Grassley, Colleagues Secure IRS Commitment to Suspend Collection of ISO AMT Liabilities

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Grassley, Colleagues Secure IRS Commitment to Suspend Collection of ISO AMT Liabilities

The following press release was published by the United States Senate Committee on Finance Chairman's News on Aug. 29, 2008. It is reproduced in full below.

Dear Commissioner Shulman:

We are writing to request your assistance in protecting taxpayers from the unintended consequences of a well-intentioned but misguided tax policy. Many families around the country have been caught by what is referred to as the Incentive Stock Option (ISO) Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT).

Because of the way stock options are treated by the AMT, many families are struggling under the weight of massive tax liabilities based on income they did not collect and never will collect. Many of these families have lived in the shadow of their tax liabilities for many years, and are waiting for Congress to take action.

We are currently working to help these ISO AMT families through the enactment of H.R. 3861, the AMT Credit Fairness and Relief Act of 2007 and its companion bill S. 2389. These bills work off of earlier legislation contained in the Tax Relief and Health Care Act of 2006 to increase the AMT refundable credit amount for families and individuals with long-term unused credits for prior year minimum tax liability. This reflects the true tragedy for the ISO AMT families. Under current law they are entitled to use refundable credits into the future to compensate for what they owe now.

However, they are being pressed to pay their current liabilities immediately, without regard for the refundable credits. These families are facing the garnishments of wages, foreclosures of homes,

seizures of retirement accounts, and all the other tools available to the IRS to settle uncollected tax debts.

There is now a very broad bipartisan consensus to abate all interest and penalties attributable to ISO AMT liabilities and permit taxpayers to apply the full amount of their future refundable credits towards the entirety of their current ISO AMT liabilities. Moreover, there is now a strong bicameral commitment to enact legislation that accomplishes these goals in the near term this year. In light of that commitment, we are writing to ask that you use the discretion provided the IRS by its effective tax administration authority to suspend efforts to collect ISO AMT liabilities while Congress acts to fix this situation and to take Congress’ determination to act in this matter into consideration when allocating limited collection resources this year.

We are committed to protecting these families from the burdens of a tax policy that was never meant to have taxed them so much on so little actual income. We would be grateful if we could count on your assistance with this issue.

Sincerely,

Charles Grassley John F. Kerry United States Senator United States Senator

Maria Cantwell Barbara Boxer United States Senator United States Senator

Chris Van Hollen Sam Johnson Member of Congress Member of Congress

Richard E. Neal Jim Ramstad Member of Congress Member of Congress

David Loebsack Jim McDermott Member of Congress Member of Congress

Zoe Lofgren Tim Walberg Member of Congress Member of Congress

Jon C. Porter Melissa L. Bean Member of Congress Member of Congress

Patrick J. Kennedy Anna G. Eshoo Member of Congress Member of Congress

Michael M. Honda Shelley Berkley Member of Congress Member of Congress

Wally Herger Leonard L. Boswell Member of Congress Member of Congress

Doris O. Matsui Tom Latham Member of Congress Member of Congress

Pete Sessions Elijah E. Cummings Member of Congress Member of Congress

David E. Price John T. Doolittle Member of Congress Member of Congress

Tom Davis Member of Congress

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Source: US Senate Committee on Finance Chairman's News

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