IRS Relief- Farmers and Ranchers Have More Time to Replace Livestock – Drought-Stricken Affected

 

Farmers and ranchers who previously were forced to sell livestock due to drought, like the drought currently affecting much of the nation, have an extended period of time in which to replace the livestock and defer tax on any gains from the forced sales.

Farmers and ranchers who due to drought sell more livestock than they normally would may defer tax on the extra gains from those sales.

To qualify, the livestock generally must be replaced within a four-year period. The IRS is authorized to extend this period if the drought continues.

The one-year extension of the replacement period announced today generally applies to capital gains realized by eligible farmers and ranchers on sales of livestock held for draft, dairy or breeding purposes due to drought.

Sales of other livestock, such as those raised for slaughter or held for sporting purposes, and poultry are not eligible.

The IRS is providing this relief to any farm located in a county, parish, city, borough, census area or district, listed as suffering exceptional, extreme or severe drought conditions by the National Drought Mitigation Center (NDMC), during any weekly period between Sept. 1, 2013, and Aug. 31, 2014.

All or part of 30 states are listed. Any county contiguous to a county listed by the NDMC also qualifies for this relief.

As a result, farmers and ranchers in these areas whose drought sale replacement period was scheduled to expire at the end of this tax year, Dec. 31, 2014, in most cases, will now have until the end of their next tax year.

Because the normal drought sale replacement period is four years, this extension immediately impacts drought sales that occurred during 2010. But because of previous drought-related extensions affecting some of these localities, the replacement periods for some drought sales before 2010 are also affected.

Additional extensions will be granted if severe drought conditions persist.

Details on this relief, including a list of NDMC-designated counties, are available in Notice 2014-60, posted today on IRS.gov.

Details on reporting drought sales and other farm-related tax issues can be found in Publication 225, Farmer’s Tax Guide, also available on the IRS web site.

How does the IRS & Government Agencies Locate Taxpayers, The Tools Used by the IRS

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Contrary to popular opinion the government does not work all cases like  it’s a CSI crime scene investigation.

when they try to locate taxpayers are US citizens they use very normal and simple means to locate persons of interest.

The following list is the most common way the IRS and government agencies locate taxpayers.

  • Telephone directories
  • IRS’s Information Returns Processing data
  • Send a postal tracer

 

  • Motor vehicle records

 

  •  Employment commissions
  • Courthouse records for real and personal property

 

  • Local licensing when the taxpayer owns a business

 

  • Online resources (Accurint)
  • Integrated Data Retrieval System tax return research, if the due date of the last filed return was within the past two years
  • Currency and Banking Retrieval System research when Integrated Data Retrieval System research reflects that a taxpayer has filed a Foreign Bank Account Reporting form, and possible use of a Tax Attache for International accounts.
  •  Credit Bureaus

 

Please keep in mind these common ways are generally for civil cases, the IRS and other government agencies has much more sophisticated means to locate criminals or those involved in covert operations against the US government.

 

 

 

IRS GLOSSARY OF TERMS FOR TAXPAYERS, FORMER IRS

Fresh Start Tax

 

Glossary of Terms

Area Director

The senior-level manager in the Collection Field function chain of command (i.e., the Group Manager reports to the Territory Manager, who reports to the Area Director).

Calendar Year

A 12-consecutive-month period ending on the last day of December.

Campus

The data processing arm of the IRS. The campuses process paper and electronic submissions, correct errors, and forward data to the Computing Centers for analysis and posting to taxpayer accounts.

Collection Activity Report

An automated report that provides managers timely and reliable raw data to show results each month by program, case type, location, etc.

Collection Field Function

An area within the IRS that is authorized to perform collection tasks in a centralized manner. The objective of the Collection Field function is to collect taxes through personal contact whenever there is an outstanding balance due.

Collection Queue

An automated holding file for unassigned inventory of delinquent cases for which the Collection Field function does not have enough resources to immediately assign for contact.

Continental Shelf

Cases regarding foreign taxpayers engaged in activities related to the exploration for, or exploitation of, natural resources on the Outer Continental Shelf in the Gulf of Mexico.

Criminal Investigation

Serves the American public by investigating potential criminal violations of the Internal Revenue Code and related financial crimes in a manner that fosters confidence in the tax system and compliance with the law.

Currently Not Collectible

Tax accounts that are removed from active inventory after the necessary steps in the collection process have been taken.

Customs and Border Protection Officer

Officers who work for U.S. Customs and Border Protection, which is the largest enforcement agency within the DHS. These officers ensure the Nation’s safety by screening passengers and cargo.

Customs Hold

A notification to the DHS that, according to the IRS records, a taxpayer owes Federal taxes. If the taxpayer should return to the United States or Commonwealth Territories and has not yet paid the total amount due, he or she could be interviewed by a Customs and Border Protection Officer at the time of entry. The IRS will then be advised of the taxpayer’s arrival and will be provided with information enabling it to contact the taxpayer regarding payment of his or her outstanding tax liability.

Director Collection Report

A report used by National Office Collection management that measures Collection Field function results on a national level.

Domestic Collection

Responsible for ensuring payment compliance among domestic persons through the fair and equitable application of these laws, as well as providing education to domestic customers to promote future compliance.

Domestic Revenue Officer

An employee in the Collection Field function who attempts to contact domestic taxpayers and resolve collection matters that have not been resolved through notices sent by the IRS campuses.

Entity Case Management System

The ENTITY is a database displaying current Collection Field function and Advisory inventory. The ENTITY application receives data from the Integrated Collection System for open, closed, and return to Collection Queue cases; the Delinquent Inventory Account List for Collection Queue cases; and the Automated Lien System for lien information.

Fiscal Year

Any yearly accounting period, regardless of its relationship to a calendar year. The Federal Government’s fiscal year begins on October 1 and ends on September 30.

Group Manager

A first-level manager in the Collection Field function, responsible for supervising revenue officers.

Individual Taxpayer Identification Number

A nine-digit number issued by the IRS to individuals who are required for U.S. tax purposes to have a Taxpayer Identification Number but who do not have – and are not eligible to obtain – a Social Security Number.

Information Return

A return that includes any form, statement, or schedule required to be filed with the IRS with respect to any amount from which tax is required to be deducted and withheld.

Integrated Collection System

Provides workload management, case assignment/tracking, inventory control, case analysis tools, and management information system capabilities to support the SB/SE Division’s collection fieldwork.

Internal Revenue Manual

Contains the policies, procedures, instructions, guidelines, and delegations of authority that direct the operation and administration of the IRS. Topics include tax administration, personnel and office management, and others.

International Collection

Responsible for ensuring payment compliance among all persons subject to U.S. tax/laws and treaties through the fair and equitable application of these laws, as well as providing education to international customers to promote future compliance.

International Revenue Officer

An employee in the Collection Field function who attempts to contact international taxpayers and resolve collection matters that have not been resolved through notices sent by the IRS campuses.

International Tax Gap

The estimated difference between the amount of tax that international taxpayers should pay and the amount that is paid voluntarily and on time. Currently, there is no official IRS International Tax Gap estimate.

International Tax Noncompliance

There are three primary types of tax noncompliance:
(1) Under reporting of tax liabilities on tax returns.
(2) Underpayment of taxes due from filed returns.
(3) Nonfiling, which refers to the failure to file a required tax return altogether or on time.

These types of tax noncompliance are mutual to both the international and domestic taxpayer.

International Territory Report

A report used by Headquarters Collection management which measures Collection Field function results for the International Territory.

Inventory Delivery System

An inventory delivery system used for collection cases. The system uses proven analytical scoring models and a business rules engine to route cases to the Automated Collection System, the Collection Queue, or direct field assignment.

Job Aid

A job aid is a repository for information, processes, or perspectives that supports work and activity by directing, guiding, and enlightening performance.

Levy

A method used by the IRS to collect outstanding taxes from sources such as bank accounts and wages.

Lien

An encumbrance on property or rights to property as security for outstanding taxes.

Mutual Collection Assistance Request

In the context of this report, a request by a treaty partner for the IRS to collect taxes owed them from individuals residing in the United States.

Nonresident Alien

An individual who is not a U.S. citizen or U.S. national who has not passed the green card test or the substantial presence test.

Offshore Voluntary Disclosure Initiative Program

This program offers a civil settlement structure in which taxpayers pay an offshore penalty in lieu of a number of other penalties that may be assessed in cases of offshore noncompliance. Once taxpayers have been accepted into the program, they work with a revenue agent who reviews up to eight years of amended or original tax returns, and information returns, as well as other information about their offshore accounts.

Qualified Intermediary

An eligible person or entity (i.e., a foreign financial institution, a foreign branch or office of a U.S. financial institution, or any other entity acceptable to the IRS) which enters into a Qualified Intermediary Agreement. The Qualified Intermediary agrees to assume certain documentation and withholding responsibilities in exchange for simplified information reporting for its foreign account holders.

Resident Alien

An individual who has been admitted for permanent residence in the United States and is entitled to all deductions, exclusions, and credits under the same rules as a U.S. citizen.

Revenue Officer

Employee in the Collection Field function who attempts to contact taxpayers and resolve collection matters that have not been resolved through notices sent by the IRS campuses or through telephone contact.

Seizure

The taking of a taxpayer’s property to satisfy his or her outstanding tax liability.

Subject Matter Expert

A person with bona fide expert knowledge about what it takes to do a particular job. The goal of the Subject Matter Expert is to facilitate and ensure uniformity and consistency of each program area and to provide expert advice in the program subject matter.

Tax Period

Refers to each tax return filed by the taxpayer for a specific period (year or quarter) during a calendar year for each type of tax.

Taxpayer Delinquency Investigation

An unfiled tax return for a taxpayer. One Taxpayer Delinquency Investigation exists for all tax periods.

Taxpayer Delinquent Account

A balance-due account of a taxpayer. A separate Taxpayer Delinquent Account exists for each delinquent tax period.

Territory Manager

A second-level manager in the Collection Field function responsible for supervising group managers within a specific geographic Territory.

Treasury Enforcement Communication System

An information-sharing platform that allows users to access different databases. It is owned and managed by the DHS’s U.S. Customs and Border Protection component and is the principal system used by officers at the border to assist with screening and making determinations regarding admissibility of arriving persons.

U.S. Department of Homeland Security

A stand-alone, Cabinet-level department, created with Congress’ passage of the Homeland Security Act of 2002[10] in November 2002. Its mission includes preventing terrorism and enhancing security, managing the border, administering immigration laws, securing cyberspace, and ensuring disaster resilience.

Receive IRS Notice – Letter 4106, Letter Advising Taxpayer of Department of Homeland Security

Fresh Start Tax

 

 

If you have received an IRS notice or letter contact us today to speak to true tax professionals that can resolve your matter.

We are comprised of tax attorneys, certified public accountants and former IRS agents.

 

Our  former IRS agents have over 60 years of working directly for the Internal Revenue Service in the local, district, and regional tax offices of the Internal Revenue Service.

We are A+ rated by the Better Business Bureau and have been in private practice since 1982.

Call us today for a initial tax consultation or you can directly Skype us by using the password freshstarttax.

Areas of Professional Tax Representation

 

  • On staff,  Tax Attorney’s,  IRS Tax Lawyers, Certified Public Accountants, Enrolled Agents,
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  • We taught Tax Law in the IRS Regional Training Center
  • Former IRS Agents, Managers and Instructors with over 60 years experience in the local, district and regional IRS offices.
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  • As heard on GRACE Net Radio.com – Monthly Radio Show-Business Weekly

 

Areas of Professional Tax Practice:

 

  • Same Day IRS & State Tax Representation
  • Offers in Compromise / IRS Tax Debt Settlements
  • Immediate Release of IRS Bank Levies or IRS Wage Garnishments
  • Tax Relief from a IRS Bill, Letter or Notice of “Intent to Levy”
  • IRS Tax Audits IRS Hardships Cases or Unable to Pay
  • Payment Plans, Installment Agreements, Structured agreements
  • Abatement of Penalties and Interest
  • State Sales Tax Cases
  • Payroll / Trust Fund Penalty Cases / 6672
  • Filing Late, Back, Unfiled Tax Returns
  • Tax Return Reconstruction
  • FBAR/FATCA
  • Civil, Criminal Tax Experts
  • Income, Business, Corporate Tax
  •  Letter 4106, Letter Advising Taxpayer of Department of Homeland Security

 

Receive IRS Notice – Letter 4106, Letter Advising Taxpayer of Department of Homeland Security

 

Treasury Inspector General Rips IRS on its International Collection Efforts

 

Final Report issued on September 12, 2014

Highlights of Reference Number: 2014-30-054 to the Internal Revenue Service Commissioner for the Small Business/Self-Employed Division.

IMPACT ON TAXPAYERS

In today’s global economy, businesses and individuals are becoming more and more involved in international transactions. For U.S. taxpayers, income received from these international transactions is subject to U.S. tax rules and reporting requirements. Accordingly, the role of an international revenue officer is very important in helping taxpayers comply with the tax laws and reducing international tax noncompliance.

WHY TIGTA DID THE AUDIT

The IRS faces many unique challenges in collecting taxes from international taxpayers. Moreover, the IRS does not have reliable statistics on the rate of noncompliance of these taxpayers with their U.S. tax obligations. The overall objective of this review was to evaluate the IRS’s collection efforts on delinquent taxpayers residing in foreign countries.

WHAT TIGTA FOUND

International tax noncompliance remains a significant area of concern for the IRS. However, the IRS’s collection efforts need to be enhanced to ensure that delinquent international taxpayers become compliant with their U.S. tax obligations.

TIGTA’s review found that the IRS has not provided effective management oversight to International Collection, which contributed to several control weaknesses in the program. For example, International Collection does not have:

· Adequate policies, procedures, position descriptions, or the training needed to ensure that international revenue officers can properly work International Collection cases.

· A specific inventory selection process that ensures that the International Collection cases with the highest risk are worked.

· Performance measures and enforcement results reported separately from Domestic Collection.

· A process to measure the value of the “Customs Hold” as an enforcement tool.

 

WHAT TIGTA RECOMMENDED

TIGTA recommended that the IRS:

1) develop a formal International Collection Strategic plan;

2) update International Collection guidance to provide specific policies and procedures to international revenue officers;

3) evaluate and update the current international revenue officer position descriptions;

4) develop a formal International Collection training plan using Subject Matter Experts to develop and teach international specific courses;

5) evaluate the International Collection inventory selection criteria;

6) develop separate performance measures and track specific enforcement results for International Collection; and

7) continue to pursue direct access to the Customs Hold information.

 

 

Treasury Enforcement Communication System

Background

In today’s global economy, businesses and individuals are becoming more and more involved in international transactions. For U.S. taxpayers, income received from these international transactions is subject to U.S. tax rules and reporting requirements.

For purposes of U.S. taxation, international taxpayers can be grouped into four general categories:

  • • U.S. individual taxpayers and resident aliens[1] working, living, or doing business abroad.
  • • U.S. corporations doing business abroad.
  • • Nonresident aliens working or doing business in the United States.
  • • Foreign corporations doing business in the United States.

 

Congress, the U.S. Department of the Treasury, and the IRS have all placed a strong emphasis on reducing international tax noncompliance.

Congress, the U.S. Department of the Treasury, and the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) have all placed a strong emphasis on reducing international tax noncompliance.

The International Collection program (hereafter referred to as International Collection) has been a part of the Small Business/Self-Employed (SB/SE) Division’s Collection Field function since October 2006.

The Collection Field function’s mission is “to provide SB/SE taxpayers with top quality postfiling services by helping them understand and comply with all applicable tax laws and by applying the tax laws with integrity and fairness.” This also includes ensuring payment compliance of international taxpayers who are subject to U.S. tax laws.

International revenue officers in International Collection are primarily responsible for collecting delinquent taxes and tax returns of international taxpayers who are subject to U.S. tax and reporting requirements.

The current International Collection program has 39 international revenue officers assigned to five international groups.

Figure 1: Comparison of the International Collection Staffing and

Dollars Collected During Fiscal Years 2012 Through 2014

Fiscal Year 2012

Fiscal Year 2013

Fiscal Year 2014[2]

Number of International Revenue Officers

Fiscal Year 2012   39

Fiscal Year  2013    40

Fiscal Year  2013  44

 

Dollars Collected

2014- $53,674,372

2013- $53,045,741

2012- $22,217,561

 

The IRS faces many unique challenges in collecting taxes from international taxpayers, such as difficulties in locating taxpayers in a foreign country, complexity of international tax law and tax treaty issues, language barriers, and the absence of international toll-free telephone services.

Moreover, the IRS does not have reliable statistics on the rate of noncompliance of these taxpayers with their U.S. tax obligations.

Accordingly, the role of an international revenue officer is very important in helping taxpayers comply with the tax laws and in reducing international tax noncompliance.

This review was performed in Collection offices in :

Norwalk, Connecticut; Lanham, Maryland; Bethpage, New York; Buffalo, New York; New York, New York; Seattle, Washington; and the IRS Headquarters in Washington, D.C., and used information obtained from Collection offices in Miami, Florida; Honolulu, Hawaii; and Guaynabo, Puerto Rico, during the period September 2012 through December 2013.

We conducted this performance audit in accordance with generally accepted government auditing standards. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain sufficient, appropriate evidence to provide a reasonable basis for our findings and conclusions based on our audit objective.

We believe that the evidence obtained provides a reasonable basis for our findings and conclusions based on our audit objective.

International tax noncompliance remains a significant area of concern and focus for the IRS.

However, the IRS’s collection efforts need to be enhanced to ensure that delinquent international taxpayers become compliant with their U.S. tax obligations. Our review found that the IRS has not provided effective management oversight to International Collection contributing to several control weaknesses in the program.

Most notably, International Collection does not have:

  • · Adequate policies, procedures, position descriptions, or the training needed to ensure that international revenue officers can accurately work International Collection cases.
  • · A specific inventory selection process that ensures that the International Collection cases with the highest risk are worked.
  • · Performance measures and enforcement results reported separately from Domestic Collection.
  • · A process to measure the effectiveness of the Customs Hold as an enforcement tool.
  • A Lack of Effective Management Oversight Has Affected Many Areas in International Collection

 

Collection Field function management developed an International Collection Strategy document in June 2012 to support the international vision:

To ensure payment compliance among all persons subject to U.S. tax laws and treaties through the fair and equitable application of these laws, as well as providing education to our customers to promote future compliance.

This strategy was reported as a Collection Field function prior year accomplishment in both the IRS’s Fiscal Year 2013 and Fiscal Year 2014 Collection Program Letters.

However, at the time of our review, Collection Field function management had not allotted any resources to this strategy, nor did we identify any specific actions that had been taken for its implementation.

A strategy is defined as a method or plan chosen to bring about a desired future, such as achievement of a goal or solution to a problem.

The International Collection Strategy document meets this definition, but is too general in nature to be considered a strategic plan. It provides little specificity regarding Collection Field function plans related to enacting the strategy and does not contain key requirements of a strategic plan.

For example, it does not describe how the goals and objectives are to be achieved (including the operational processes, skills, technology, and resources required); identify any external factors that could significantly affect the achievement of the goals and objectives; or describe program evaluations that will be used to establish or revise the goals and objectives.

In addition, the Collection Field function has set no milestones for meeting the goals and objectives of the strategy. Despite Collection Field function management reporting this strategy as an accomplishment in its Collection Program Letters, there appears to have been no urgency to implement the International Collection Strategy since its creation in June 2012.

An International Collection Strategy document was created, but it is not a strategic plan.

We believe that a significant factor preventing the successful implementation of this strategy is the many managerial changes at the executive level in the International Collection program over the last few years. Since September 2012, International Collection has been led by five different Territory Managers and two different Area Directors, all with no previous International Collection experience.

On October 20, 2013, International Collection was officially moved under a new Area Director as part of the overall Collection Field function realignment. Two of the five Territory Managers were placed subsequent to the realignment. Without consistent executive leadership, it is difficult to develop and implement any long-term improvement strategies.

Subsequent to the completion of our fieldwork, a permanent Territory Manager with extensive international experience was placed to lead the International Collection program.

In addition, Collection Field function management appointed an executive to be specifically responsible for the development of an action plan addressing the key areas outlined in the International Collection Strategy document along with working collaboratively with other IRS functions to support its implementation.

However, without establishing a formal strategic plan for International Collection, the complex tax issues facing both the international revenue officer and the international taxpayer may not be fully addressed.

Policies and procedures are insufficient for international revenue officers

There are limited policies and procedures provided specifically for international revenue officers. The Internal Revenue Manual contains more than 6,000 pages of policies and procedures for working collection cases. However, few pages were dedicated specifically to International Collection issues.

We interviewed a judgmental sample[3] of 15 international revenue officers and all five international group managers, many of which expressed frustration regarding the limited policies and procedures available to them.

The following specific concerns were raised:

The available guidance on issues frequently encountered by international revenue officers is often difficult to find because it is scattered throughout the Collection Internal Revenue Manual.

There were similar frustrations regarding International Collection policies and procedures provided on the SB/SE Division’s Collection intranet website.
There is a lack of available job aids addressing international issues.

At the beginning of our review (September 2012), we found that many of the International Collection policies and procedures in the Internal Revenue Manual had not been updated since Calendar Year 2009.

In addition, some of the international guidance on the SB/SE Division’s Collection intranet website had not been updated since Calendar Year 2011, as well as some web links were no longer active.

However, during our review, International Collection management began updating its Internal Revenue Manual guidance and most had been updated as of January 2014. Management also added an Internal Revenue Manual section prescribing procedures to handle certain adjustments required in many international revenue officer cases.

In addition, Collection management began updating the Collection intranet website as new international procedures were finalized. The IRS informed us that the web links are now monitored and updated regularly.

The complexity of International Collection cases requires specific guidance to address those issues beyond the guidance provided to domestic revenue officers. Most IRS policies generally do not account for the differences between international and domestic taxpayers.

An example is that the timeliness guidelines for working international cases are the same as for working domestic cases.

As a general rule, international cases are more complex than domestic cases because they can involve treaty limitations on what an international revenue officer can and cannot do in a foreign country to contact the taxpayers, obtain tax returns, and collect the taxes due.

Without sufficient policies and procedures, international revenue officers may not be providing the international taxpayer with fair and equitable application of the tax laws.

There are also logistical challenges in contacting and collecting from an international taxpayer that must be acknowledged.

For example, international revenue officers have limited ability to make telephone or field contact with international taxpayers due to time zone and language differences. Therefore, they are often restricted to making the initial contact through registered mail, subject to U.S. Postal regulations, which can delay delivery to the taxpayers.

The Internal Revenue Manual is primarily focused on domestic cases and does not provide separate timeliness guidelines for international cases to account for these differences. The amount of time given to international taxpayers to respond to the correspondence is the same as for domestic taxpayers. More realistic time frames for correspondence with international taxpayers should be incorporated into the International Collection guidance in the Internal Revenue Manual.

Position descriptions for international revenue officers are inadequate

A position description is a document that summarizes the specialized duties, activities, and responsibilities of an employee’s job within the Government. The document describes the position and establishes what types of work are expected of the employee.

Our analysis of the position description used for international revenue officers revealed that the duties and responsibilities are the same as their domestic counterparts, even though the international position requires additional topical specific knowledge and skills.

The only differences in the position descriptions for international revenue officers were additional wording identifying their position as “Moderate Risk” and the requirement for a national security clearance for access to secret and confidential information.

In addition, the international position description does not state that the position is for an international revenue officer and does not even use the word “international” anywhere in the document.

International Collection is generally not recognized as a separate entity within the Collection Field function even though international revenue officers require specific knowledge and skills to address the significant issues facing international taxpayers.

For example, international revenue officers require knowledge in complex U.S. tax rules and reporting requirements that include any tax treaties that are applicable to a taxpayer’s country of residence.

They also have to be knowledgeable of the differences in enforcement capabilities when dealing with an international taxpayer.

Inadequate position descriptions that do not describe the skill sets needed for international revenue officers to successfully work a more complex inventory may not adequately support the Collection Field function’s international initiatives, as well as ensure that quality service is provided to international taxpayers.

Additional in-depth training is needed to ensure that international revenue officers can accurately and timely resolve cases.

The IRS must enforce the tax laws to ensure that U.S. taxpayers meet their tax obligations regardless of where they may work or reside. In order for the IRS to meet this goal, it must address the challenges of international tax administration by properly training its international revenue officers to understand and work complex cross-border issues.

Yet, the IRS has created few training courses specifically for International Collection.

International Collection training is developed by the SB/SE Division’s Human Capital Officer in partnership with the Collection Field function. Each year, Collection Field function management sends out requests to the International Collection group managers to solicit ideas from field personnel for new courses to be developed or requests to bring back courses which need to be updated. Once the course subjects are chosen, international revenue officers are asked to volunteer to develop and teach the courses. The training is taught by international revenue officers, domestic revenue officers, Collection Policy personnel, or a combination of all three depending on the particular subject matter.

In Fiscal Years 2010 and 2011, there was little International Collection training given to international revenue officers.

In Fiscal Year 2012, international revenue officers received training on four topics: Adjustments and Penalties; Foreign Trusts and International Insolvency; Offshore Collection Techniques; and Offshore Research and Resources.

In Fiscal Year 2013, international revenue officers received training on two additional topics: Individual Taxpayer Identification Numbers and Qualified Intermediaries.

We found inaccuracies in training topics because inexperienced international revenue officers developed some of the materials instead of Subject Matter Experts.

We reviewed the training materials for four of the six international training topics and found that they were not always developed or taught by Subject Matter Experts.

We found that some topics were developed by lower graded and/or inexperienced international revenue officers who volunteered to research, develop, and teach the topic.

Although we determined that IRS Counsel and SB/SE Division Training personnel are responsible for reviewing and approving the topics before they are provided to the international revenue officers, inaccuracies were identified in two of the topics.

For example, the Adjustments and Penalties topic included incorrect information on where to send international adjustments to be processed, which we were told caused significant delays to the resolution of hundreds of cases and may have negatively impacted customer service to international taxpayers.

The approved International Strategy document states that timely training will be provided to international revenue officers on topics that are unique to international casework. In addition, the IRS Strategic Plan for Fiscal Years 2009 through 2013 states that the IRS must invest to meet the challenges of international tax administration and train employees to identify and understand issues in a complex and cross-border international environment.

However, most of the judgmental sample of 15 international revenue officers and five group managers interviewed believed the training they received was insufficient in improving their skills and did not provide them with an in-depth knowledge for resolving their cases. In addition, one Territory Manager considered the centralized training approach of little value because the training was focused on very basic information.

When training courses do not contain information specific to international revenue officers, International Collection management customizes them.

For example, all newly hired international revenue officers receive the same basic domestic revenue officer training with domestic revenue officers, followed by separate “international” training. According to some of the judgmental sample of 15 international revenue officers we interviewed, there were instances when domestic revenue officers with no International Collection experience were provided as On-the-Job-Trainers for the international portion of the training.

According to the group managers and internal revenue officers interviewed, this can be problematic because international revenue officers are required to know international tax and treaty laws, which can make determining the correct tax liability more difficult. In addition, some managers expressed concern that the investigative tools available to international revenue officers are often limited, and locating taxpayers living abroad can be more involved and time consuming than locating domestic taxpayers.

There are risks of inequitable treatment of international taxpayers and violating tax treaties if the international revenue officers are not provided adequate training on international issues.

 

International Collection’s Inventory Selection Process May Not Ensure That the Most Productive Cases Are Worked

International Collection’s inventory practices for selecting international casework may not ensure that international revenue officers receive the highest priority cases. The assignment of inventory is a priority and is a key factor in determining workload needs and balancing resources across the Collection Field function.

The Inventory Delivery System is a collection system that automates the grading and assignment of cases received into the Collection Field function. The level of complexity, or grade of a case, is based on an application of business rules programmed into the Inventory Delivery System and applied systemically upon receipt of the casework.

The Entity Case Management System (ENTITY) receives data from the Inventory Delivery System and delivers the case inventory to the field. Cases receive their risk level assignment in priority order with no distinction between domestic and international cases.

Appropriately graded case inventory is based on the accuracy and relevance of the criteria used to determine the risk levels of the cases in the Collection Queue.

There are no separate criteria for determining risks and grading international cases. International group managers pull the high and medium-risk cases from the Collection Queue for their international revenue officers to work.

However, ENTITY does not take into account the affluence of the foreign country[5] where the taxpayer is currently living, nor does it determine whether the taxpayer had assets in the United States before moving overseas. ENTITY looks only at the case as a Taxpayer Delinquent Account or a Taxpayer Delinquency Investigation that has accompanying Information Returns Processing documents that may or may not change the grading of the case or the risk level.

Domestic criteria are used to determine the risk level of international cases, which can cause the highest priority cases to not be worked.

Interviews with Collection Field function management and review of Collection accomplishment reports indicate that productivity is currently measured primarily on whether employees complied with procedural requirements and the number of cases they closed.

The amount of revenue collected does not appear to be taken into consideration when assessing whether or not International Collection is successfully selecting the cases with the most collection potential.

According to International Collection group managers, they face a more difficult challenge in identifying current and potentially collectible cases for assignment to their revenue officers.

Although monitoring compliance with procedural requirements is important, measures and desired outcomes related to closing cases should also be aligned with Collection’s primary mission of collecting revenue and making the best use of limited International Collection resources.

According to the September Fiscal Year 2012 International Territory Report provided by Collection Field function management, 3,451 (35.9 percent) of 9,612 Taxpayer Delinquent Account modules were closed as Currently Not Collectible.

Under the current prioritization system, the three most frequent reasons for closing International Collection cases as Currently Not Collectible are:

  • · The taxpayer could pay, but the IRS was unable to collect the liability because the taxpayer resides in a foreign country.
  • · The IRS was unable to locate the taxpayer or their assets.
  • · The IRS was unable to contact a taxpayer, and although the taxpayer’s address was known, there was no means to enforce collection.

Collection Field function management needs to ensure that their inventory selection process identifies and selects international cases with the most collection potential for international revenue officers to work. For example, enhancing case selection criteria by including the international attributes of a case may help identify and remove cases with low Representation potential from inventory allowing international revenue officers to work more productive cases. The selection criteria should prioritize collecting revenue to help close the International Tax Gap while also making the best use of the limited resources of International Collection.

 

Office of Audit Comment:

While IRS management stated that they regularly update their inventory selection models and that the corrective actions for this recommendation are complete, no additional evidence was provided to support that international collection case results were specifically evaluated or that any international specific case selection models were updated.

This is a concern considering that more than one-third of the International Collection program’s inventory is closed as Currently Not Collectible.

We still believe that international collection case selection practices need to be reevaluated and adjustments made to inventory selection models to identify more productive cases by including international attributes in the selection criteria, better identification of taxpayers with the ability to pay, and taxpayers who can be located and subsequently contacted.

Separate Performance Measures and Quantifiable Enforcement Results Are Needed to Determine the Success of International Collection Efforts

Performance measures for International Collection are not reported separately from Domestic Collection.

The IRS combines Domestic, International, and Puerto Rico collection results when reporting overall Collection Field function performance. According to Collection Field function management, the IRS does not find it necessary to further break down collection results to highlight International Collection statistics. The Area Director tracks the international inventory using separate productivity reports that include the number of international revenue officers and number of cases closed by their grade level. The Territory Manager and Area Director believed these reports provided the key information needed to monitor the international program with the focus primarily on the number of case closures.

The approved International Collection Strategy document states that international case processing will be examined to improve case processing efficiencies for systemic (e.g., ENTITY) and non-systemic cases. The non-systemic cases include Mutual Collection Assistance Request cases, Continental Shelf cases, and Offshore Voluntary Disclosure Initiative Program cases. These are not included as closures for International Collection because they are not part of the inventory system. International revenue officers also work other collateral cases including Qualified Intermediary cases. These cases are also non-systemic cases.

According to the International Collection Territory Manager, approximately 70 percent of the international revenue officer’s time is spent working ENTITY cases and the other 30 percent is spent on these non-systemic cases. When time is spent on non-systemic cases, the determination of resources expended in direct casework is not accurate because non-systemic cases are considered non-case related activities and reported as indirect time, overhead, or details.

Although the formal reporting of Collection performance measures has not broken out International Collection statistics, in Fiscal Year 2012, Collection Field function management created a new International Territory Report to provide certain International Collection statistics. This report accounts for some of the non-systemic or “other” casework in International Collection, and allows for reporting of selected results for international cases. However, the International Territory Report does not provide specific international case statistics that are related to existing Collection Field function performance measures.

Overall, Collection Field function performance measures address many operational statistics covering dollars collected; the number and types of closures; enforcement actions such as liens, levies, and seizures; age of inventory; and many other measures. However, in spite of using the International Territory Report and other Collection reports, Collection Field function management could not provide the following data specifically for international cases:

Dollars collected from tax returns secured.
Dollars collected from notices with international revenue officer assignments.
The number of liens, levies, and seizures resulting from international revenue officer enforcement actions.

Performance measures provide a way to determine what has been accomplished and whether or not an organization is meeting its stated goals and objectives. Without specific performance measures for International Collection, the IRS cannot establish effective performance goals or measure International Collection’s success in achieving them. In addition, the IRS cannot address the challenges of international tax enforcement without having key International Collection statistics.

Recommendation

Recommendation 6: The Commissioner, SB/SE Division, should develop separate performance measures and track the enforcement results for International Collection to determine the success of its collection efforts.

Management’s Response: The IRS agreed with this recommendation. Beginning in Fiscal Year 2014, the International Collection program developed measures for closures, efficiency, quality, and employee satisfaction. The IRS is also monitoring a variety of diagnostic indicators and may develop additional measures after programming relating to realignment of Collection is completed.

Office of Audit Comment: IRS management’s response indicates that they consider the corrective actions for this recommendation to be completed. While IRS management stated that the International Collection program has developed measures for closures, efficiency, quality, and employee satisfaction as a result of the realignment of Field Collection in October 2013, we do not believe that the completed corrective actions fully address our recommendation. For example, no corrective actions were taken in relation to the lack of identifiable international collection tax enforcement results, or the IRS’s inability to track these results to determine the overall success of its international collection efforts. Therefore, we believe that the IRS should consider developing corporate level metrics to measure its international enforcement results, which would help to determine the success of its international collection efforts, as well as the accuracy of its international inventory selection models.

The Value of the “Customs Hold” As an Enforcement Tool Has Not Been Assessed

International revenue officers can request that a Customs Hold be input into the Treasury Enforcement Communication System (TECS) for delinquent taxpayers. Once the taxpayer is on the TECS, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) notifies the IRS whenever the taxpayer travels into the United States. During our interviews with a judgmental sample of 15 international revenue officers and all five group managers, many identified the Customs Hold as one of the most effective enforcement tools available to them in dealing with delinquent international taxpayers. International revenue officers use information obtained through a Customs Hold to attempt to contact the taxpayers while they are in the United States and/or locate the taxpayers’ assets.

The TECS is a database maintained by the DHS and is used extensively by the law enforcement community. Taxpayers are informed with a Letter 4106, Letter Advising Taxpayer of Department of Homeland Security Notification, that an international revenue officer has taken action to advise the DHS that the taxpayer has outstanding tax liabilities and that this may result in an interview by a Customs and Border Protection Officer if the taxpayer attempts to enter the United States. There is a Memorandum of Understanding[7] between the IRS and the DHS that allows Customs and Border Protection Officers to stop delinquent taxpayers identified on the TECS to collect their contact information of where they will be staying while in the United States.

According to the TECS Coordinator, the international revenue officer must submit a completed Form 6668, TECS Entry Request, to have a Customs Hold placed on a taxpayer. The form is sent to the group manager for a signature and e-mailed to the TECS Coordinator. The TECS Coordinator maintains a spreadsheet to document taxpayers added to or deleted from the TECS. According to the spreadsheet, there are approximately 1,700 taxpayers on the TECS with approximately $1.6 billion in delinquent tax assessments. This includes assessments of approximately $1.1 billion solely owed by international taxpayers. The IRS keeps no record of the dollars collected as a result of the Customs Holds and the subsequent interactions with the delinquent taxpayer. As a result, the actual value of the Customs Hold as an enforcement tool is unknown.

The TECS Coordinator does not have direct access to the system

The TECS Coordinator must submit all requests for taxpayers to be added to or deleted from the TECS through the IRS’s Criminal Investigation. The TECS Coordinator is assigned to the SB/SE Division’s Collection Field function Information Technology and Security office and does not have direct access to the TECS. As a result, the TECS Coordinator cannot independently verify that any requested actions related to the TECS have actually occurred, which could cause:

Taxpayers who have become compliant to be unnecessarily delayed by Customs and Border Protection Officers because they were not properly deleted from the TECS.
The IRS to not obtain updated taxpayer contact information because the taxpayer was never input into the TECS.

There currently is no requirement for the TECS Coordinator to track what is input or deleted from the TECS. The TECS Coordinator created a spreadsheet in an attempt to informally track this information; however, it is not directly linked to the TECS. Although the TECS Coordinator has requested direct access to the TECS and Collection Field function management informed us they have been pursuing direct access, they are dependent on the DHS providing access because the DHS owns the system. Without direct access to the TECS, there is no assurance that information that has been input into the system is up to date and accurate.