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David Merrill
01-14-14, 10:46 AM
This is certainly worth taking note of. (http://www.taxpayeradvocate.irs.gov/userfiles/file/2013-Annual-Report-to-Congress-Executive-Summary.pdf)

Chex
01-14-14, 03:41 PM
This is certainly worth taking note of. (http://www.taxpayeradvocate.irs.gov/userfiles/file/2013-Annual-Report-to-Congress-Executive-Summary.pdf)

You bet it is David and this is a report to our congress? I like these reports from Nina E. Olson.

Only made it to page 48, cant wait to read about 12USC411, if its in there.


Page 47 the Problem
The classification of workers as employees or independent contractors has significant tax consequences for businesses and individuals, ranging from the allowance of expenses derived from a “trade or business” to eligibility for employee benefit or pension plans. The National Taxpayer Advocate has repeatedly called for the IRS to simplify its worker classification criteria and develop online self-help tools, but the IRS has taken little action. In addition, applicants who receive adverse classification determinations from the IRS may not automatically receive administrative appeal options, and those who do may not be afforded all the remedies offered in internal guidelines.

The SS-8 IRS form is a document created for employers to help determine federal employment taxes and income tax withholding from a worker's salary.

The case will be assigned to a technician who will review the facts, apply the law, and render a decision. http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/fss8.pdf

Do you really want a novice technician to evaluate a congressional law?

Some people just don’t get it. http://www.city-data.com/forum/work-employment/1788705-i-got-filed-independent-contractor.html


Page 48 the Problem


U.S. citizens or resident aliens are subject to tax on their worldwide incomes and have the same general tax reporting requirements whether they live in the United States or abroad. However, the tax requirements have become so confusing and the compliance burden so great that taxpayers are giving up their U.S. citizenship in record numbers.

(Cant blame them.)


Problem COLLECTION PROCESS: IRS Collection Procedures Harm Taxpayers and Contribute to Substantial Amounts of Lost Revenue.

The withholding and payment of trust fund taxes are vital components of the voluntary compliance system. Trust fund tax delinquencies can quickly become unmanageable for business taxpayers; yet the IRS provides inadequate attention and service for emerging trust fund collection cases. The IRS persists in assigning these cases to employees who are not fully equipped to resolve them. Consequently, important collection options (e.g., installment agreements and offers in compromise), are exceptionally rare and are frequently not available to business taxpayers until their debts become uncollectible. The National
Taxpayer Advocate is troubled by the high percentage of business taxpayers who cannot resolve their tax problems in response to IRS collection notices or contacts with the Automated Collection System (ACS) and believes the IRS could resolve many of these accounts through a more proactive, service-oriented
approach.

The withholding and payment of trust fund taxes are vital components of the voluntary compliance system. Trust fund tax delinquencies can quickly become unmanageable for business taxpayers; yet the IRS provides inadequate attention and service for emerging trust fund collection cases.

Trust Fund Taxes
A trust fund tax is money withheld from an employee's wages (income tax, social security, and Medicare taxes) by an employer and held in trust until paid to the Treasury.

When you pay your employees, you do not pay them all the money they earned. As their employer, you have the added responsibility of withholding taxes from their paychecks. The income tax and employees' share of FICA (social security and Medicare) that you withhold from your employees' paychecks are part of their wages you pay to the Treasury instead of to your employees. Your employees trust that you pay the withholding to the Treasury by making Federal Tax Deposits (PDF). That is why they are called trust fund taxes.

Through this withholding, your employees pay their contributions toward retirement benefits (social security and Medicare) and the income taxes reported on their tax returns. Your employees' trust fund taxes, along with your matching share of FICA, are paid to the Treasury through the Federal Tax Deposit System. The withheld part of these taxes is your employees' money, and the matching portion is their retirement benefit. For additional information, refer to Employment Taxes and the Trust Fund Recovery Penalty (TFRP).

Employment tax deposits are a current expense. Postponing paying them is not the same as making a late payment on your phone bill or to a supplier. Congress has established large penalties for delays in turning over your employment taxes to the Treasury. The longer it takes to pay that money, the more it will cost you. For more information, refer to Publication 15, Circular E, Employer's Tax Guide.

Page Last Reviewed or Updated: 05-Sep-2013
http://www.irs.gov/Businesses/Small-Businesses-%26-Self-Employed/Trust-Fund-Taxes