FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Press Release # 105 - 360
June 24, 1998
WASHINGTON -- Senate and House conferees Wednesday reached a
bipartisan agreement on an historic package of reforms to the Internal Revenue
Service.
The Internal Revenue Service Restructuring and Reform Act of 1998 will
shift the burden of proof off of the taxpayer and onto the IRS; create an independent
board to give the IRS a new direction; and create a new arsenal of taxpayer
protections, including protections for innocent spouses, usually women.
The cost of the bill is $13 billion over 10 years.
The Conference Report will be filed today. The House is expected to act on
the conference report Thursday; the Senate is expected to take it up after the July
recess.
Senate Finance Committee Chairman William V. Roth, Jr. (R-DE) who is
Chairman of the House-Senate Conference Committee stated:
"This legislation will open the door to real restructuring and reform of an
agency that for far too long has been allowed to operate in darkness. It is aimed at
protecting both taxpayers and employees against those inside the agency who have
abused the awesome power of the IRS.
"These reforms will help turn the IRS into an agency that has power
sufficient enough to collect the appropriate amount of federal revenues, but whose
institutional culture is marked by service, efficiency, cooperation, and openness.
The reforms will help create a culture where taxpayers and employees alike are
protected from abuse, retaliation, and the kinds of nightmares exposed by the Senate
Finance Committee last fall and this past spring."
House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Bill Archer (R-TX) who is Vice-Chairman of the House-Senate Conference Committee stated:
"This plan will give David the taxpayer an arsenal of powerful slingshots to use against Goliath the IRS. Reform of the IRS has been long overdue and I'm delighted that Congress is passing legislation that puts the taxpayer first.
"This Congress has balanced the budget, cut taxes, fixed welfare, and now we've protected taxpayers from IRS abuses. I'm very proud of the bipartisan way we are leading the nation in the right direction."
Additions to the bill:
The bill includes an amendment that reduces the holding period on capital gains from 18 months to 12 months.
The bill also clarifies the tax treatment of meals that are provided on the employers' premises for the convenience of the employer where more than half of the employees receive the meals. The meals would not be taxable to the employee, and would be fully deductible to the employer.
The bill also includes an amendment that replaces the term,"most favored nation" with the term "normal trade relations". This change will help ensure that the language of our trade laws more clearly and accurately reflects our trade policy, which is that the vast majority of our trading partners receive treatment equal to all others.
A summary of the highlights of the conference report is attached.
All members of the Board are subject to Senate confirmation.
The Board will have access to information which will allow it to identify problems at the agency. If the Board identifies a certain problem, it can ask the Treasury Inspector General to investigate and report back.
The Board may not intervene in specific taxpayer cases or specific personnel
matters.
2.The bill gives the Commissioner the management tools he needs to recruit,
retain, hire and fire employees.
3.The bill will make the Taxpayer Advocate more independent of the IRS to
ensure that the Taxpayer Advocate's office represents the interests of the
taxpayers without undue interference by the IRS.
4.The bill transfers the IRS Office of Chief Inspector to the new Treasury
Inspector General for Tax Administration to provide more effective oversight
and to eliminate the mismanagement and conflict of interest that were
evident in the Senate hearings.
Holding IRS employees accountable for their actions.
1. This bill requires the IRS to terminate an employee if any of the following
conduct relating to the employee's official duties is proven in a
disciplinary or other proceeding:
- Perjury.
- Falsifying or destroying documents to cover up mistakes.
- Willfull failure to obtain the required approval signatures on
documents authorizing the seizure of a taxpayer's home, personal
belongings or business assets.
- Assault or battery on a taxpayer or other IRS employee.
Ensuring that taxpayers are treated with fairness by creating a whole new arsenal of taxpayer protections.
1.Shifting the burden of proof to the IRS in court proceedings.
2.Reforming the law to protect innocent spouses to ensure that divorced or
separated individuals are only responsible for additional taxes on their
own income.
3. Providing interest and penalty relief for taxpayers by: