The Internal Revenue Service will host a special nationwide open house on Saturday, Sept. 25 to help taxpayers especially veterans and people with disabilities solve tax problems and respond to IRS notices.
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IRS to Hold Special Open House for Veterans and Persons with Disabilities
1. Media Relations Office Washington, D.C. Media Contact: 202.622.4000
www.IRS.gov/newsroom Public Contact: 800.829.1040
IRS to Hold Special Open House for Veterans and
Persons with Disabilities
Offices in All 50 States Will be Open Saturday, Sept. 25 to Provide Tax Assistance
IR-2010-97, Sept. 14, 2010
WASHINGTON The Internal Revenue Service will host a special nationwide open
house on Saturday, Sept. 25 to help taxpayers especially veterans and people with
disabilities solve tax problems and respond to IRS notices.
One hundred offices, at least one in every state, will be open from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. local
time. IRS staff will be available on site or by telephone to help taxpayers work through
issues and leave with solutions.
In many locations, the IRS will partner with organizations that serve veterans and the
disabled to offer additional help and information to people in these communities. Partner
organizations include the National Disability Institute (NDI), Vets First, Department of
Veterans Affairs, National Council on Independent Living and the American Legion.
Taxpayers have tremendous success solving their tax issues at our open houses, IRS
Commissioner Doug Shulman said. I want to encourage veterans and people with
disabilities to come in on Sept. 25. Just like we reached out earlier this year to small
businesses and victims of the Gulf Oil Spill, we want to help other taxpayers put their
toughest problems behind them.
IRS locations will be equipped to handle issues involving notices and payments, return
preparation, audits and a variety of other issues. At a previous IRS open house on June
5, over 6,700 taxpayers sought and received assistance and 96 percent had their issues
resolved the same day.
At the Sept. 25 open house, anyone who has a tax question or has received a notice
can speak with an IRS employee to get an answer to their question or a clear
explanation of what is necessary to satisfy the request. A taxpayer who cannot pay a
balance due can find out whether an installment agreement is appropriate and, if so, fill
out the paperwork then and there. Assistance with offers-in-compromise an
agreement between a taxpayer and the IRS that settles the taxpayers debt for less than
the full amount owed will also be available. Likewise, a taxpayer struggling to
complete a certain IRS form or schedule can work directly with IRS staff to get the job
done.
2. Taxpayers requiring special services, such as interpretation for the deaf or hard of
hearing, should check local listings and call the local IRS Office/Taxpayer Assistance
Center ahead of time to schedule an appointment.
The open house on Sept. 25 is the third of three events scheduled after this years tax
season. Plans are underway for similar events next year. Details will be available at a
later date.
Reminder for Small Tax-Exempt Organizations
The IRS also encourages representatives of small tax-exempt charitable community
organizations, many of which serve people with disabilities and veterans, to file Form
990-N before the Oct. 15 deadline. Community organizations that fail to file a Form 990-
N by this date risk losing their tax exempt status. As of June 30, more than 320,000
organizations were at risk of losing their exempt status.
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