
IRS Enforcement Action
Heating Up, Lien Filings Triple
Don't misread the New York
Times article of Friday, April 13, 2001. While it is correct that the IRS has
placed about a million cases into an inactive file, enforcement action IS on the
rise. Remember that even if the IRS has put your case into an inactive status,
the taxes do not go away until the statute of limitations expires. That is ten
years after the assessment (first billing notice) date.
It appears that the lax
enforcement efforts by the IRS over the past three years has come to an end.
Federal tax liens filings shot up in August and September, 2000.
According
to a southern California based firm that researches courthouse filings
nationwide, the number of Federal tax liens filed jumped from an average of
9,000 per month from January through July to nearly 24,000 in August and
September 2000. It is expected that lien filings will continue to increase
rapidly. This is consistent with a recent CNN report that the IRS has requested
a $144 million increase in its 2001 budget, to be allocated for hiring 1,633
additional personnel including more than 600 tax collectors and auditors.
Levies
on wages and bank accounts are also likely to increase dramatically in the
coming months. Taxpayers will again feel the need to contact a tax professional
to resolve their long-standing IRS problems.
That raises a very important question. How
should you use this information? Does that mean that now is the time to file
delinquent returns, set up a payment agreement or submit an Offer in Compromise?
In the case of filing old returns, absolutely
yes. If you want to set up a payment agreement, also definitely yes. Offers are a little
different. While the IRS recently changed the Offer program, the changes were not
particularly meaningful. However, if you are a good Offer candidate, I would submit the
Offer now. What I have heard from other tax pros around the country is that the IRS is
going a little outside their normal guidelines to accept Offers as long as they are
"close on the numbers".
I still strongly suggest that you use a
competent EA, CPA or attorney that specializes in collection cases. The reason is that
every $1 difference in the ability to pay on the IRS financial statement is a $48
difference in the amount of the Offer. The fee that you pay for professional
representation may well be offset by the amount of the Offer.
The IRS has been much easier to work
with over the past three years. It appears that the pendulum has begun to swing
the other direction.