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CALSCALE:GREGORIAN
METHOD:PUBLISH
PRODID://NDCP//515616
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260429T143533
VTIMEZONE:America/Chicago
DTSTART:20270415T180000Z
DTEND:20270415T210000Z
UID:515616
SUMMARY:Surgent's Representing a Client in an IRS Audit (RCA3)
LOCATION:Webinar
DESCRIPTION:Surgent's Representing a Client in an IRS Audit (RCA3)\n\n04/15/27 01:00 PM CST\n - 04/15/27 04:00 PM CST\Description:\nThe Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 called for delivering nearly $80 billion to the IRS over 10 years to allow the IRS to purchase new technology and hire employees. This funding would have provided the IRS with new equipment and new employees, possibly to handle more audits, many of them involving very complex tax issues. The Trump Administration has reversed this with prospects for a reduction in IRS employees and less money to fund the purchase and development of new software.
 This program discusses the current state of IRS audits. Trump administration changes will of course have enormous impacts on these audits going forward.Objectives:
 Thoroughly understand the current state of IRS audits
 Advise clients regarding anticipated changes in upcoming IRS audits
 Presenters:Mike Tucker, Ph.D., LL.M., J.D., CPAKaren Davis, EA, MBA, Ph.D.Shannon Retzke SmithField of Study:Taxes (3)Major Topics:
 Impact of the Trump Administration on IRS funding
 Reduction in IRS staffing
 Potential reduction in IRS’s ability to process and audit tax returns
 Status of IRS Direct File program
 Auditing large corporations and partnerships
 Audits of high income and high net worth individuals
 Information document requests
 What happens when a client agrees or disagrees with the IRS’s audit findings
 The Dirty Dozen for 2025: roadmap to IRS audit issues
 \Location:\nWebinar\n\n,
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:Surgent's Representing a Client in an IRS Audit (RCA3)<br /><br />04/15/27 01:00 PM CST - 04/15/27 04:00 PM CST<br />Description:<br />The Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 called for delivering nearly $80 billion to the IRS over 10 years to allow the IRS to purchase new technology and hire employees. This funding would have provided the IRS with new equipment and new employees, possibly to handle more audits, many of them involving very complex tax issues. The Trump Administration has reversed this with prospects for a reduction in IRS employees and less money to fund the purchase and development of new software.  <br />
<br />
This program discusses the current state of IRS audits. Trump administration changes will of course have enormous impacts on these audits going forward.<br><br><b>Objectives:</b><br><ul>
    <li>Thoroughly understand the current state of IRS audits</li>
    <li>Advise clients regarding anticipated changes in upcoming IRS audits</li>
</ul><br><b>Presenters:</b><br>Mike Tucker, Ph.D., LL.M., J.D., CPA<br>Karen Davis, EA, MBA, Ph.D.<br>Shannon Retzke Smith<br><br><b>Field of Study:</b><br>Taxes (3)<br><br><b>Major Topics:</b><br><ul>
    <li>Impact of the Trump Administration on IRS funding</li>
    <li>Reduction in IRS staffing </li>
    <li>Potential reduction in IRS&rsquo;s ability to process and audit tax returns</li>
    <li>Status of IRS Direct File program</li>
    <li>Auditing large corporations and partnerships</li>
    <li>Audits of high income and high net worth individuals </li>
    <li>Information document requests </li>
    <li>What happens when a client agrees or disagrees with the IRS&rsquo;s audit findings</li>
    <li>The Dirty Dozen for 2025: roadmap to IRS audit issues</li>
</ul><br />Location:<br />Webinar<br /><br />,  
PRIORITY:3
TRANSP:TRANSPARENT
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ACTION:DISPLAY
DESCRIPTION:Reminder
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