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WALKER CONSULTING FIRM

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IRS.GOV
  • Nov 2, 2016
  • 2 min

Taxpayer Bill of Rights: #4, The Right to Challenge the IRS’s Position and Be Heard

Taxpayers have the right to raise objections and provide additional documentation in response to formal IRS actions or proposed actions, to expect that the IRS will consider their timely objections and documentation promptly and fairly, and to receive a response if the IRS does not agree with their position. What you can expect: If the IRS notifies you that your tax return has a mathematical or clerical error, you have 60 days to tell the IRS that you disagree. You should pro
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IRS.GOV
  • Nov 2, 2016
  • 3 min

Taxpayer Bill of Rights: #2, The Right to Quality Service

Each and every taxpayer has a set of fundamental rights they should be aware of when dealing with the Internal Revenue Service. In 2014, the agency adopted a Taxpayer Bill of Rights (TBOR) that has become a cornerstone document to provide the nation's taxpayers a better understanding of their fundamental rights when dealing with federal taxes. The IRS has repeatedly highlighted these 10 rights for taxpayers and shared them extensively on a continuing basis with its employee
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IRS.GOV
  • Nov 2, 2016
  • 2 min

Taxpayer Bill of Rights: #1, The Right to Be Informed

In 2014, the Internal Revenue Service adopted a Taxpayer Bill of Rights (TBOR) that has become a cornerstone document to provide the nation's taxpayers a better understanding of their fundamental rights when dealing with the agency. Not only has the IRS highlighted these 10 rights for taxpayers, they have also been shared extensively on a continuing basis with IRS employees since then. The TBOR adopted by the IRS in 2014 includes the same 10 fundamental rights that were place
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Sanford Burnham: Florida’s $350 million tax incentive bust
William Patrick
  • Oct 29, 2016
  • 4 min

Sanford Burnham: Florida’s $350 million tax incentive bust

Ten years ago, it all seemed so clear: A California medical research institute would recreate its success in Florida using $350 million in taxpayer-funded incentives. BAD DEAL: Sanford Burnham’s $350 million incentive deal didn’t deliver promised benefits to Florida taxpayers. A key metric to the start-up support: creating 303 jobs. With the state, Orange County and Orlando governments offering generous financing and a long-term time horizon to meet modest performance goals,
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