Many of my EIC clients attend church. What should be in the statement to make it good documentation?
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Example of place of worship statement
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I believe this question is "What would need to be on a place of worship statement to prove residency of a qualifying child for EIC?" - not charitable contributions. It's one of the items you can check on form 8867 line 26. I'd guess a statement from someone indicating the family regularly attends with the child in question present? Ultimately it'll be "What satisfies an IRS audit" but I don't know what that is.
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Originally posted by David1980 View PostI believe this question is "What would need to be on a place of worship statement to prove residency of a qualifying child for EIC?" - not charitable contributions.
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Weak Substantiation
JenMo, if this kid really does live with your client, is this the best evidence that can be produced that the kid resides there?
Just think. School records. Medical records. Neighbor statements. Social Services records, etc. etc. And the client says something about church? God knows the heart - IRS needs more.
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Many churches have well-organized youth programs and keep very detailed records of emergency contacts, etc. This is especially true if the church sponsors off-site activities such as camps, field trips, mission trips, mothers morning out programs, home-school co-ops, or sports activities. It's a matter of responsible care and also to address potential liability issues.
So I wouldn't discount church records as a source of validation - it depends upon the degree of involvement of the family and how diligent the church is in keeping their records.Last edited by JohnH; 02-03-2013, 11:50 PM."The only function of economic forecasting is to make astrology look respectful" - John Kenneth Galbraith
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Originally posted by Snaggletooth View PostNeighbor statements.
Though, in questionable situations, it's probably a combination of documents that are relied upon instead of any one thing.
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Originally posted by Uncle Sam View PostDon't you think that the place the child(ren) attend school attesting to the address of record would be more
appropriate to establish a child's living place?Last edited by David1980; 02-03-2013, 11:49 PM.
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I'm not implying that church records are the best source of information, just making the point that they might be more reliable than it first appears. I'd certainly want the more reliable info if I actually prepared any EIC returns, but I wouldn't rule out church records altogether. Perhaps as a supplement to the other items you mentioned."The only function of economic forecasting is to make astrology look respectful" - John Kenneth Galbraith
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Good Question
Originally posted by JenMO View PostMany of my EIC clients attend church. What should be in the statement to make it good documentation?
If I ask how many calories are in a Sonic Burrito, don't assume I am sitting here eating one, and tell me I am going to have a heart attack in 3.6 years.
I have noticed people do a lot of extrapolating on here, (and not necessarily this thread, the worst offender has not made an appearance on this one), and it scares some of us to the point where we don't ask questions. And, sometimes it feels like the extrapolating is not really intended to be helpful, but to be a smarty pants. Sorry, I'm a little grouchy.
Mmmm, this is really good burrito, BTW.Last edited by RitaB; 02-04-2013, 11:16 AM.If you loan someone $20 and never see them again, it was probably worth it.
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There are so many divorced/single parents with "joint" custody. If the parents are in the same town the school has contact records for more than one parent which can make it difficult too. Medical records to the insured, which is not always the primary. Divorce decrees/placement records that have scheduled days for each parent - that in the real world don't always follow schedule as someone usually ends up taking someone extra time for vacation, holidays, whatever.
In a perfect world it would be so easy to determine "custody", in our real world not so.
RitaB - I very much agree with you!
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