumstances, help them understand what steps are
required to resolve their issues, and work with them every
step of the way until their problems are resolved to the
fullest extent permitted by law.
Taxpayers can gain quick access to the Taxpayer Advocate
Service by calling its toll–free number at 1–877–777–4778
(TTY/TTD 1-800-829-4059). Alternatively, taxpayers can call
or write to their Local Taxpayer Advocate, whose address and
phone number are listed in local telephone directories and
in Publication 1546, How to Get Help With Unresolved Tax
Problems.
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