Other posts are ongoing about the eye-opening article in NATP describing "visits" by the IRS to preparers, with an agenda of assessing preparer penalties. Whereas the veracity of the accounts in the article has been questioned on this board, it DOES appear that the spectre of using preparer penalties for revenue instead of auditing taxpayers is very attractive for the IRS.
The implied duty (under the guise of "due diligence") to AUDIT our clientele strikes at the very heart of our practice. To change our procedures to include the gathering and storage of documents just to cover our butt means we will HAVE to increase our fees and become non-competitive. Well-healed preparation sources such as HRB, JH, TurboTax (where the taxpayer can cheat all he wants) will resist these penalties and survive this new trend, whereas people like myself will go out of business.
NOW is the time for NAEA and NATP to make our thoughts known. These organizations are supposed to be founded for our own benefit, and NOT just to send their people to nicey-nice discussions with the IRS. If you are a member of an organization 50,000 people strong, all of us with a common objective, we should expect such an organization to make its wishes felt.
This is not a call for militant countenance. There are things such as tracking the activities of legislators, voting records, officials in the IRS, etc. That's what other trade organizations do.
The implied duty (under the guise of "due diligence") to AUDIT our clientele strikes at the very heart of our practice. To change our procedures to include the gathering and storage of documents just to cover our butt means we will HAVE to increase our fees and become non-competitive. Well-healed preparation sources such as HRB, JH, TurboTax (where the taxpayer can cheat all he wants) will resist these penalties and survive this new trend, whereas people like myself will go out of business.
NOW is the time for NAEA and NATP to make our thoughts known. These organizations are supposed to be founded for our own benefit, and NOT just to send their people to nicey-nice discussions with the IRS. If you are a member of an organization 50,000 people strong, all of us with a common objective, we should expect such an organization to make its wishes felt.
This is not a call for militant countenance. There are things such as tracking the activities of legislators, voting records, officials in the IRS, etc. That's what other trade organizations do.
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