December 01, 1997
Internal Audit Review of the Use of Statistics and Protection of Taxpayer Rights in the Arkansas-Oklahoma District Collection Function
Summary of Findings
An Internal Audit was conducted at the request of the Acting Commissioner and Regional
Commissioner, Midstates Region. It was begun Oct. 1, 1997, and was delivered to the Senate
Finance Committee on Dec. 5, 1997. The report evaluates two aspects of the Collection
field function in the Arkansas-Oklahoma District -- whether managements use of
enforcement statistics was appropriate and whether the use of statistics led to the abuse
of taxpayers rights.
The IRSs Chief Inspector has also initiated a Nationally Coordinated Audit to
evaluate the use of statistics in the Collection activity nationwide. This audit will
cover twelve districts, including Arkansas-Oklahoma, and will be completed by the end of
December. A second audit is underway focusing on Collection management practices and the
use of enforcement tools, which is scheduled to be completed by the end of February 1998,
with a report issued by the end of March 1998. This audit will cover multiple districts,
including Arkansas-Oklahoma.
The current report on the Arkansas-Oklahoma District finds that the IRSs overall
focus on measuring performance via productivity goals is unbalanced. It cites a
climate that may have set the stage for miscommunication about performance
measures to employees and managers at all levels of the organization. The report says this
overemphasis on productivity could affect taxpayers right to fair treatment, as well
as employees access to a fair evaluation system.
According to the report, the Arkansas-Oklahoma District Collection function is
operating wit within this Servicewide climate The Districts goals and performance
expect at ions are focused heavily on specific statistical targets. Further, senior
management and executives are evaluated almost solely on productivity goals in the area of
increasing voluntary compliance.
In the Arkansas-Oklahoma District, one third of the 90 Revenue Officers interviewed for
this report said they felt pressure to increase the use of enforcement tools, especially
the authority to seize assets. The report found few verifiable case examples to support
this perception but claims that the results nevertheless reflect a state of mind. The
report found no references to tax enforcement results in Revenue Officer evaluations.
However, references to enforcement statistics did appear in some evaluations of Revenue
Officers supervisors. Collection groups were expected to set their own goals, and
some did, which the report says could be construed as a violation of the Taxpayer Bill of
Rights.
In the area of the use of seizures in the District, the report cites a "strong
enforcement mindset" and the perceived pressure to seize property, which may have led
some Revenue Officers to take questionable actions. Of the 67 seizure cases that were
reviewed, 23 did not meet the IRSs procedural requirements and/or could be viewed as
inappropriate treatment of taxpayers.
Finally, the report says that while the Arkansas-Oklahoma District conducted more
seizures per Revenue Officer in 1997 than the national average, this represented just over
3% of total taxpayers in collection stream. Further, it notes that over 90% of taxpayers
in the sample had a history of delinquency in filing and/or paying either individual,
business or employment taxes. The report also acknowledges that seizure is sometimes the
only viable course of action to resolve egregious delinquencies.
How the IRS Is Responding to the Findings
The Collection function within the IRS has already taken a number of steps to address
both the issues raised in the Senate Finance Committee hearings in September and the
findings of this report.
To date, the IRS has already:
- Stopped the practice of ranking 33 districts on results.
- Suspended the distribution of goals relating to revenue production to field offices.
- Required the Collection Division Chiefs approval of all proposed seizures
(effective November 24).
- Required the District Directors approval of seizures of a residence, its contents,
or perishable goods (also effective November 24).
- Directed each District and Service Center Director to review all complaint
correspondence received after July 1, 1997, and to confirm to the Taxpayer Advocate that
all cases have been resolved properly, with no outstanding issues (effective mid
-December).
Specifically, the Arkansas-Oklahoma District has already:
- Halted all seizure actions (on September 24) until district management met with all
Compliance employees to enable the correction of any miscommunication regarding the
responsibilities of Compliance employees in dealings with taxpayers.
- Temporarily required that all levy actions receive management approval, which will also
allow an opportunity to correct any miscommunication (also on September 24).
- Held a series of 15 town meetings with District management and the Taxpayer Advocate to
emphasize the correct application of the law to facts of a specific case and the
importance of considering all factors before taking enforcement action because of the
impact of such action on taxpayers lives. After each meeting concluded, the Director
lifted seizure and levy action "stand down" for employees in attendance.
The report indicates that the Collection function operated in an environment lacking
the appropriate emphasis on quality and customer service issues. In addition,
misunderstanding and the inappropriate use of statistics and measures may have caused some
employees to make sometimes serious mistakes of judgment.
It is important to realize that the report is not an indictment of the use of measures
and statistics in evaluating program performance. Instead, it found that existing
Servicewide measures, as applied in the District, were inappropriately skewed toward
compliance at the expense of quality and customer service, thereby risking the protection
of taxpayer rights. The IRS is taking the necessary steps to review and revise Servicewide
measures so they properly take into account these very important aspects of the IRS
mission.
Next Steps
The Internal Audit report raises a number of important issues in connection with
Collection activity in the District that have larger implications and should be addressed
on a Servicewide basis. The IRS had decided to take a number of interim steps to change
current procedures based on the reports findings.
Determination of Hardship
If a taxpayer is advised that their property is going to be seized and tells a Revenue
Officer that such an action will cause hardship, the Revenue Officer will be required to
refer the case to the local Taxpayer Advocate for a consideration of the existence of a
hardship.
Publication 594
The IRS is in the process of completely revising and clarifying Publication 594,
Understanding the Collection Process, to make it more useful to taxpayers in dealing with
IRS Collection personnel. This publication is included in all Notices of Intent to Levy
mailed to taxpayers. The revised publication will include a detachable Form 911,
Application for Taxpayer Assistance Order, which a taxpayer can use to request a Taxpayer
Assistance Order from the local Taxpayer Advocate. The Taxpayer Advocate may determine
that the collection action would cause a significant hardship for the taxpayer and may
order the action stopped. Including Form 911 in the Notice of Intent to Levy will ensure
that taxpayers are able to exercise their right to request assistance from the Taxpayer
Advocate. Seizure of Principal Residence -- Current procedures require that the District
Director approve seizures of a taxpayers principal residence. New procedures will
require District Director approval of all seizures of residential property used by any
individual, including a third party, as a principal residence. This would include rental
property owned by the taxpayer and rented by another person as a principal residence.
Substitute for Return
If a taxpayer fails to file an individual income tax return after repeated contacts by the
IRS, the IRS may prepare a return for the taxpayer using information such as Form W-2 and
1099. If a Revenue Officer is assigned a case where the tax was assessed using this
substitute for return procedure, upon contact with the taxpayer, the Revenue Officer must
now explain to the taxpayer how the tax was computed and fully advise the taxpayer of the
opportunity to correct the return with any appropriate expenses or deductions or other
information to support a decrease in the assessed tax. The taxpayer must be given
reasonable time to provide this information before collection actions can begin.
Seizure of Perishable Goods
The determination of seized property as perishable goods is made by the Revenue Officer
handling the case. As a result of a recent decision by the IRS, all perishable goods
seizures must be approved by the District Director. In addition, District Directors must
now approve the Revenue Officers determination of perishable goods in addition to
the ultimate seizure and sale.
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