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MR. SMITH GOES TO WASHINGTON TO TELL THE IRS TO LEAVE SMALL BUSINESS OWNERS ALONE

WASHINGTON, DC – Today the House Small Business Committee heard testimony from Douglas Shulman, Commissioner of the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) and Mr. Christopher Smith, owner of S.T.O.P –Northland, a small business near Kansas City, Missouri.  The purpose of the hearing was to examine the cost of tax compliance for small businesses.

According to a 2008 Syracuse University study, the IRS has significantly increased audits of small businesses, while reducing them on larger firms.  The study found that the smallest companies were 41% more likely to be audited in 2007 than in 2005, and companies with $10 to $50 million in assets were 29% more likely to be investigated.  Ranking Member Graves noted the unfairness of this in his opening statement, “Small firms are less able to hire high priced attorneys and accountants to fight back.”

Mr. Smith’s compelling story began in 2007 when he learned an employee had embezzled nearly $60,000 from his company.  After contact back and forth with the IRS, and uncovering mistakes by the IRS, an employee of Mr. Smith’s was able to negotiate a reduction in his tax payment, although he believes he was then paying the tax for the third time.  “How on earth can an employee negotiate with an IRS agent the amount of a tax due when during an audit they ask specific questions to qualify you as the appropriate person to be liable?” asked Mr. Smith.  Mr. Smith stated that he has spent over 150 hours of his personal time solely to comply with the audit and will never be able to get over the losses.

Mr. Graves concluded by saying, “If small firms didn’t have enough stress trying to run a small company in a recession, we burden them with countless laws, regulations, reporting requirements, and continue to do so every year.  We must simplify our tax code and require the IRS to do a better job of helping small businesses to comply.  Small businesses deserve better.”