Written by Scott Allen

The IRS Doesn’t Allow Second Chances?

Unfortunately the IRS is like life—it doesn’t offer second chances.  When one phase of life is over we must accept what follows.  That acceptance is best done by reconciling ourselves to the realities we face.  Two “secrets” to becoming reconciled to the challenges of life are  distraction and creativity.  The ability to adjust our thoughts away from adversity with appropriate distractions and to seek outlets for our creative abilities, allows us to go on living even if there is little hope for improvement.  It is the combination of reconciliation, distraction and creativity that allows us to find real enjoyment out of life’s short lived pleasures.

 

Life has its measure of sadness to be sure, but it is a sadness we can handle, and from that sadness will come wisdom from pursuing appropriate actions.  One purpose of life is to pass that wisdom on to the next generation.  If they can make just one less error than we made, then there is hope that our children may have a little better life than we had.  Can we really expect any more out of life than this?

 

When you have a serious IRS problem, you want to get it right the first time.  Don’t allow life’s simple pleasures be taken away because you think your IRS matter will never be resolved.  May I suggest you consult with Scott Allen E.A. regarding your best option to solve your IRS debt.  There are several to choose from and it is critical to make the best choice because, as the title of this blog says, “The IRS Doesn’t Allow Second Chances.”  Scott Allen E.A. can be reached at 480-926-9300.  Let Scott put your mind at ease.

Print off this blog and bring it with you at the initial consultation and receive $50.00 off any IRS resolution work we do.  One blog offer per client.

 

Written by Scott Allen

How Taoism can help you deal with Mesa AZ IRS Problems?

Those in Mesa AZ with an IRS Problem

Here a Taoist tale with the unusual title, Good fortune rests upon disaster.  Disaster lies hidden within good fortune.  Who knows the standards?

 

There is a story of a farmer whose horse ran away.  That evening the neighbors gathered to commiserate with him since this was such bad luck. He said, “Maybe so, maybe not.”  The next day the horse returned, but brought with it six wild horses and the neighbors came exclaiming at his good fortune.  He said, “Maybe so, maybe not.”  And then the following day, his son tried to saddle and ride one of the wild horses, but was thrown and broke his leg.  Again, the neighbors came to offer their sympathy for the misfortune.  And he said, “Maybe so, maybe not.”  The day after that, conscription officers came to the village to seize young men for the army, but because of the broken leg the farmer’s son was rejected.  When the neighbors came to say how fortunately everything had turned out, he said, “Maybe so, maybe not.”

 

 

This Taoist tale tells us to overcome our tendency to make rash judgments about our current situation in life.  This would include having a serious problem with the IRS.  This Taoist belief is called emptying the mind, or sitting and forgetting.   Most of our suffering in life is caused by our conceptions, which predispose us to see the world in particular ways that disrupt our ability to respond appropriately.

 

Before you jump to any incorrect conclusions about your problem with the IRS, you should seriously consider having a consultation with Scott Allen E.A.  Scott knows the best option to settle your IRS tax debt.  Scott can be reached at 480-926-9300.  You will only talk with Scott and he will put your mind at ease.

Print off this blog and bring it with you at the initial consultation and receive $75.00 off any IRS resolution work we do.  One blog offer per client.

 

Written by Scott Allen

Arizona IRS and state tax help: State Payroll Tax Problems?

An Arizona IRS Tax Attorney?

No, state payroll tax problems are not a legal matter so an Arizona IRS or tax attorney is not required.  Arizona, like most states is under stress financially to operated state government functions.  Many states are running large deficit spending.  For this reason Arizona aggressively enforces collection action against businesses that are behind on filing their payroll tax returns and payment of payroll taxes.

The Arizona Department of Revenue has the authority to file state tax liens and seize property as well as take away driving privileges.  If you are delinquent in the filing or payment of Arizona payroll taxes, contact Scott Allen E.A. who has expertise in negotiating settlements with the Arizona Department of Revenue.  Scott provides a free initial consultation and can be reached at 480-926-9300.

 

Written by Scott Allen

Scottsdale AZ IRS Help: Represent me for my appointment with an Appeals Officer

Scottsdale AZ IRS Tax Attorney for IRS help ?

This is not a legal matter and you don’t need to pay an expensive Scottsdale AZ IRS Tax Attorney to represent you.  You have a choice to either represent yourself or have an Enrolled Agent (E.A), a CPA, a Scottsdale AZ IRS Tax Attorney, or your tax preparer represent you.  The best choice is the one that does this work successfully on a regular basis and charges a fair fee.  When you use a representative, you will need to give them an IRS Power of Attorney—IRS Form 2848.

The meeting will be held at the IRS for your Appeals hearing.  The Appeals process is not a formal procedure.  You will generally meet in a small office.  There will not be any one present except you and the Appeals officer.  No recording of the procedures is done by the IRS.  You do have the right to record the procedures as long as you let them know in advance but this is not necessary if you are being represented.  It may even make negotiating a favorable settlement less likely.  The Appeals Officer would not want to come off as being soft if the recording were played before their manager.

Scott Allen E.A. has successfully represented many clients at Appeal hearings and will be able to accomplish what you need done at a fair fee.  Contact Scott at 480-926-9300 to arrange a free consultation to determine what your best strategy to settle with the IRS for less than what you owe.

 

Written by Scott Allen

Phoenix AZ IRS Help: I have received an Innocent Spouse Preliminary Determination Letter?

Phoenix AZ IRS Tax Attorney for Innocent Spouse?

This is not a legal matter and you do not need to hire a Phoenix AZ IRS Tax Attorney.  This notice gives you 30 days to appeal the IRS decision to turn down your request for innocent spouse relief.  Once you know that the IRS has turned down your petition, you usually have a pretty good idea as to the reasons why.  Now is the time to work with an IRS representative like Scott Allen E. A. who can prepare arguments in your favor and file an appeal.  If the letter is responding favorably there is no need to contact Scott.  Scott Allen E.A. is available for a free consultation on your determination letter.  Contact Scott at 480-926-9300 and compare his services to any Phoenix Arizona IRS Tax Attorney today!

Thank you.

 

Written by Scott Allen

Do I Need a Mesa Tax Attorney to Qualify for Currently Not Collectible Status?

No, qualifying for Currently Not Collectible Status (CNC) is not a legal matter and doesn’t require a Mesa Tax Attorney.  However, you probably will need an IRS representative like Scott Allen E.A. to get your current payment plan reduced to no payment.  The IRS is reluctant to put a taxpayer on an IRS installment arrangement into a zero payment plan.  There are steps needed to be taken before requesting the IRS to accept no payment.  It is not just a matter of filing new financial statements.

It should be remembered that penalties and interest still accrue when you are in CNC status.  Mesa tax attorneys are necessary to file a tax motivated bankruptcy but you are better off using an Enrolled Agent like Scott Allen E.A. who can successfully complete this procedure at a fraction of the cost of an Mesa Tax Attorney.  Call Scott Allen E.A today for a free consultation at 480-926-9300 to see if you qualify for a CNC status.

info@taxdebtadvisors.com

Written by Scott Allen

What does Tom Hanks and having an Arizona IRS Problem have in common?

Arizona and IRS Problems

Well if you haven’t watched the movie Castaway, you should.  Tom Hanks was fantastic and this movie is now firmly entrenched as one of my “Top Ten”.  Tom Hanks plays the role of Chuck Noland.  There is a quote from the movie that overwhelmed me with insight on how to deal with the challenges of life, like having a serious IRS tax problem.  To understand the quote, one would need to have some idea of what lead up to Chuck’s monologue.

Chuck and his girlfriend Kelly were deeply in love.  There was no doubt that they were planning to get married.  The last time they saw each other was shortly before Christmas.  Chuck gave Kelly a little present that was obviously an engagement ring.  Chuck worked for Fed Ex and was on his way to a location somewhere in the Pacific.  In route the Fed Ex jet crashed into the ocean.  All aboard were killed except for Chuck who miraculously climbed into a raft and eventually made his way to an uninhabited island.

Kelly assumed that Chuck was killed and eventually married and had a daughter.  Four years later, Chuck was able to escape the island and the barrier reef that surrounded it with the aid of a sail that was made out of two sides of a plastic portable-toilet that washed ashore.

Chuck went to Kelly’s home and after seeing that she was married and had a daughter, he knew that there was no possibility of marrying Kelly.  Kelly was also overcome with emotion at the realization that her life had progressed to the point that she no longer could be with Chuck.  They still deeply loved each other but each one had to accept that their love for each other could have no future manifestation.

After leaving Kelly’s home, Chuck went to the home of a friend to share his feelings about his situation.  Here is his dialogue from that visit.

We had both done the math

Kelly added it all up

Knew she had to let me go

I added it up

Knew I had lost her

Because I was never going to get off that island

I was going to die there, totally alone

I was going to get sick or get injured or something

The only choice I had

The only thing I could control

Was when and how and where that was going to happen, so

I made a rope

And I went up to the summit to hang myself

I had to test it, you know

Of course, you know me, and the weight of the log snapped the limb off the tree

I couldn’t even kill myself the way I wanted to

I had power over nothing

That’s when this feeling came over me like a warm blanket

I knew somehow that I had to stay alive, somehow….

I had to keep breathing

Even though I had no reason to hope

And all my logic said that I would never see this place again

So that’s what I did

I stayed alive

I kept breathing

Then one day that logic was proven all wrong

Because the tide came in and gave me a sail

And now here I am

I’m back in Memphis talking to you

I have ice in my glass

And I’ve lost her all over again

I’m so sad I don’t have Kelly

But I’m so grateful she was with me on that island

And I know what I have to do now

I have to keep breathing

Because tomorrow the sun will rise

Who knows what the tide could bring?

Oh, how I wish I could write lines like that.  I was awe struck with several key points that I have experienced in my own life.

First, life will eventually put us in a situation where we have to deal with something we are not prepared for or ever imagined could happen to us.  It may be the death of a loved one, a divorce, a substance abuse problem, a business failure, a serious IRS tax problem or just the awful realization of our physical limitations or emotional weaknesses and we feel we “have power over nothing.”

Second, when we have one of these experiences we have to eventually, do “the math.”  We have to accept what has happened.  We can wish and pray and cry, but time cannot be reversed and we have no option except to acknowledge and submit to our situation.    There is no route around or over or under it. There is no other way, than through our experience.  And dealing with the IRS is like that as well.  You have to do, “the math,” and realize that you need some professional IRS help.

Third, our situation may be so devastating that we conclude like Chuck Noland, that we are “never going to get off that island.”  We are absolutely convinced that our life can never be whole or the way we want it to be. It appears to us that all is lost and that we suffer our pain “totally alone.”  Every person that comes into Scott Allen E.A.’s office says, “I am afraid that I’m going to have this problem the rest of my life.”

Fourth, we may even face the question raised by Hamlet, “to be or not to be.”  Even though we cannot find any logical reason to go forward, we just need to keep breathing until our feelings of total and complete hopelessness will be “proven all wrong.”  The best way to do that with your IRS problem is to schedule a free consultation and have Scott Allen E.A. show you that he has the ability to prove to you that “you were all wrong” about your IRS problem—It can be fixed.

Five, eventually “the tide (will come) in and give (you) a sail.”  You will be “cast away” from your former situation and realize that you have no other choice but to move on and “to keep breathing.  Because tomorrow the sun will rise and who knows what the tide could bring?”  My message to you is that Scott Allen E.A is that “sail.”  He can fix your IRS matter and make it possible for you to have a tomorrow and see the sun rise again in your life.

The movie ends with Chuck Noland finding a new love in his life and all that he thought was lost would be restored in a way he never imagined and his new opportunity enlarged ability to love life.  His new life would no longer be controlled by a clock or a deadline as it was when he was an executive at Fed Ex.  He knew better than he did before he was Cast Away to that island, to have hope in his future and to accept the challenges of life and that sometimes we are Cast Away from what we thought was best for us or what we wanted at the time.

The same will be true for you.  Scott has seen many times that those who learn from their IRS problem go much farther with their lives, IF THEY LEARN FROM THAT EXPERIENCE, than if they never had their IRS problem.

If you are really serious about resolving your Phoenix AZ IRS problem, call Scott Allen E.A. for a free consultation at 480-926-9300.  He will provide you with plan that will get you off of the IRS Island and back into your own island without IRS harassment and able to see a way to end your Arizona IRS problem.

www.taxdebtadvisors.com

Print off this blog and bring it with you at the initial consultation and receive $55.00 off any IRS resolution work we do.  One blog offer per client.

 

Written by Scott Allen

I have Unemployment Tax Problems: Phoenix AZ IRS Tax Attorney?

Phoenix AZ IRS Tax Attorney for unemployment

No, unemployment tax problems are not a legal matter and does not require a Phoenix AZ IRS tax attorney.  Every Phoenix self-employed business is required to pay unemployment taxes to their state and the federal government.  These taxes go towards paying for unemployment benefits should you have to lay off an employee.  The taxes paid to the federal government are known as Federal Unemployment Taxes or FUTA, and your state unemployment taxes are known as SUTA.

There are severe penalties and interest if these taxes are not paid on time.  If you have missed deadlines in paying these taxes, you should immediately consult with an IRS unemployment tax specialist.  Scott Allen E.A. has the expertise to work out payment arrangements with your state or the IRS is you have gotten behind on paying your unemployment taxes.  If you have not used a payroll service to help keep you current, it is best to use one as payroll taxes and unemployment taxes rules are difficult for new business owners to become familiar with while operating their day to day activities.  If you need a free consultation regarding your unemployment taxes, contact Scott Allen E.A. at 480-926-9300 instead of a Phoenix AZ IRS Tax Attorney.

Thanks !

 

Written by Scott Allen

Do I Need a Gilbert AZ IRS Tax Attorney For Trust Fund Recovery Penalties?

Trust Fund and Gilbert AZ IRS Tax Attorney

The IRS is very aggressive in trying to collect on Trust Funds associated with payroll taxes withheld from employee’s paychecks.  However, this is not a legal matter and is not considered a criminal act and does not require the services of an Gilbert AZ IRS Tax Attorney.  Most employers that do not pay in their payroll tax withholdings are struggling with their business and try to keep the business afloat by “borrowing” these funds with the intent to pay them back at a later date when business improves.

Unfortunately most businesses do not improve enough to pay the taxes with the penalties added.  When the business closes, these taxes are eventually reassigned over to the individual(s) responsible for paying the taxes.  This will include the owners and anyone associated with payment of taxes.

There are two areas of IRS representation work that may be needed with regard to Trust Fund Recovery Penalties.  If you feel that the IRS is unjustified in targeting you for payment of the taxes and penalties, we are able to evaluate your responsibility or lack thereof.  This is usually a black and white matter, but the IRS takes a “shot gun” approach and tries to include as many people without really knowing who is truly responsible.

The second area is making a settlement with the IRS if you are in fact responsible for the payment of the tax and penalties.  There are several options available to settle with the IRS for less than the amount owed, depending on your financial ability to pay.

Scott Allen E.A. of Gilbert and Mesa AZ has expertise in both areas dealing with Trust Fund Recovery Penalties.  Call Scott today and schedule a free consultation at 480-926-9300 to get an evaluation of what your options are.  Scott Allen E.A. will put your mind at ease knowing that you are facing this serious IRS problem with a professional who has successfully negotiated many favorable settlements with the IRS on Trust Fund Recovery Penalties.  Please call Scott for a honest second opinion if you are determined to think you need a Gilbert AZ IRS Tax Attorney for IRS Trust Fund Recovery Penalties.

Thank you.

 

Written by Scott Allen

I am being audited and have lost my records: Help!

Do I need a Mesa Arizona IRS Attorney when I don’t have proof of deductions?

Often taxpayers know that they have legitimate deductions but when audited cannot provide proof of the deductions because their documentation is inadequate in the opinion of the IRS auditor.  For example a taxpayer may have a cancelled check but doesn’t have the receipt to prove the expense was a deductible item.  This is not a criminal issue and does not require the need for an IRS Tax Attorney in Mesa AZ.  This can often be reversed by using an Enrolled Agent such as Scott Allen E.A.  One example that actually occurred shows one of many ways to validate deductions without proof of the expense.  One of Scott’s clients was a truck driver who lost his gas receipts or never kept them—it doesn’t matter.  His client was paid per mile he drove his truck by his company.  It is known with a high degree of accuracy the miles per gallon the truck gets over a year’s time.  It is simple math to calculate the number of gallons of diesel needed to drive the miles he was paid.  Over a year’s time an average price per gallon can be estimated.  In this case the IRS auditor was unwilling to budge and allow the deduction.  However, it was allowed by the Appeals Officer when Scott requested an Appeals Hearing.  The IRS Appeals Office has much more latitude of allowing deductions than auditors.

If you have a situation where an IRS auditor disallows deductions because you cannot provide them adequate documentation, contact Scott Allen E.A. at 480-926-9300 for a free consultation to determine what options are available in your case.  Using a Mesa AZ IRS Attorney in this situation is not warranted and will only cost you more in legal fees to get your IRS matter resolved.

 

1 56 57 58 59 60 69