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Showing posts with label Obamacare. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Obamacare. Show all posts

Sunday, October 29, 2023

A School And Obamacare Penalties

 

How would you like to get the following notice in the mail?

 

Believe it or not, the IRS sent this to a public school system in Virginia. I am looking at the Tax Court petition as I write this.

This notice is for a Section 6721 penalty, assessed for failure to file certain information forms with the IRS. Common information forms include:

·      Form W-2 (Wage and Tax Statement)

·      Forms(s) 1099 (Interest, Dividends, and numerous others)

·      Form 8027 (Tip Income and Allocated Tips)

·      Forms(s) 1094 & 1095 (Health Insurance)

There is a virtually automatic companion to this penalty - Section 6722 – which assesses another penalty for failure to provide an information form to the recipient.

Combined we are talking over $2.2 million.

To a school?

Let’s go through this.

The school (Arlington) received the above notice dated June 13, 2022.

The second notice (for Section 6722 penalties) was dated June 27, 2022.

The IRS wanted payment by July 12, 2012.

COMMENT: Arlington had an issue. While they knew the IRS was assessing penalties for information returns, they had no idea which information forms the IRS was talking about.

The IRS Revenue Officer (RO) issued a Final Notice of Intent to Levy on July 12, 2022.

COMMENT: The same day?  I have been leaving messages with a Revenue Agent for over two weeks now concerning an individual tax audit, and this RO issued a FINAL on the same day stated in the notice?

COMMENT: There is also a procedural error here. The IRS must issue notices in a certain order, and the RO is not entitled to jump the line and go straight to that FINAL notice.

We learn that this specific RO had previously assessed penalties (without explanation) and filed liens (again, without explanation) on a middle school in the Arlington school system. These miraculously went away before an Appeals hearing could occur.

COMMENT: Sounds like something personal.

On August 10, 2022, Arlington requested a collection due process hearing on the June 13 and June 27 notices. It faced a formidable obstacle, however, as it did not know what the IRS was talking about.

The IRS sent a letter dated December 5, 2022, scheduling an Appeals conference on January 18, 2023. That letter also suggested that Arlington had not filed Forms 1042, which concerns withholding on payments to foreign persons.

COMMENT: Seems an odd one. I would have thought Forms W-2, if anything.

It turns out that the 1042 reference was mistaken.

COMMENT: Clown show.

Arlington (more specifically, Arlington’s attorneys) tried repeatedly to contact the Appeals Officer (AO). It appears that he inadvertently answered his phone one time, and the Appeals conference was moved to January 31, 2023. Arlington still wanted to know what form was costing them over $2.2 million.

The attorneys marched on. They contacted the IRS Practitioner Line, which told them that the penalties might relate to the Affordable Care Act (Obamacare). They also sent a written request to IRS Ogden for explanation and copies of any correspondence concerning the matter.

COMMENT: I’ve done the same. Low probability swing, in my experience.

The attorneys also contacted the Taxpayer Advocate.

Receiving nothing, the attorneys again requested to postpone the Appeals hearing. They learned that two additional penalties had been added. What were the two penalties about? Who knows.

The two late penalties were “abated” before the Appeals hearing on February 10, 2023.

The AO failed to show up to the Appeals hearing on February 10, 2023.

COMMENT: That sounds about right.

At the re-rescheduled hearing on February 24, 2023, the AO wanted to know what Arlington intended to do. Arlington replied that they were still trying to figure out what the penalties were for, and that a little help would be welcome.

That however would require the AO to – gasp – actually work, so he attempted to transfer the case to another AO. He was unsuccessful.

COMMENT: Fire the guy.

On June 30, 2023, the AO sent the attorneys re-generated IRS notices (not copies of originals) proposing $1,1113,000 in penalties for failure to send Forms 1094-C to the IRS and an additional $1,113,000 for failure to provide the same 1094-C to employees.

COMMENT: Finally, we learn the mystery form.

Arlington (really, its attorneys) learned that the IRS had listed a “Lang Street” address for correspondence. Lang Street was never Arlington’s address and was only one of the middle schools in the district. It was, however, the middle school which the RO had liened earlier in our story.

While talking to the AO on June 30, 2023, the attorneys requested additional time to submit a penalty abatement request.  The AO allowed 14 days.

COMMENT: Really? This is the school’s summer recess, no one is there, and you expect people to dig up years-old paperwork in 14 days?

Once again, the AO refused to answer numerous calls and faxes.

The attorneys – frustrated – contacted the AO’s manager. The manager gave them additional time.

On August 21, 2023, Arlington received a mysterious IRS letter about a claim filed on or about February 23, 2023. Problem: Arlington had not filed any such thing.

The attorneys sent a copy of the mystery notice to the AO.

On September 13, 2023, the AO told the attorneys that he had closed the case and issued a Notice of Determination.

COMMENT: This is the “90-day letter” and one’s entrance ticket to the Tax Court.

The attorneys asked why the NOD. The AO explained that he could not provide a penalty abatement while the underlying Obamacare forms remained unfiled.

Uh huh.

By the way, while the AO verbally communicated that a NOD had been issued, Arlington never received it. It appears - best I can tell – that the NOD is stuck at a processing facility.

COMMENT: Fits the rest of the story.

So, what happened with those forms?

It turns out that Arlington sent employees their copies of the Obamacare forms on or about February 28, 2020.

COMMENT: Well, there goes one of the two penalties.

Arlington was going to send the IRS copies on March 16, 2020.

What happened at this point in 2020?

The Governor of Virginia closed all schools for two weeks over COVID-19.

He then closed the schools through the rest of the school year.

On March 30, 2020, Arlington requested an extension of time to file those Obamacare forms with the IRS.

Virtually no one was at the school. People were working remotely, if possible. The school was trying to figure out how to even pay its employees when everyone was remote.

Yeah, I suspect those forms were never sent.

Heck of a reasonable cause, I would say.

And fire the guy.

Sunday, October 2, 2022

The Obamacare Subsidy Cliff

 

I am looking at a case involving the premium tax credit.

We are talking about the Affordable Care Act, also known as Obamacare.

Obamacare uses mathematical tripwires in its definitions. That is not surprising, as one must define “affordable,” determine a “subsidy,” and - for our discussion – calculate a subsidy phase-out. Affordable is defined as cost remaining below a certain percentage of household income. Think of someone with extremely high income - Elon Musk, for example. I anticipate that just about everything is affordable to him.

COMMENT: Technically the subsidy is referred to as the “advance premium tax credit.” For brevity, we will call it the subsidy.

There is a particular calculation, however, that is brutal. It is referred to as the “cliff,” and you do not want to be anywhere near it.

One approaches the cliff by receiving the subsidy. Let’s say that your premium would be $1,400 monthly but based on expected income you qualify for a subsidy of $1,000. Based on those numbers your out-of-pocket cost would be $400 a month.

Notice that I used the word “expected.” When determining your 2022 subsidy, for example, you would use your 2022 income. That creates a problem, as you will not know your 2022 income until 2023, when you file your tax return. A rational alternative would be to use the prior year’s (that is, 2021’s) income, but that was a bridge too far for Congress. Instead, you are to estimate your 2022 income. What if you estimate too high or too low? There would be an accounting (that is, a “true up”) when you file your 2022 tax return.

I get it. If you guessed too high, you should have been entitled to a larger subsidy. That true-up would go on your return and increase your refund. Good times.

What if it went the other way, however? You guessed too low and should have received a smaller subsidy. Again, the true-up would go on your tax return. It would reduce your refund. You might even owe. Bad times.

Let’s introduce another concept.

ACA posited that health insurance was affordable if one made enough money. While a priori truth, that generalization was unworkable. “Enough money” was defined as 400% of the poverty level.

Below 400% one could receive a subsidy (of some amount). Above 400% one would receive no subsidy.

Let’s recap:

(1)  One could receive a subsidy if one’s income was below 400% of the poverty level.

(2)  One guessed one’s income when the subsidy amount was initially determined.

(3)  One would true-up the subsidy when filing one’s tax return.

Let’s set the trap:

(1)  You estimated your income too low and received a subsidy.

(2)  Your actual income was above 400% of the poverty level.

(3)  You therefore were not entitled to any subsidy.

Trap: you must repay the excess subsidy.

That 400% - as you can guess – is the cliff we mentioned earlier.

Let’s look at the Powell case.

Robert Powell and Svetlana Iakovenko (the Powells) received a subsidy for 2017.

They also claimed a long-term capital loss deduction of $123,822.

Taking that big loss into account, they thought they were entitled to an additional subsidy of $636.

Problem.

Capital losses do not work that way. Capital losses are allowed to offset capital losses dollar-for-dollar. Once that happens, capital losses can only offset another $3,000 of other income.

COMMENT: That $3,000 limit has been in the tax Code since before I started college. Considering that I am close to 40 years of practice, that number is laughably obsolete.

The IRS caught the error and sent the Powells a notice.

The IRS notice increased their income to over 400% and resulted in a subsidy overpayment of $17,652. The IRS wanted to know how the Powells preferred to repay that amount.

The Powells – understandably stunned – played one of the best gambits I have ever read. Let’s read the instructions to the tax form:

We then turn to the text of Schedule D, line 21, for the 2017 tax year, which states as follows:

         If line 16 is a loss, enter ... the smaller of:

·      The loss on line 16 or

·      $3,000

So?

The Powells pointed out that a loss of $123,822 is (technically) smaller than a loss of $3,000. Following the literal instructions, they were entitled to the $123,822 loss.

It is an incorrect reading, of course, and the Powells did not have a chance of winning. Still, the thinking is so outside-the-box that I give them kudos.

Yep, the Powells went over the cliff. It hurt.

Note that the Powell’s year was 2017.

Let’s go forward.

The American Rescue Plan eliminated any subsidy repayment for 2020.

COVID year. I understand.

The subsidy was reinstated for 2021 and 2022, but there was a twist. The cliff was replaced with a gradual slope; that is, the subsidy would decline as income increased. Yes, you would have to repay, but it would not be that in-your-face 100% repayment because you hit the cliff.

Makes sense.

What about 2023?

Let’s go to new tax law. The ironically named Inflation Reduction Act extended the slope-versus-cliff relief through 2025.

OK.

Congress of course just kicked the can down the road, as the cliff will return in 2026.

Our case this time was Robert Lester Powell and Svetlana Alekseevna Iakovenko v Commissioner, T.C. Summary Opinion 2002-19.

Monday, June 22, 2020

It’s A Cliff, Not A Slope


It is one of my least favorite areas of individual tax practice.

We are talking about health insurance. More specifically, health insurance purchased through the exchanges, coupled with advance payment of the premiums.

Why?

Because there is a nasty tax trap in there, and I saw the trap again the other day. It caught a client who gets by, but who is hardly in a position to service heavy tax debt.

Let’s set it up.

You can purchase health insurance in the private market or from government-sponsored marketplaces – also called exchanges. The exchanges were created under the Affordable Care Act, more colloquially known as Obamacare.

If you purchase health insurance through the exchange and your income is below a certain level, you can receive government assistance in paying the insurance premiums. Make very little income, for example, and it is possible that the insurance will be free to you. Make a little more and you will be expected to contribute to your own upkeep. Make too much and you are eliminated from the discussion altogether.

The trap has to do with the dividing line of “too much.”

Let’s look at the Abrego case.

Mr and Mrs Abrego lived in California. For 2015 he was a driver for disabled individuals, and he also prepared a few tax returns (between 20 and 30) every year. Mrs Abrego was a housekeeper.

They enrolled in the California exchange. They also did the following:

(1)  They provided an estimate of their income for 2015. Remember, the final subsidy is ultimately based on their 2015 income, which will not be known until 2016. While it is possible that someone would purchase health insurance, pay for it out-of-pocket and eventually get reimbursed by the IRS when filing their 2015 tax return in 2016, it is far more likely that someone will estimate their 2015 income to then estimate their subsidy. One would use the estimated subsidy to offset the very real monthly premiums. Makes sense, as long as all those estimated numbers come in as expected.

(2)  They picked a policy. The monthly premiums were $1,029.

(3)  The exchange cranked their expected 2015 numbers and determined that they could personally pay $108 per month.

(4)  The difference - $ 1,029 minus $108 = $921– was their monthly subsidy.

The Abregos kept this up for 10 months. Their total 2015 subsidy was $9,210 ($921 times 12).

Since the Abregos received a subsidy, they had to file a tax return. One reason is to compare actual numbers to the estimated numbers. If they guessed low on income, they would have to pay back some of the subsidy. If they guessed high, the government would owe them for underestimating the subsidy.

The Abregos filed their 2015 return.

They reported $63,332 of household income.

How much subsidy should they have received?

There is the rub.

The subsidy changes as income climbs. The subsidy gets to zero when one hits 400% of the poverty line.

What was the poverty line in California for 2015?

$15,730 for a married couple.

Four times the poverty line was $62,920.

They reported $63,332.

Which is more than $62,920.

By $412.

They have to pay back the subsidy.

How much do they have to pay back?

All of it - $9,210.

Folks, the tax rate on that last $412 is astronomical.

It is frustrating to see this fact pattern play out. The odds of a heads-up from the client while someone can still do something are – by the way – zero. That leaves retroactive tax planning, whose success rate is also pretty close to zero.

Our client left no room to maneuver. Why did her income go up? Because she sold something. Why did she not call CTG galactic command before selling – you know: just in case? What would we have done? Probably advised her to NOT SELL in the same year she is receiving a government subsidy.

How did it turn out for the Abregos?

They should have been toast, except for one thing.

Remember that he prepared tax returns. He did that on the side, meaning that he had a gig going. He was self-employed.

He got to claim business deductions.

And he had forgotten one.

How much was it?

$662.

It got their income below the magic $69,920 level.

They were on the sliding scale to pay back some of that subsidy. Some - not all.

It was a rare victory in this area.

Our case for the homegamers was Abrego v Commissioner.

Sunday, November 10, 2019

Repaying The Health Care Subsidy


Twice in a couple of weeks I have heard:
“They should check on the Exchange.”
The Exchange refers to the health insurance marketplace.

In both cases we were discussing someone who is between jobs.         

The idea, of course, is to get the subsidy … as someone is unemployed and can use it.

There might also be a tax trap here.

When you apply for Obamacare, you provide an estimate of your income for the coverage year. The answer is intuitive if you are applying for 2020 (as we are not in 2020 yet), but it could also happen if you go in during the coverage year. Say you are laid-off in July. You know your income through July, and you are guessing what it might be for the rest of the year.

So what?

There is a big what.

Receive a subsidy and you have to pay it back – every penny of it – if your income exceeds 400% of the poverty line for your state.

Accountants refer to this as a “cliff.” Get to that last dollar of income and your marginal tax rate goes stratospheric.

Four times the poverty rate for a single person in Kentucky is approximately $50 grand.  Have your income come in at $50 grand and a dollar and you have to repay the entire subsidy.

It can hurt.

How much latitude does a tax preparer have?

Not much. I suppose if we are close we might talk about making a deductible IRA contribution, or selling stock at a loss, or ….

There may be more latitude if one is self-employed. Perhaps one could double-down on the depreciation, or recount the inventory, or ….

Massoud and Ziba Fanaieyan got themselves into this predicament.

The Fanaieyans lived in California. He was retired and owned several rental properties. She worked as a hairstylist.

They received over $15,000 in subsidies for their 2015 tax year.

Four times the California poverty line was $97,000.

They reported adjusted gross income of $100,767.

And there was (what I consider) a fatal preparation mistake. They failed to include Form 8962, which is the tax form that reconciles the subsidy received to the subsidy to which one was actually entitled based on income reported on the tax return.

The IRS sent a letter asking for the Form 8962.

The Fanaieyans realized their mistake.

Folks, for the most part tax planning is not a retroactive exercise. Their hands were tied.

Except ….

Mr. Fanaieyan remembered that book he was writing. All right, it was his sister’s book, but he was involved too. He had paid some expenses in 2012 and 2013. Oh, and he had advanced his sister $1,500 in 2015.

He had given up the dream of publishing in 2015. Surely, he could now write-off those expenses. No point carrying them any longer. The dream was gone.

They amended their 2015 tax return for a book publishing loss.

The IRS looked at them like they had three eyes each.

To Court they went.

There were technical issues that we will not dive into. For example, as a cash-basis taxpayer, didn’t they have to deduct those expenses back in 2012 and 2013? And was it really a business, or did they have a (dreaded) hobby loss? Was it even a loss, or were they making a gift to his sister?

The Court bounced the deduction. They had several grounds to do so, and so they did.

The Fanaieyans had income over four times the poverty level.

They had to repay the advance subsidies.

I cannot help but wonder how this would have turned out if they had claimed the same loss on their originally-filed return AND included a properly-completed Form 8962.  

Failing to include the 8962 meant that someone was going to look at the file.

Amending the return also meant that someone was going to look at the file.

Too many looks.


Sunday, May 12, 2019

Getting Married And ObamaCare Subsidies


I am reading a case that reminds me of a return from last year’s filing season. I had an accountant who became upset, arguing that the result was unfair.

I agree, but this is tax.

I started practice in the eighties, and a significant portion of my tax education was at a law school.  Tax accounting classes tended to be staccato-like:  issue-driven, procedural and reliably arithmetic. Tax law classes were case and doctrine-focused: what is income, for example, and we would study the concept of income as it evolved over the decades.

It seemed to me that tax law early in my career followed – as a generalization - more of that law school feel: corporate liquidations and the General Utilities doctrine; the claim of right doctrine and North American Oil; business purpose and Helvering v Gregory. There were strong Ways and Means and Finance Committee chairs with some understanding of the issues (and precedent) their committees were addressing.  

But those were different politicians. Both they and taxes have gotten progressively weirder.

Congress went on to introduce something called uniform capitalization, arguing that accountants did not know how to absorb costs into inventory; tax items – personal exemptions or itemized deductions, for example – that would evaporate like a Thanos movie moment; an alternative minimum tax that would tax something that ultimately went down in value; the increasing refundability of tax credits, meaning that those at the low end of the income scale had as much if not more opportunity to game the system than any big-baddy McMoneybags did.

Let’s look at the Fisher case.

Christina Fisher began the year as a single mom. She married Timothy in November. Christina was struggling, and she received Obamacare subsidies.

You may recall that there are two relevant aspects to Obamacare that will come into play in this case:

(1)  If you are below a certain income level, you might be entitled to some – or even full – subsidy of your health insurance premiums.
(2)  You can use that subsidy to pay your premiums immediately rather than wait to the end of the year and receive the subsidy via a tax refund.

There was no question that Christina was entitled to a subsidy for more than 10 months. Her circumstances changed when she married; she no longer qualified.

Time to prepare her taxes.

One is supposed to attach a reconciliation of projected income when receiving the subsidy to actual income ultimately reported on the tax return. The Fishers did not.

The IRS did it for them. They also wanted approximately $4,500, saying she was not entitled to the subsidy.

A rational mind would expect that the tax law would go to a month-by-month calculation. There was no doubt that she qualified for 10 months. Let’s allow for some doubt in the month of marriage. Let’s also disqualify the last month of the year because of Timothy’s income.

At worst she would have to pay back 2 months, right?

Nah.

She has to use her household income for the year – including Timothy’s income.

Then she takes half of that amount for her monthly testing.

Not her OWN income, mind you, but one-half of combined income for the year.

Who came up with this?

Not the best and brightest exercising due deliberation, clearly.

Well, using even one-half of the combined household income, Christina failed all 10 months one would have expected her to pass. She owed almost $4,500 to the IRS.

And that is why my accountant lost his mind last year. He could not believe that what he was reading is really what was meant. It made no sense! Surely there is an alternative calculation? Does the tax Code allow a facts and circumstances …?

Ahh, he is still young. He will learn.


Sunday, September 17, 2017

Paying Back The ObamaCare Subsidy

I do not see many tax returns with the ObamaCare health exchange subsidy.

Our fees make it unlikely.

However, take an ongoing client with variable income or business losses and we do see some.

I saw one this busy season that gave me pause.

Let’s discuss the McGuire case to set up the issue.

Mr. McGuire was working and Mrs. McGuire was not. In 2013, they applied with the Covered California and qualified for a monthly subsidy of $591, or $7,092 per year. They enrolled in a plan that cost $1,182 monthly. After the subsidy, their cost was (coincidentally) $591 monthly.

Mrs. McGuire started a job that paid $600 per week. She contacted Covered California, as she realized that her paycheck would affect that subsidy.

This being a government agency, you can anticipate the importance they gave Mrs. McGuire.


That would be “none.”

Several months later they did send a letter stating that the McGuires did not qualify for a subsidy.

The letter did not talk about switching to a lower cost plan. Or dropping the plan altogether. Or – be still my heart - provide a phone number to speak with an actual government bureaucrat.

It did not matter.

The McGuires had moved. They tried to get Covered California to update their address, but it was the same story as getting Covered California to update their premium subsidy for her new job.

The McGuires never received the letter.

It goes without saying that they never received Form 1095-A in 2014 either. This is the tax form for reporting an Exchange subsidy.

There are two main individual penalties under the Affordable Care Act:
(1) There is a penalty for not having “qualified” insurance. This is not the same as being uninsured. Have insurance that the government disapproves of and you are treated as having no insurance at all. 
(2) Subsidies received have to be reconciled to your actual household income. Make less that you thought and you may get a few bucks back. Make more and you may have to repay your subsidy. While technically not a “penalty,” it certainly acts like one.
The McGuires indicated on their tax return that they had health insurance (thereby avoiding penalty (1), but they did not complete the subsidy reconciliation (which is penalty (2)).

The IRS did, however.

Sure enough, the McGuires did not qualify for a subsidy. The IRS wanted its money back. All of it.

The McGuires fired back:
We would never have committed to paying for medical coverage in excess of $14,000 per year.”
True that.
We cannot afford it and would have continued to shop in the private sector to purchase the minimal, least expensive coverage or gone without coverage completely and suffered the penalties.”
That is, they would have avoided penalty (2) by not accepting subsidies and instead paid penalty (1), which would have been cheaper.
If we are deemed responsible for paying back this deficiency, it would be devastating and completely unjust. ….  The whole purpose of the Affordable Care Act was to provide citizens with just that, affordable healthcare. This has been an absolute nightmare and we hope that you will rule fairly and justly today.”
Here is the Tax Court:
But we are not a court of equity, and we cannot ignore the law to achieve an equitable end.”
Equity means fairness, so the Court is saying that – if the law is otherwise bright-line – they cannot decide on the grounds of fairness. 
Although we are sympathetic to the McGuires’ situation, the statute is clear; excess advance premium tax credits are treated as an increase in the tax imposed. The McGuires received an advance of a credit to which they were ultimately not entitled.”
The McGuires had to pay back $7 grand, despite the incompetence of Covered California.

Ouch.

Let’s return to CTG Galactic Command. How did my client get into a subsidy-repayment situation?

Gambling.

The tax Code is odd about gambling. It forces you to take gambling winnings into income. The subsidy calculation keys-off that income number.

Wait, you say. What about gambling losses?

The tax Code requires you to take gambling losses as an itemized deduction.

The subsidy calculation pays no attention to itemized deductions.

Win $40 grand and the subsidy calculation includes it. Your household income just went up.

Say that you also lost $40 grand. You netted nothing in real life.

Tough. The subsidy calculation does not care about your losses.

Heads you lose. Tails you lose. 

That was my client’s story.

Saturday, February 21, 2015

An Interim Report On Tax Season



I was speaking with a colleague earlier this week who wants to set up a tax storefront. That means a place that prepares taxes, probably only individual taxes and only for a few months a year. Think H&R Block, but without a franchise involved. I suspect he would be successful, but like any business start-up the cash drain is difficult to pull off.

And he asked me if tax seasons are getting “harder.” Yes, he is younger than me. I am getting to that age.

I hesitated on his question, as my long-standing position is that the accounting firm determines the difficulty of the season for its employees. Some firms do a good job, and other firms simply do not care. It is one of the reasons that the average career of an accountant in a CPA firm is little more than that of an NFL player.

Bet you did not know that.

Still, there are issues for tax practitioners that did not exist a few years ago – or even last year.

I was speaking this week with a good friend about whether it was safe for him to prepare his personal tax return on TurboTax. Depending upon the year and other factors, he prepares a draft return and I review it for him. Last year he changed jobs and states, so I expect I will review his return this year.

Why TurboTax? It turns out that a number of states experienced suspicious electronic filing activity this year and, upon investigation, in many cases the electronic return was filed using TurboTax.

Let’s be fair, though. That does not mean that the information came from TurboTax. There have enough recent breeches of data security that the information may have come from elsewhere.

Intuit, the parent of TurboTax, responded aggressively to this development, as you would imagine. A number of states, including Kentucky and Minnesota, temporarily halted the processing of electronically filed returns.  Meanwhile TurboTax encouraged its customers to log-in and review their accounts. They instructed their customers to review their direct-deposit information specifically.

Makes sense.

Why the states? In the past, fraudsters have targeted the IRS rather heavily. The IRS responded with stricter identity measures, including lockdowns on any tax refunds and the required use of security passwords. Florida was so hard-hit, for example, that one can request a federal security PIN number under a pilot program – even if one was not the victim of identity theft.

It may be that the fraudsters saw easier picking elsewhere.

Then we have the information documents to prepare a tax return.

I am reading that the federal health insurance marketplace has sent out approximately 800,000 erroneous Forms 1095-A. This is not insignificant and represents approximately one-in-five people using the marketplace. These forms are new and are issued by the exchanges to individuals who purchased insurance there. They include information on any government subsidy, so they are an important tax document.  For example, even if you are not otherwise required to file a tax return, you must file if you received a subsidy.


The error concerns the “benchmark plan” premium and doesn’t concern the amount of subsidy itself. The “benchmark plan”” is the second lowest cost silver plan for where one lives, and it is part of the arithmetic to settle-up whether one received too much or too little subsidy. As you know, if you received too much subsidy you have to pay it back.

Taxpayers who received Forms 1095-A are encouraged to wait until March before filing their individual tax returns. Not a problem. Surely these are people who do even meet with their tax advisors until March.

Meanwhile, it has finally dawned on some politicians that people may not realize the effect of ObamaCare on them until they file their 2014 taxes. There will be rude surprises for those who did not acquire insurance and now have to pay the penalty. Perhaps they acquired insurance but were over-subsidized, and now they have to repay the excess subsidy.

Wait until they learn that the penalty will go up every year.

Then there is a problem with the timing of obtaining health insurance. ObamaCare requires everyone to have insurance in place by February 15 – which of course is two months earlier than April 15, when taxes are due. That may be the first time people understand this Rube Goldberg contraption foisted 50-shades-of-grey style upon society. What happens then? Well, in addition to owing the penalty for 2014 it would appear that one would also owe a penalty for some part of 2015 – at least until one can acquire health insurance. The penalty goes month by month.

Many politicos – not the brightest class emerging from natural selection – are now up in arms, demanding that deadlines be changed, penalties ameliorated and so on. I suppose there is a nuance there, but it escapes me. 

Somewhat on cue, on February 20 the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services declaimed that the enrollment period shall reopen from March 15 to April 30.

To which I have two questions:
  1. What happened to the period from February 15 to March 15?
  2. Why is the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services changing the law?

On February 13 - which seems a lifetime ago at this point - the IRS finally provided some guidance on how to comply with the new repair Regulations effective with the 2014 tax returns. Considering that their first pass at the Regulations required almost everyone with real estate or other depreciable property to file for a change in accounting method - a change which the IRS mandated, by the way - the IRS then had the temerity to say that we also had to formally ask them for permission to change. I had and have a stack of real estate partnership returns in my office waiting on their guidance. Forests have been felled by tax practitioners divining for weeks and months what the IRS wanted from us this year in order to comply with their new Regulations. 

Do you ever wonder if our government is suffocating under the weight of people who - having accomplished little more than going to a name school or playing at politics - think they now have the chops to bludgeon those of us who actually accomplish something every day? 

Back to our initial question though: are tax seasons getting “harder?”

I don’t think “harder” is the word I would use for for it.