For roughly the last ten years, the internal revenue service has
made a fairly major effort to be more taxpayer friendly. The
Industry Tax Issue Resolution Program is one such step.
Industry Issue Resolution Program
After years of living in denial, the IRS has come around to
admitting tax forms and procedures may be a mess for certain
industries. As one IRS agent put it, the agency doesn't actually
work in the industries, so it doesn't have a lot of practical
knowledge in how things work financially for the businesses on a
day-to-day basis.
In a creative move, the IRS created the Industry Issue
Resolution Program. This program essentially lets businesses
complain to the IRS about burdensome tax issues. The IRS then
considers the problem, researches alternatives and tries to come
up with new regulations.
One of the better aspects of the programs is the guidance
factor. If you've every filled out business taxes, you know
there are areas that need serious clarity. You either can't tell
what the IRS is asking for or how they want it determined. Using
the Industry Issue Resolution Program, businesses can seek
clarity regarding many of the mystifying aspects of the tax
regulations.
If a business wants to raise a topic with the IRS under this
issue resolution program, it has to meet some criteria. Issued
raised must have at least two of the following criteria or the
IRS will reject the application.
1. The tax treatment of a common factual situation is uncertain.
2. The uncertainty results in frequent, repetitive examination
of the same issue for businesses in the industry.
3. The uncertainty results in a tax burden.
4. The issue is significant and impacts a large number of
taxpayers.
5. The IRS would benefit from gaining a better understanding of
the industry by interacting with the industry.
The procedure for pursuing an issue in the resolution program is
fairly simple, but fairly slow. Application is made to the
relevant department dictated in the application instructions.
You then wait until the IRS announces whether it will accept the
application, announcements which only occur semi-annually! If it
is accepted, the IRS will set up a team to investigate it and be
in touch to get your viewpoint.
About the author:
Richard A. Chapo is with
http://www.businesstaxrecovery.com -
recovery of business taxes through tax help and tax relief.
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http://www.businesstaxrecovery.com/articles to read more
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