This is quoted from "THE KIPLINGER TAX LETTER"
"IRS gives preparers a break on the new tighter reporting standards. Required disclosures need to be made only to clients, not to the Service, IRS says in proposed rules. The rules flesh out a 2007 law that requires preparers to disclose when a position that's taken on a tax return has a less than 50% chance of being correct. Tax pros had complained that making disclosures to the Service would mean tattling on clients. The rules also caution preparers to keep documents that substantiate any such disclosures. That way, when IRS agents come calling, the preparer can show that he or she has the records to rebut an IRS penalty.
Congress will provide more relief this year or next by requiring disclosure only in situations where there is a less than 40% chance that the position taken will be upheld by the service. That's the same standard that taxpayers must meet."
"IRS gives preparers a break on the new tighter reporting standards. Required disclosures need to be made only to clients, not to the Service, IRS says in proposed rules. The rules flesh out a 2007 law that requires preparers to disclose when a position that's taken on a tax return has a less than 50% chance of being correct. Tax pros had complained that making disclosures to the Service would mean tattling on clients. The rules also caution preparers to keep documents that substantiate any such disclosures. That way, when IRS agents come calling, the preparer can show that he or she has the records to rebut an IRS penalty.
Congress will provide more relief this year or next by requiring disclosure only in situations where there is a less than 40% chance that the position taken will be upheld by the service. That's the same standard that taxpayers must meet."
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