IRS Accepting Applications for Low Income Taxpayer Clinic Grants

 

The Internal Revenue Service today announced the opening of the 2014 Low Income Taxpayer Clinic (LITC) grant application process.

The LITC grant program is a federal program administered by the Office of the Taxpayer Advocate at the IRS, led by National Taxpayer Advocate Nina E. Olson. The LITC program awards matching grants of up to $100,000 per year to qualifying organizations to develop, expand, or maintain a low income taxpayer clinic. The LITC program funds organizations that serve low income individuals who have a tax dispute with the IRS (i.e., a “controversy clinic”) and organizations that provide education and outreach to taxpayers who speak English as a second language (an “ESL clinic”). Applicants may apply as either type of organization, or both. Although LITCs receive partial funding from the IRS, LITCs, their employees, and their volunteers operate independently from the IRS. Examples of qualifying organizations include:

  • Clinical programs at accredited law, business or accounting schools whose students represent low income taxpayers in tax disputes with the IRS; and
  • Organizations exempt from tax under Internal Revenue Code Section 501(a) that represent low income taxpayers in tax disputes with the IRS or refer those taxpayers to qualified representatives, or that provide outreach and education for ESL taxpayers.

The IRS welcomes all applications and will ensure that each application receives full consideration. The IRS is particularly interested in receiving applications from organizations that will operate in areas that are currently underserved.

Currently underserved areas are as follows:

 

Identified   States for New or Existing Clinics

   
   

CONTROVERSY

ESL

   

Alaska, Alabama,   Kansas, North Dakota, South Dakota

Alabama, Colorado,   Connecticut, Georgia, Louisiana, Montana, New Mexico, North Dakota, South   Dakota

   

Identified   Metropolitan Areas for New Clinic Applications

 
 
Los Angeles, California, including the following   counties:

Los Angeles, Kern,   Riverside, Ventura

 
Sacramento,   California,             including the following counties:

El Dorado, Placer,   Sacramento, San Joaquin, Stanislaus

 
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, including the following   counties:

Berks, Delaware,   Philadelphia

 
St. Louis,   Missouri,                       including the following counties:

Cape Girardeau,   Jefferson, St. Francois, St. Louis

 

Copies of the 2014 Grant Application Package and Guidelines, IRS Publication 3319, can be downloaded from IRS.gov or ordered by calling 800-TAX-FORM (800-829-3676).

The IRS is authorized to award a multi-year grant not to exceed three years. For a new clinic or a clinic applying for the first year of a three-year grant, the clinic must submit the application electronically at www.grants.gov. For an existing clinic requesting funding for the second or third year of a multi-year grant, the clinic must submit the application electronically at www.grantsolutions.gov. All applicants must use the funding number of TREAS-GRANTS-052014-001 and applications must be submitted electronically by July 12, 2013.

Visit our website at www.Hoorfarlaw.com
Courtesy of the Internal Revenue Service.

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