Fellow
tax blogger and (not fellow) Enrolled Agent Jason Dinesen has replied to my
earlier request for his opinion on the issue of a voluntary RTRP designation,
which has been made a current topic as a result of the recent comments by new
IRS Commissioner John Koskinen (click here for the ACCOUNTING TODAY article),
in “A Voluntary RTRP Designation?” at the DINESEN TAX TIMES.
Jason
opposes the idea, whether it is administered by the IRS or a “private
overseer”.
He
makes the following comments within the post –
“What purpose would it serve? It would be a useless designation no matter
who oversees it.
If administered by the
IRS, it would harm Enrolled Agents.
If you can prepare tax
returns without being an RTRP, and if the RTRP designation doesn’t allow a
person to represent clients, what exactly would people who achieve a voluntary
RTRP designation do with it????? What’s
the point?????”
Under
the current system any Tom, Dick, or Harriet can hang out a shingle as a “tax
preparer”. It has been this way for 100
years. There are many educated,
competent, and current “unenrolled” Toms, Dicks, and Harriets. I am one of them. I never wanted to represent non-client
taxpayers before the IRS, so I never became an Enrolled Agent. I can represent my own 1040 clients at an IRS
audit as preparer without an EA credential.
But
what about the person who simply buys a tax preparation software program and
holds himself/herself out to the public as a “tax preparer” with no training or
experience in tax preparation? Or the
guy or gal who has been preparing his/her own return and those of family and
friends for years and now wants to make some extra part-time money at tax time
by taking on “strangers”? Or, worst of
all, the person who adds tax preparation to his business solely so that he/she
can sell “Refund Anticipation Loans” and profit from usurious interest rates
and processing fees?
As
a knowledgeable, experienced, competent, ethical, and current “unenrolled”
preparer I, like Rodney Dangerfield, “get no respect”. The point of a recognized designation is to
set me, and those like me, apart from the “casual”, unethical, or uneducated
preparer, and recognize my knowledge, experience, competence, and currency in
preparing 1040s.
And
the point is to provide the taxpayer public with a way to identify that a
person claiming to be a “tax professional” is truly knowledgeable, experienced,
competent, ethical, and current in 1040 preparation.
Jason
is correct when discussing the already existing voluntary ATA and ATP
credential, which I addressed in my December
2013 TWTP post “Here’s A Thought - A Few More Cents on a Voluntary Credential for Tax Pros”. These credentials have
little meaning because “1) no one has
ever heard of them and 2) they have no legal backing”.
To
be of value a non-IRS administered voluntary RTRP-like designation must be
overseen by an independent organization with industry-wide support and
recognition and at least “acknowledgement” by the Internal Revenue
Service. And it must be heavily promoted
by the overseeing independent organization.
I
also agree with Jason that, unfortunately, “no
one’s heard of the EA designation either”.
The fault lies with both the IRS and the NAEA. And with the actual designation itself. A large percentage of the public erroneously
thinks an EA is actually an “agent” or employee of the IRS.
And
I do agree that the mandatory IRS RTRP credential, when it was in force, did
indeed “dilute” the EA credential. Many
Enrolled Agents sat for and passed the IRS competency exam to get the RTRP
designation solely for public relations purposes. As one EA told me, it is easier to tell a
potential client that one is a “Registered Tax Return Preparer”, which is self-explanatory, than to have to
explain what an Enrolled Agent is.
If
there is to be an IRS-administered RTRP designation I have suggested that it be
part of a two-tiered program that includes the current EA designation, which I
would change to ETRP (Enrolled Tax Return Preparer).
As
I suggest in my ACCOUNTING TODAY editorial “What the IRS Should Do About the RTRP” –
“A preparer, again including CPAs and attorneys,
would first apply for and be granted the RTRP designation by way of a test that
is limited to tax preparation (more involved than the original basic open-book
basic test). Minimum annual CPE in federal tax topics would be required once
the RTRP designation was granted. Those who had been designated an RTRP under
the former regulation regime would be “grandfathered” into the new voluntary
program, so the time and money they spent under the former mandatory RTRP
program would not have been wasted.
After a year, an RTRP
could elect to take a second test, with emphasis on taxpayer representation
issues and other advanced topics, to become an ETRP (Enrolled Tax Return
Preparer -- a new title for the current Enrolled Agent) and be permitted to
“practice” before the IRS.”
The
IRS would need to educate the public on the differences between the RTRP and
the ERTP.
Regardless
of who oversees the voluntary designation any competency test needs to be more
extensive than the truly basic exam that was in effect under the mandatory
regulation regime. And there must be
grandfathering for experienced preparers who demonstrate they maintain annual
CPE in taxation.
If
there is a voluntary RTRP program I personally will not take advantage of
it. I do not accept new 1040 clients,
and am actually trying to “thin the herd” in anticipation of retirement, so I
no longer have a need to be “recognized”.
So,
Jason, does this post change your opinion in any way? And what about my idea for a 2-tiered
program?
TTFN
2 comments:
Regulations like the proposed RTRP rarely achieve their goals. I'd rather not deal with any of the regulation - which isn't going to protect anyone from anything - and save everyone another layer of bureaucracy.
Abe-
I agree when it comes to mandatory government regulation. But the beneficiaries of a voluntary credential are the tax preparers themselves and the taxpayer public.
TWTP
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