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Committee on Ways and Means
For Immediate Release
Contact: Press Office 202-225-8933
April 10, 2002
Thomas Blasts Democrats for Opposing Important
Taxpayer Protections and IRS Improvements
WASHINGTON -Ways and Means Committee Chairman Bill Thomas (R-CA)
today criticized House Democrats who opposed important taxpayer
protections and improvements in the operations of the Internal Revenue
Service.
“With tax-filing day coming in less than a week, Democrats said
‘No’ to improving conditions for hard-working taxpayers,” said
Thomas. “They said ‘No’ to allowing the IRS to waive penalties
for taxpayers making innocent mistakes, and they rejected increased
confidentiality of taxpayer records. Democrats voted against making
browsing of taxpayer records by IRS employees a potential cause for
termination, and they opposed an increase in funding for low-income
taxpayer clinics.”
The bill, opposed by 193 Democrats, added over 30 important changes
to IRS practices. More information on HR 3991, the Taxpayer Protection
and IRS Accountability Act of 2002, will follow.
Committee on Ways and Means
Subcommittee on Oversight
TAXPAYER PROTECTION AND IRS ACCOUNTABILITY ACT
KEY THEMES:
The Taxpayer Protection and IRS Accountability Act of 2002 - would
take concrete steps to refine the role of the IRS in administering
the nation’s tax laws, ensuring that in all its activities it
fully embraces the concepts of fairness, efficiency, and
confidentiality.
SPECIFIC EXAMPLES OF HOW THE BILL HELPS TAXPAYERS:
TAXPAYER PRIVACY/CONFIDENTIALITY
Tax records contain considerable sensitive financial and
personal information. That means that no one - not even IRS
employees - should be allowed to see them without a good business
reason.
Under the bill’s provisions, unauthorized browsing of taxpayer
records would be considered one of the “ten deadly sins” that
can lead to dismissal for IRS employees.
Coupled with improvements in IRS staff behavior, this will help
prevent violations of taxpayer privacy. Similarly, limiting IRS
inspections of tax prepares based on taxpayer examinations will
also help protect the privacy of taxpayer information.
DEADLINE EXTENSION FOR E-FILERS
Broader use of E-filing will allow the IRS to more efficiently
and more cheaply process income tax returns.
By extending the filing deadline 15 days (until April 30),
taxpayers will be given an incentive to E-File.
REFORMING PENALTIES
· Allows taxpayers -- that would otherwise pay nothing -- to
settle their debts with the IRS over a period of time without
being forced to pay the entire amount. This partial pay
installment plan brings common sense to the collection process.
We reduce the federal tax deposit avoidance penalty from 10% to
2% in certain cases. For example, if a small business is unable to
make a deposit at their bank, but they personally take their
$2,000 deposit into the local IRS office and pay in full on the
due date, right now they are charged $200 because they are not
making the deposit through the authorized depository - the bank.
Even the IRS thinks the penalty is too much.
We allow the IRS to waive unfair penalties for honest taxpayers
who make innocent mistakes. For example, a taxpayer mails his
return on April 15 with a check for $200,000 - the balance due. He
mistakenly puts on only $1.40 in postage rather than $1.50.
Instead of the taxpayer being assessed a $10,000 failure to file
penalty, the IRS could waive penalties for taxpayers having a good
history of tax compliance.
When the IRS makes an error and imposes a levy on a taxpayer,
right now they have only a short time limit during which they can
provide relief to the taxpayer. This is especially unfair if IRS
levies against a taxpayer’s retirement account. For example, the
IRS misapplies a tax payment and, consequently imposes a levy on a
taxpayer's IRA account of $25,000. The IRS later realized its
mistake, but is unable to restore the IRA balance. The taxpayer is
not only required to include $25,000 in income during the levy
year, but must pay a penalty for the early distribution of the
IRS. The bill requires the IRS to extend the time limit for
taxpayers to contest levies and provides relief to taxpayers whose
retirement accounts were affected.
LOW INCOME TAXPAYER CLINICS
We increase funds for Low Income Taxpayer Clinics to provide legal
assistance to citizens involved in disputes with the IRS, as well as
offering help to individuals for whom English is a second language
to understand their tax rights. This authorization would increase to
$9 million for 2002, $12 million for 2003 and $15 million for 2004.
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