Pursuant to a congressional request, GAO reviewed the Internal Revenue
Service's (IRS) managers' compliance with legislative and policy
prohibitions against using enforcement statistics in employee
evaluations and the requirement that managers certify each quarter
whether violations had occurred, focusing on: (1) the extent to which
IRS' certification process identified violations of law and policy; (2)
IRS employees' perceptions of the use of tax enforcement results in
their annual performance evaluations; (3) supervisors' use of tax
enforcement results in written employee performance evaluations; and (4)
IRS' efforts to revise the certification process.
GAO noted that: (1) for fiscal years 1996 and 1997, district and service
center directors submitted 368 quarterly certifications that reported 11
potential violations; (2) GAO identified several systemic weaknesses
that affected the reliability of the certifications; (3) specifically,
GAO found: (a) some confusion among IRS officials about what constituted
a violation; (b) inadequate guidance about specific actions directors
should take to identify violations; (c) a failure to integrate
performance evaluations and the certification process; and (d) unclear
guidance on sanctions that could be applied against managers for
misusing tax enforcement results or submitting false certifications; (4)
GAO's survey of a statistically representative sample of examination and
collection employees showed a widespread perception that managers
considered enforcement results when preparing annual performance
evaluations; (5) GAO estimated that 75 percent of front-line employees
and 81 percent of group managers perceived that tax enforcement results
affected their most recent performance evaluation; (6) about 70 percent
of front-line employees said they based their perception in part on
information communicated to them verbally in staff meetings or
performance feedback sessions with their managers; (7) and about 36
percent of front-line employees indicated tax enforcement results were
used in their written performance evaluations; (8) 9 percent of
employees received a written evaluation that contained a tax enforcement
result and an estimated 69 percent contained narrative that employees
could have interpreted as inappropriate references to tax enforcement
results but which did not violate IRS guidance; (9) about 41 percent of
the evaluations in GAO's sample mentioned process measures dealing with
the age of the cases in the employee's workload inventory and the number
of cases worked within guidelines established for closing cases; (10)
IRS has undertaken several steps to strengthen the certification
process; (11) although these actions address some of the weaknesses of
the current system, IRS' revised guidance has few examples of the
appropriate and inappropriate use of tax enforcement results in written
evaluations; (12) the revised guidance does not clearly inform managers
about potential sanctions for inappropriate use of tax enforcement
results; and (13) IRS' new independent review process is geared toward
identifying written violations and not violations communicated verbally.
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