IRS Still Can't Get It Right

Taxpayers' Assistance Personnel Not Following Manuals

A recent Treasury study shows that the IRS's Customer Account Services, the people who answer taxpayers' questions, still cannot find their way clear to giving correct advice to citizens when they call the IRS for help. The study revealed that accurate answers to tax law questions were given only about 62 percent of the time.

How big a problem is this? In this filing season about 80 million taxpayers will either pone or walk into an IRS office seeking help with tax law questions.

Even worse, the study showed that the key reason for the high error rate is not so much that IRS personal don=t know what they're talking about. It's that they=re not following the procedures developed by the IRS to ensure that correct answers are given. The Treasury estimates that if the proper procedures were followed, the accuracy rate would by more like 97 percent.

I guess we can conclude from this that the IRS's Customer Account Services people just don't care about the so-called "customers" they are servicing.

For a FREE Consultation on solving your IRS problem call at 1-800-209-5770.

Bookmark and Share
Fouts Law Office · 572 Maddox Drive, Suite 213 · Ellijay, GA 30540 · Tel: (800) 509-2770 · Fax: (706) 636-5293
From the Tax Blog
One Stop Shop for IRS Tax Resources

Note: The links are here for informational purposes only. They are ...

What’s The Difference Between Tax Avoidance and Tax Evasion?

There are two constants in life – death and taxes. Since neither ...

IRS Information
Avoid jail time for failing to pay taxes
Our Respect For Clients
IRS Tax Collection Enforcement
DOJ Tax Division
Explanation of IRS Tax Codes
Videos about IRS policy
Tax Judgment Collection Manual
Tax Articles
International Tax Collection by the IRS
Your Righs During an IRS Tax Audit
What It Takes To Get An IRS Employee Fired
Declare Yourself Tax-Exempt?
12 Common Tax Scams
IRS Employee Misconduct
Avoid Tax Audits
IRS Collection
IRS Tax Videos
Get Your Tax Refund
Why Use a Tax Attorney
State Income Taxes
Tax Scams
Income Tax History