June 14,2019
Congress Passes Grassley-Led Bipartisan IRS Reform Bill
Thursday,
June 13, 2019
Congress Passes
Grassley-Led Bipartisan IRS Reform Bill
WASHINGTON
– Senate Finance Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) released the
following statement on the Senate passage of the Taxpayer First Act. The
House of Representatives passed the bipartisan bill on Monday. It now goes to
President Donald Trump to be signed into law.
“This
bipartisan, bicameral bill represents years of hard work and consensus
building. It’s a big first step toward strengthening taxpayer protections and
turning the IRS into the customer service organization it ought to be,” Grassley
said. “I look forward to President Trump signing it into law so the IRS can
begin implementing long overdue reforms that will put taxpayers first.”
Grassley introduced the Taxpayer First
Act in the Senate earlier this year with Ranking Member Ron Wyden (D-Ore.).
The bipartisan Senate legislation:
·
Establishes
an independent office of appeals within the IRS;
·
Requires
the IRS to submit to Congress plans to redesign the structure of the agency to
improve efficiency, modernize technology systems, enhance cyber security and
better meet taxpayer needs;
·
Includes
a number of provisions to help protect taxpayers from tax ID theft and improve
taxpayer interaction with the IRS should they become a victim of this crime;
·
Expands
to all taxpayers an IRS program that currently only allows victims of tax ID
theft to obtain a personalized PIN that better secures their identity;
·
Puts
in place new safeguards to protect taxpayers against recent IRS enforcement
abuses of so-called “structuring laws”;
·
Improves
the IRS whistleblower program by:
o authorizing the
IRS to communicate with whistleblowers during the processing of their claims,
while also protecting taxpayer privacy; and
o extending
anti-retaliation provisions to IRS whistleblowers that are presently afforded
to whistleblowers under other whistleblower laws;
·
Modifies
the private debt collection program to ensure lower-income Americans are not
targeted, while also strengthening the long-term viability of the program; and
·
Codifies
the successful Volunteer Income Tax Assistance (VITA) program, allowing the IRS
up to $30 million for matching grants to qualifying tax preparation sites.
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