Title: SBSE Campus Compliance Services
1SBSE Campus Compliance Services
- Addressing the Tax Gap
- Charlestine D. Hardy
- Director, Campus Compliance - Memphis
2Tax Gap
- The difference between the tax that taxpayers
should pay and what they actually pay on a timely
basis - Includes three components Nonfiling,
Underreporting, and Underpayment - 345 Billion Gross Tax Gap
3NATIONAL TAX GAP 2001 ( in Billions)Gross Tax
Gap 345 Billion (NCR 16.3)
Non-Filing 27
Underreporting 285
Underpayment 33
SB/SE portion is 27.5
SB/SE portion is 23.8
Individual Income Tax 197
Corporation Income Tax 30
Employment Tax 66.1
Estate Excise Tax 4
Non-Business Income - 56
SBSE 50.2 Remainder TEGE and LMSB
SB/SE portion is 117
LMSB 25 SBSE 4.9
Business Income - 109
Adjustments, Deductions Exemptions - 16.7
Updated using Census tabulations, March 2006
Credits 12.8 (EITC 7.8)
NCR Non Compliance Rate
4Compliance Services StructureSB/SE Campus
Compliance Services
Director
PMO
Campus Filing Payment Compliance
Campus Reporting Compliance
Finance
Brookhaven Campus
Cincinnati Campus
Memphis Campus
Ogden Campus
Philadelphia Campus
5Compliance Initiatives
- Examination Correspondence Audits (Corr. Audits)
- Automated Underreporter (AUR)
- Telephone Excise Tax Refund (TETR)
- Centralized Offer in Compromise (COIC)
6Examination Correspondence Audits (Corr. Audits)
7Campus Examination Program
- Approximately 1 million Campus Exam
letters/notices were issued and audits conducted - Less than 596,000 cases were closed with taxpayer
responses - Campus Exam generated tax assessments totaling
more than 7.7 billion
8Campus Examination Letters and Notices
- A selection of taxpayer notices are used to
- identify the issues being audited
- request supporting information/documentation
- All notices include
- Publication 3498-A
- Form 886
9Campus Examination Letters and Notices
- Most common Campus Exam notices are CP 75 and CP
75A for EITC and dependency issues - Most common Campus Exam ICLs are L566(SC/CG) and
L566-B(SC/CG) with Form 4549
10AutomatedUnderreporter (AUR)
11Automated Underreporter Impact
- More than 4 million AUR notices issued
- IRS issues CP2000 notice to taxpayer for
discrepancies that remain unaccounted for - AUR generated increased tax assessments totaling
more than 3.9 billion
12The AUR Program
- Third parties including employers, banks, and
brokers provide information returns to the IRS - IRS matches amounts reported on individual tax
returns to the information returns - IRS issues CP2000 notice to taxpayer for
discrepancies that remain unaccounted for - Initial match begins after the original return
due date not a real-time process
13Responding to the Notice If the taxpayer agrees
to the CP2000
- Do not file an amended return
- Check box A on the CP2000 response page
- Return the response page timely along with a
check, money order, or request for an installment
agreement
14Responding to the Notice If the taxpayer
disagrees with the CP2000
- Respond in writing by the due date
- Provide a written statement that details why the
taxpayer disagrees - Attach relevant documents to support the
taxpayers position, and - (We recommend that Taxpayers) Provide a contact
number
15Online Payment Agreement (OPA)
16Objective
- To have taxpayers self qualify and apply for a
payment agreement online - To have taxpayers receive notification of payment
agreement online during the same internet session - The major goal of OPA is to automate payment
agreements for individual taxpayers - OPA is a web based application that can be
accessed through irs.gov
17OPA allows user to
- pay now
- arrange a short-term extension to pay
- arrange a monthly payment agreement via
- direct debit
- payroll deduction
- routine payment agreement
- participate in a customer satisfaction survey
18Benefits of OPA
- It will
- reduce payment agreement processing costs
- expand available taxpayer service beyond normal
business hours. - allow taxpayers to know in real-time if their
agreement request is granted and it will be
established while the taxpayer is online. - facilitate payments starting sooner thus
benefiting the taxpayer and IRS.
19Offer in CompromiseProgram Update
20Tax Increase Prevention Reconciliation Act of
2005
- Created significant changes to the Offer in
Compromise Program - Effective for offers received July 16, 2006
21IRC 7122 subsection (c) Rules for Submission of
OICs
- There are 3 types of payment terms
- Lump sum offers 5 or less installments
- - 20 of offer amount with Form 656
- Short Term Periodic Payment 6 or more payments
- Deferred Periodic Payment paid in 25 or more
months and within time remaining on the statutory
period for collection
22New Processability Criteria
- TP cannot be a debtor in a bankruptcy case.
- TP must submit the 150 application fee, or Form
656-A, "Income Certification for Offer in
Compromise Application Fee and Payment - TP must submit 20 payment with lump sum offer,
or a signed Form 656-A - Submit first installment payment on a periodic
payment offer, or a signed Form 656-A
23New Timeframe forRendering OIC Decision
- An OIC will be declared accepted if a written
decision is not rendered within 24 months from
the date the offer is received by IRS - Litigation period will not be included in 24
month calculation
24Telephone Excise Tax
25Telephone Excise Tax
- One year initiative to refund telephone excise
tax. Tax Year 2006, only. - Taxpayers had the option of claiming a safe
harbor amount or an actual amount. - IRS SBSE enforcement activity in Memphis Campus
- On most of the returns selected the credit
claimed was reduced to the standard amount.