Interesting Points Dan
I agree that there will be not enough investigators to check on all of us but I was thinking that education of the public would lead to a general expectation that a preparer will have credentials on the wall of the office the way Doctors do. For example I won't let someone treat me for illness unless they have completed Medical School and either are Board Certified or are in a residency program where Board Certified Doctors are at the top of the food chain.
You raise another valid point in that EAs will no longer be the only preparers who have licenses from the Federal Government. I was hoping and even presuming that the IRS would educate the public. At least in my state I believe a Medical School Graduate who has not successfully completed a residency and is not Board Certified can still treat patients if any will come for treatment. I may be putting too much confidence in the Public and the IRS.
On the other hand it's worth a lot to me to know that soon the kind of preparer one is will not mitigate the consequences one faces for doing wrong unless of course one is the kind of preparer who cannot be found. In my perfect world we would simply make the penalties for doing wrong the same for all preparers and tell the un-enrolled that yes they may write any returns they think they can write correctly but there are consequences for writing them incorrectly.
I'm sensing discomfort with the new regime on the part of many but I remain cautiously optimistic.
I agree that there will be not enough investigators to check on all of us but I was thinking that education of the public would lead to a general expectation that a preparer will have credentials on the wall of the office the way Doctors do. For example I won't let someone treat me for illness unless they have completed Medical School and either are Board Certified or are in a residency program where Board Certified Doctors are at the top of the food chain.
You raise another valid point in that EAs will no longer be the only preparers who have licenses from the Federal Government. I was hoping and even presuming that the IRS would educate the public. At least in my state I believe a Medical School Graduate who has not successfully completed a residency and is not Board Certified can still treat patients if any will come for treatment. I may be putting too much confidence in the Public and the IRS.
On the other hand it's worth a lot to me to know that soon the kind of preparer one is will not mitigate the consequences one faces for doing wrong unless of course one is the kind of preparer who cannot be found. In my perfect world we would simply make the penalties for doing wrong the same for all preparers and tell the un-enrolled that yes they may write any returns they think they can write correctly but there are consequences for writing them incorrectly.
I'm sensing discomfort with the new regime on the part of many but I remain cautiously optimistic.
Comment