On August 8, 2005, in IR-2005-81, the Internal Revenue Service and the
Treasury Department announced that the Industry Issue Resolution (IIR) Program
would address concerns relating to “member of a family receiving assistance”
requirements for the work opportunity and welfare-to-work tax credits. Employers
had expressed concern that, before the issuance of Rev. Rul. 2003-112, 2003-2
C.B. 1007, states applied the family-member requirements in a manner inconsistent
with the holding in that revenue ruling and, as a result, employers were not
permitted to claim credits that should have been allowed. A multi-functional
team was formed to analyze the relevant facts. Based upon the analysis conducted
by the team, the IRS and Treasury have concluded that the states applied the
family-member requirements in a manner consistent with the holding of Rev.
Rul. 2003-112 in all but a small number of cases and that these cases had
an insignificant impact on the aggregate amount of work opportunity and welfare-to-work
tax credits employers were permitted to claim. Consequently, no administrative
resolution through the IIR program is appropriate.
Section 51 of the Internal Revenue Code allows a work opportunity tax
credit (WOTC) to an employer who paid qualified wages during the taxable year
to an individual who is a member of a targeted group described in section
51(d). To be a member of a targeted group, an individual must be certified
by the designated local agency (state workforce agency) as satisfying the
applicable conditions for that group. To qualify for three of the targeted
groups (qualified IV-A recipient, qualified veteran, and qualified food stamp
recipient), the individual must be certified by the state workforce agency
as being “a member of a family receiving assistance” under a stated
benefit program for a specified period of time.
Section 51A allows a welfare-to-work (W-t-W) tax credit to an employer
who paid qualified wages during the taxable year to an individual who is a
long-term family assistance recipient. A long-term family assistance recipient
under section 51A must be certified as “a member of a family receiving
assistance” under rules similar to the certification requirements for
qualified IV-A recipients, qualified veterans, and qualified food stamp recipients
under section 51.
In 2002, the Internal Revenue Service received a request for clarification
of the standards under which an individual could be certified as “a
member of a family receiving assistance” who qualifies for inclusion
in one of these four groups (affected groups). The Service then issued Rev.
Rul. 2003-112, which holds that an individual can be certified as a member
of a family receiving assistance if the individual’s family receives
assistance for the requisite period and the individual is included on the
grant (and thus receives assistance) for some portion of the specified period.
During the period before publication of the ruling, some state workforce
agencies might have applied standards differing from the standard in Rev.
Rul. 2003-112. Because the Service did not limit the retroactive effect of
the ruling, the application of a different standard could have resulted in
an incorrect denial of certification for some employees. Under normal procedures,
an employer that believes a denial of certification is incorrect would request
that the state workforce agency reconsider its denial and would be allowed
a credit only if, after reconsideration, the agency certified the employee.
A trade association representing service providers that screen employees
for credit eligibility and assist employers in submitting requests for their
certification proposed an alternative procedure. Under the alternative procedure,
employers would be permitted to claim credits for a percentage of requests
for certification that were denied before issuance of Rev. Rul. 2003-112.
The proposal became the subject of an Industry Issue Resolution (IIR) project.
IIR PROCESS: INDUSTRY DATA, IRS STUDY, AND CONCLUSION
The trade association asserted that its member data indicated that certification
rates varied among states and were lower for the targeted groups requiring
certification as a member of a family receiving assistance (affected groups).
However, the data did not provide a complete picture of WOTC employers and
certification rates. The data also did not differentiate between denials
for administrative reasons (such as lack of timeliness or original signature)
and denials for technical reasons (failure to meet a statutory requirement
for a targeted group), nor did it provide a valid basis for determining what
proportion of the denials for technical reasons were the result of the application
of a standard differing from that set forth in Rev. Rul. 2003-112.
In response to the IIR submission, the Service undertook a study to
determine whether a significant portion of the denials of requests for certification
issued before the publication of Rev. Rul. 2003-112 were the result of state
agencies taking a position inconsistent with the conclusion in the revenue
ruling. In doing so, the Service worked with state authorities and the Department
of Labor to collect data on the reasons for denials of requests for certification
in the four affected groups and conducted a statistical analysis of that data.
The Service also considered information presented by interested parties.
Based upon this study, the Service has determined that only an insignificant
fraction (less than one percent) of the denials of requests for certification
in the four affected groups resulted from state workforce agencies taking
a position inconsistent with Rev. Rul. 2003-112.
Accordingly, the Service and Treasury have concluded that any failures
prior to the issuance of Rev. Rul. 2003-112 to apply a standard consistent
with the standard set forth in the ruling had a negligible effect on the aggregate
amount of credits taxpayers were permitted to claim. Therefore, no Internal
Revenue Service administrative resolution is necessary or appropriate, and
no credit will be allowed by the Service for any WOTC and W-t-W tax credit
claims without proper certification by a designated local agency in accordance
with the statute. An employer that believes an employee was improperly denied
certification prior to the publication of Rev. Rul. 2003-112 may request that
the appropriate state workforce agency reconsider the denial.
The principal author of this announcement is Karin Loverud of the Office
of Division Counsel/Associate Chief Counsel (Tax Exempt & Government Entities).
For further information regarding this announcement, contact Karin Loverud
at (202) 622-6080 (not a toll-free call).
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