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"We believe that all tax assistance providers should be trained and licensed as necessary," said Richard C. Breeden, Chairman of H&R Block. "We also strongly support requirements that anyone providing tax preparation services should have the systems in place to ensure full legal compliance and consistently high ethical practices." Rep. John Lewis, D-Ga., said low-income taxpayers are often taken advantage of by "fly-by-night" tax preparers who set up shop in storefronts, only to go out of business after tax season. "If they have problems, they cannot be located," said Lewis, chairman of a House subcommittee that oversees the IRS. "We're going to find a way to deal with it." Registering tax preparers would enable the IRS to track the ones with problems, said Paul Cinquemani, director of government relations for the National Association of Tax Professionals. "As complex as the tax law is, believe me it doesn't hurt to raise the bar," Cinquemani said. "I don't understand how anyone operates without getting education to stay on top of tax law. It's very complex." Cinquemani said two kinds of preparers cause problems for taxpayers and the IRS. "There are the incompetent and there are the unscrupulous," he said. "Some are both."
[Associated
Press;
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