Did anyone else receive an email on this from NAEA? Am I reading this correctly that only Dems so far are either sponsoring or co sponsoring this bill?
Dear NAEA members (with a copy to non-member EAs, too),
I am writing with wonderful news and to make a personal request.
Why are we so excited about the Enrolled Agents Credential Act of 2013? For lots of reasons. The legislation has been a priority of NAEA leadership, which has charged the GR team with doing everything it can to garner Congressional interest. The bill is simple—a one-pager and at no cost to taxpayers—but don’t let that distract you. Enrolled agents hold a federally-granted license to practice, yet in some states they are unable to hold themselves forth by their Treasury-granted name or are otherwise harassed by state regulators for alleged advertising infractions. NAEA has been working for years to provide relief to these beleaguered tax experts and we now have something to show for that.
As part of our strategy, we used the 2013 Fly-in Day as a platform to advocate for the bill. Nearly 90 members from 30 states and the District of Columbia attended this year’s Fly-in to advance causes important to the profession and to raise EA awareness in the process. We advocated in almost 150 congressional offices in the House and Senate for tax reform, return preparer oversight and protection of the EA credential.
For those of you who participated, your efforts both during the visits and through your follow-up were important and I thank you from the bottom of my heart.
NAEA’s government relations team (Bob Kerr, Sr. Director, Government Relations and Jeff Trinca, Federal Legislative Counsel) courted members of the tax-writing committees in the House and Senate to find allies in support of a one-page stand-alone bill that would help codify the federal enrolled agent credential approved by the Treasury.
Please note the bipartisan nature of the bills. Representative Xavier Becerra (D-CA), a long-time ally of NAEA, has agreed to jump on board with Dr. Boustany and co-sponsor H.R. 2313. In addition, Representatives Tim Bishop (D-NY) and Delegate Eleanor Holmes Norton (D-DC) are also original co-sponsors of H.R. 2313.
•Write your representative and both of your senators and ask them to co-sponsor the Enrolled Agents Credential Act. Here’s how you do that:
1.Visit the CongressMerge website, type your address into the appropriate fields and click the “Submit It” button.
2.After submitting your address, you should see all three of your elected representatives. To the right, you will see phone and fax numbers and an email contact form hosted on each of their congressional websites. Click on those links one-after-the-other until you have contacted all of them.
3.In your email to your representative in the House, ask your representative to support and co-sponsor H.R. 2313. In your emails to both of your senators, please ask them to co-sponsor S. 1134.
• If you find that your representative or senator is an original sponsor or co-sponsor, write to thank your legislator for his/her leadership on an issue of great importance to you.
Introduction of these bills is an advocacy high-water mark, but we need your help at the grassroots level. Please take a minute to protect enrolled agents and strengthen the profession by contacting your elected representatives and asking them to support the Enrolled Agents Credential Act of 2013.
Dear NAEA members (with a copy to non-member EAs, too),
I am writing with wonderful news and to make a personal request.
Why are we so excited about the Enrolled Agents Credential Act of 2013? For lots of reasons. The legislation has been a priority of NAEA leadership, which has charged the GR team with doing everything it can to garner Congressional interest. The bill is simple—a one-pager and at no cost to taxpayers—but don’t let that distract you. Enrolled agents hold a federally-granted license to practice, yet in some states they are unable to hold themselves forth by their Treasury-granted name or are otherwise harassed by state regulators for alleged advertising infractions. NAEA has been working for years to provide relief to these beleaguered tax experts and we now have something to show for that.
As part of our strategy, we used the 2013 Fly-in Day as a platform to advocate for the bill. Nearly 90 members from 30 states and the District of Columbia attended this year’s Fly-in to advance causes important to the profession and to raise EA awareness in the process. We advocated in almost 150 congressional offices in the House and Senate for tax reform, return preparer oversight and protection of the EA credential.
For those of you who participated, your efforts both during the visits and through your follow-up were important and I thank you from the bottom of my heart.
NAEA’s government relations team (Bob Kerr, Sr. Director, Government Relations and Jeff Trinca, Federal Legislative Counsel) courted members of the tax-writing committees in the House and Senate to find allies in support of a one-page stand-alone bill that would help codify the federal enrolled agent credential approved by the Treasury.
Please note the bipartisan nature of the bills. Representative Xavier Becerra (D-CA), a long-time ally of NAEA, has agreed to jump on board with Dr. Boustany and co-sponsor H.R. 2313. In addition, Representatives Tim Bishop (D-NY) and Delegate Eleanor Holmes Norton (D-DC) are also original co-sponsors of H.R. 2313.
•Write your representative and both of your senators and ask them to co-sponsor the Enrolled Agents Credential Act. Here’s how you do that:
1.Visit the CongressMerge website, type your address into the appropriate fields and click the “Submit It” button.
2.After submitting your address, you should see all three of your elected representatives. To the right, you will see phone and fax numbers and an email contact form hosted on each of their congressional websites. Click on those links one-after-the-other until you have contacted all of them.
3.In your email to your representative in the House, ask your representative to support and co-sponsor H.R. 2313. In your emails to both of your senators, please ask them to co-sponsor S. 1134.
• If you find that your representative or senator is an original sponsor or co-sponsor, write to thank your legislator for his/her leadership on an issue of great importance to you.
Introduction of these bills is an advocacy high-water mark, but we need your help at the grassroots level. Please take a minute to protect enrolled agents and strengthen the profession by contacting your elected representatives and asking them to support the Enrolled Agents Credential Act of 2013.
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