Tax planning

  • The Public Company Accounting Oversight Board will delay implementation for one part of a rule relating to professionals who provide both tax and audit services to companies.Adopted in July 2005, Rule 3523, “Tax Services for Persons in Financial Reporting Oversight Roles,” went into effect on Oct. 31. The rule prohibits auditors from providing tax services to certain members of management who serve in financial reporting oversight roles at an audit client.

    November 3
  • The Internal Revenue Service today issued the 2007 optional standard mileage rates used to calculate the deductible costs of operating an automobile for business, charitable, medical or moving purposes.

    November 2
  • U.S. tax directors report that they now have greater visibility before corporate leadership, but they also believe they are spending more time on work that is less valued by their organizations because of increasing legislative and regulatory demands, according to a survey of senior tax executives by KPMG LLP.

    November 2
  • H&R Block Inc. said that it will provide better and more transparent notification to customers detailing all the costs tied to its refund anticipation loans.

    November 2
  • It took some time and an issue as seemingly innocuous as Katrina tax relief for the Internal Revenue Service to get dragged into a public relations skirmish this election season.The trouble start a couple of weeks ago, when Commissioner Mark Everson made an announcement that the IRS will postpone collection activities against taxpayers in the hardest-hit areas struck by Hurricane Katrina until 2007. That’s essentially buys those taxpayers a couple more months -- through the holidays -- after a one-year filing extension expired Oct. 16.

    November 1
  • In its latest attempt to become a player in the accounting software space, Microsoft had released a free stripped-down version of its software -- targeting small businesses that are late adopters and rely on pencil and paper or Excel for their bookkeeping needs.

    October 31
  • A federal report says that the Internal Revenue Service needs to put a better system in place to evaluate the results of the private debt collection program it implemented this fall.The Government Accountability Office looked at a trio of issues, including whether the IRS addressed critical success factors before limited implementation, whether the IRS will assess lessons learned before fuller implementation, and finally, whether the IRS’s planned study will help determine if using private contractors is the best use of federal funds.

    October 31
  • The Internal Revenue Service is pushing back the printing schedule for a number of its tax products, including several versions of the 1040 and 1099 forms.Earlier this month, the IRS warned the Senate Finance Committee tax staff that delays in enacting a number of expiring tax breaks could have an adverse impact on tax administration -- affecting outside contracts with vendors to get the forms and instructions printed, and possibly eventually having a negative impact on collections.

    October 30
  • Nearing the November elections, Intuit Inc. has given $1 million to a California political action committee called the Alliance for California's Tomorrow.The group has already spent $66,000 supporting the campaign of Republican Tony Strickland for state controller, according to the Los Angeles Times.

    October 30
  • Robert Wayne Hallock was convicted by a federal judge today of tax evasion for attempting to hide from the government over $1 million obtained by selling fraudulent certificates of deposit, the Justice Department and Internal Revenue Service jointly announced.According to the indictment, in February 1997, Hallock, formerly a partner at the law firm of Kirkland & Ellis LLP in Chicago, sold a fraudulent CD from which he received approximately $1.8 million dollars. In an attempt to hide that income from the government, Hallock funneled it through a Florida bank account in the name of Himmel & Grund, LLC and hired an associate to use the from that bank account to purchase hundreds of thousands of dollars in cashier’s checks that Hallock used to spend on personal expenditures.

    October 25
  • In a press conference timed to coincide with the 20th anniversary of President Reagan’s signing the last major tax reform act into law, former Sen. Bill Bradley, D-N.J., and Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., issued a call for another tax reform push.Wyden has introduced his Fair Flat Tax Act in the Senate, which includes provisions to lower tax rates and broaden the overall tax base. The legislation would allow taxpayers to file their returns on a simplified, single-page 1040 form; collapse individual tax brackets from the current six down to just three; and set a single, flat corporate rate. The bill would also end the alternative minimum tax and contains a unique provision to provide a refundable 10-percent tax credit for every taxpayer’s state and local taxes -- a benefit for taxpayers who don’t itemize.

    October 25
  • I always believed that New York had a deserved reputation of aggressively going after individuals regarding whether they have New York residency with regard to collection of its income and estate taxes.

    October 23
  • The American Institute of CPAs and the National Association of the State Boards of Accountancy have reached compromises that could potentially affect both the peer review process and issue of substantial equivalency/mobility.With regard to the 18-year-old peer review process, the institute -- working with state boards and NASBA -- unveiled a new model for transparency, which contains an “opt out” provision by firms for voluntary state board disclosure of peer review results.

    October 23
  • Beginning in January, Link2Gov will be able to process credit card payments related to federal business tax Forms 941 and 940 for an expanded number of filing years -- 1997 through present balance due.

    October 23
  • Let me preface my weekly missive with the admission that I’m a Wesley Snipes groupie.

    October 22
  • Surfing champion Sunny Garcia was sentenced to three months in federal prison for failing to pay taxes on more than $417,000 in prize money.

    October 22
  • The Treasury Department and the Internal Revenue Service issued proposed regulations addressing the tax treatment of an exchange of property for an annuity contract.

    October 19
  • The chairman of the Joint Economic Committee is asking the Internal Revenue Service to refrain from taxing online gamers.

    October 19
  • The New Jersey Supreme Court ruled that companies operating in the state may not use out-of-state subsidiaries to hold their intellectual property and subsequently shield profits from the state’s corporate income tax.The judgment, which applies only to New Jersey, means that companies will no longer be able to use a shelter strategy to transfer property such as trademarks or patents to subsidiaries in low- or no-tax states. Companies have generally paid the subsidiary for the use of brands or other proprietary property and then deducted those payments from their state income taxes. The income collected by the subsidiary is than taxed at a lower rate, or not at all.

    October 17
  • White men can’t jump, and movie actor Wesley Snipes apparently can’t fill out his tax returns properly, according to a recently unsealed indictment from the Internal Revenue Service.The eight-count indictment charges Snipes and two Florida men with conspiracy to defraud the IRS and presenting a fraudulent claim for payment. Snipes is facing six counts of failing to file income tax returns between 1999 and 2004.

    October 17