FL - Seminole County local government infrastructure surtax rate continues at 1%
On November 5, 2024, voters in Seminole County approved a ballot referendum extending the expiration date of Seminole County’s 1% […]
Read MoreCurrent rules call for the IRS to provide a 45-day notice when it intends to contact a third party with three exceptions, including when the taxpayer authorizes the contact; the IRS determines that notice would jeopardize tax collection or involve reprisal; or if the contact involves criminal investigations.
The agency is proposing to shorten the length of proposing to shorten the statutory 45-day notice to 10 days when the when there is a year or less remaining on the statute of limitations for collection or certain other circumstances exist.
“The IRS’s proposed regulations … erode an important taxpayer protection and could punish taxpayers for IRS delays,” Collins wrote in a November 7, 2024, blog post. The agency generally has three years to assess additional tax and ten years to collect unpaid tax. By shortening the timeframe, it could cause personal embarrassment, damage a business’s reputation, or otherwise put unreasonable pressure on a taxpayer to extend the statute of limitations to avoid embarrassment.
“Furthermore, the ten-day timeframe is so short, it is possible that some taxpayers may not receive the notice with enough time to reply,” Collins wrote. “As a result, those taxpayers may incur the embarrassment and reputational damage caused by having their sensitive tax information shared with a third party on an expedited basis without adequate time to respond.”
“The statute of limitations is an important component of the right to finality because it sets forth clear and certain boundaries for the IRS to act to assess or collect taxes,” she wrote, adding that the agency “should reconsider these proposed regulations and Congress should consider enacting additional taxpayer protections for third-party contacts.”
By Gregory Twachtman, Washington News Editor
On November 5, 2024, voters in Seminole County approved a ballot referendum extending the expiration date of Seminole County’s 1% […]
Read MoreBeginning January 1, 2025, dealers should temporarily stop collecting the following Florida discretionary sales surtaxes: the Hillsborough County 0.5% indigent […]
Read MoreThe IRS implemented measure to avoid refund delays and enhanced taxpayer protection by accepting e-filed tax returns with dependents already […]
Read MoreThe IRS Advisory Council (IRSAC) released its 2024 annual report, offering recommendations on emerging and ongoing tax administration issues. As a […]
Read MoreThe IRS announced details for the second remedial amendment cycle (Cycle 2) for Code Sec. 403(b) pre-approved plans. The IRS also addressed […]
Read MoreThe IRS has published its latest Financial Report, providing insights into the Service’s current financial status and addressing key financial […]
Read MoreThe IRS has published the amounts of unused housing credit carryovers allocated to qualified states under Code Sec. 42(h)(3)(D) for calendar year […]
Read MoreThe IRS has offered a checklist of reminders for taxpayers as they prepare to file their 2024 tax returns. Following […]
Read More