When I was working for a major storefront firm, I inherited from my mentor a wonderful elderly couple. My mentor told me that in a couple of years they would get correspondence from the IRS advising them that they did not need to file. My mentor said that he had tried to convince them of this himself. After doing two more returns for the couple and being told that there had been no IRS letter, I found out that ever since being told by my mentor that they did not need to file, they had been taking the returns home and sticking them in a drawer in case the IRS should ever question their failure to file. I pleaded with them to let me write a letter explaining why they did not need to file. Since they were long time clients of the firm, I could have done this at no charge to them. My pleas fell on deaf ears. I did something that could have got me in trouble. I went behind their back and rang up their Pastor. They had told me much over the years about what a good kind and smart man he was. It took some explaining to get him to grasp that I wanted him to help me get them to NOT spend money with me. Apparently pastors are often asked to get church members TO spend money with someone. I finally got him to understand that one of the core commitments of my faith is not oppressing the poor and another is not taking anyone's money without returning fair value in goods or services. Anyway, I suggested that the couple could increase their giving to the Church by the money they stopped spending with Block. The pastor indicated that they already gave enough to the church and they should spend the money on something special for themselves. But he did talk to them for me and they did go along with my plan. When I moved out of town I turned them over to another Preparer who I felt would take good care of them.
I have since been told that I broke the rules in approaching the pastor without their permission. I got by with it, and I wonder what else I could have done beyond the obvious step of asking for permission. (Sometimes it is easier to ask for forgiveness than permission but I know that sometimes it isn't.) I was an unenrolled preparer at that time and had never heard of Treasury Circular Thirty. I did know that my employer did not like for me to reveal the identities of clients to anyone.
I have since been told that I broke the rules in approaching the pastor without their permission. I got by with it, and I wonder what else I could have done beyond the obvious step of asking for permission. (Sometimes it is easier to ask for forgiveness than permission but I know that sometimes it isn't.) I was an unenrolled preparer at that time and had never heard of Treasury Circular Thirty. I did know that my employer did not like for me to reveal the identities of clients to anyone.
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