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VITA, the MTC and the modern accounting curriculum (Part I).


Several authors have discussed the benefits of "service learning" in the accounting curriculum and, more specifically, the Volunteer Income Tax Assistance (VITA (VMEbus International Trade Association, Fountain Hills, AZ, www.vita.com) A trade association that supports the VMEbus and other open standards. Founded in 1984, VITA was accredited as an ANSI standards development organization in 1993. See VMEbus. ) program. This is described as a means of strengthening the accounting curriculum by engaging students in critical analysis and problem solving problem solving

Process involved in finding a solution to a problem. Many animals routinely solve problems of locomotion, food finding, and shelter through trial and error.
; see Still and Clayton, "Utilizing Service-Learning in Accounting Programs," 19 Issues in Acct'g Ed. 478 (November 2004). Service learning assignments have been proposed as a means of accomplishing the goals of the 1999 MCPA MCPA, MCP

2-methyl-4-chlorophenoxyacetic acid; a weedkiller reported to be nontoxic at the levels likely to be encountered on pasture, though it has killed cattle dosed experimentally with large single doses.
 Core Competency A core competency is something that a firm can do well and that meets the following three conditions specified by Hamel and Prahalad (1990):
  1. It provides customer benefits
  2. It is hard for competitors to imitate
  3. It can be leveraged widely to many products and markets.
 Framework; see Gujarathi and McQuade, "Service Learning: Extending the Curriculum," 72 The CPA (Computer Press Association, Landing, NJ) An earlier membership organization founded in 1983 that promoted excellence in computer journalism. Its annual awards honored outstanding examples in print, broadcast and electronic media. The CPA disbanded in 2000.  Journal 168 (February 2002). The VITA program is often mentioned in these discussions and has been proposed as a way to accomplish the active-learning objectives of Accounting Education Change Commission Position Statement No. 1; see Quinn et al., "Revitalizing re·vi·tal·ize  
tr.v. re·vi·tal·ized, re·vi·tal·iz·ing, re·vi·tal·iz·es
To impart new life or vigor to: plans to revitalize inner-city neighborhoods; tried to revitalize a flagging economy.
 VITA to Address AECC AECC Association for Emissions Control by Catalyst
AECC Aeromedical Evacuation Control Center
AECC Aeromedical Evacuation Coordination Center
AECC Aerojet Energy Conversion Company
AECC American Evangelical Christian Church, Inc.
 Position Statement No. 1 Objectives," 13 J. of Acct'g Ed. 479 (1995).The development of technical knowledge and of communication, team and computer skills has been attributed to this clinical tax program; see Porter and Bradwick, '"School-to-Work' Preparedness pre·par·ed·ness  
n.
The state of being prepared, especially military readiness for combat.

Noun 1. preparedness - the state of having been made ready or prepared for use or action (especially military action); "putting them
: Integrating Tax Clinics into the Business Curriculum," 27 TTA TTA Telecommunications Technology Association (Korea)
TTA Teacher Training Agency (UK)
TTA Triangle Transit Authority (Raleigh/Chapel Hill/Durham, North Carolina, USA) 
 505 (August 1996). The community service aspect of VITA provides an opportunity for accounting students to make a difference in their local communities; see Shafer and Park, "Giving Back: Pro Bono Short for pro bono publico [Latin, For the public good]. The designation given to the free legal work done by an attorney for indigent clients and religious, charitable, and other nonprofit entities.  Accounting Services," 188 JOA JOA Joint Operating Agreement
JOA Joan of Arc
JOA Joint Operations Area
JOA Journal of Accountancy (AICPA publication)
JOA Joint Operational Area (US DoD)
JOA Joint Operating Area
 95 (November 1999).

Some have claimed that VITA's pedagogical ped·a·gog·ic   also ped·a·gog·i·cal
adj.
1. Of, relating to, or characteristic of pedagogy.

2. Characterized by pedantic formality: a haughty, pedagogic manner.
 merits are too significant for it to be offered only as a voluntary extracurricular activity; see Dunlevy and Sherman, "VITA: A Means to Compete for the Future" 70 PA CPA Journal 17 (Winter 2000). Others have compared university-sponsored VITA programs on the basis of whether academic credit was offered and found that resource issues were of more concern to the success of a VITA program; see Strupeck and Whitten, "Accounting Service-Learning Experiences and the IRS An abbreviation for the Internal Revenue Service, a federal agency charged with the responsibility of administering and enforcing internal revenue laws.  Volunteer Income Tax Assistance Programme: A Teaching Note," 13 Acct'g Ecl. 110 (March 2004). While most authors have been generally positive toward the program's educational and community benefits, one important potential problem has been identified: inadequate training and certification of volunteers has resulted in significant numbers of incorrectly prepared tax returns for taxpayers using the service; see Banoff and Lipton, "VITA Program Scores a Zero," 101 J. Tax'n 320 (November 2004).

The role played by VITA in the modern accounting curriculum remains a relevant issue. According to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 a 2004 American Taxation Association (ATA (1) (AT Attachment) The specification for IDE drives. See IDE.

(2) See analog telephone adapter.

ATA - Advanced Technology Attachment
) survey, ATA members have a strong commitment to the VITA program; see Bauman et al., "Pro-Bono Tax Services: The Role of Tax Academics and Students," 36 TTA 500 (August 2005). The 79 faculty members who responded to the survey reported that they completed Federal and state tax returns for nearly 30,000 taxpayers; see ATA, "Pro-Bono Tax Services Taskforc--March 5, 2005, Executive Summary of Survey Resuits," available at http://aaahq. org/ ata/public-interest/reports/ATAPro-Bono-SurveyReport-March 2005.pdf. About half the faculty conducted their pro-bono work on campus, while the others worked off campus. A majority of the respondents In the context of marketing research, a representative sample drawn from a larger population of people from whom information is collected and used to develop or confirm marketing strategy.  indicated that they have a long-term commitment to VITA: 35% were involved for more than 10 years, and an additional 25% were involved over five years. But the survey also indicated that slightly less than 40% of participating students at university sponsored VITA sites received course credit for their involvement. Further, only 35% of the faculty involved indicated that they received recognition or support from their universities for their efforts. The primary reason offered by faculty for not offering pro-bono tax services was the lack of institutional recognition and support for this time-intensive activity; see id. at p. 2.

Any discussion of the VITA program's educational role must occur in the context of the current tax curriculum. A joint AICPA-ATA task force conducted a 2003 survey on the state of the tax curriculum; see Kern Kern, river, 155 mi (249 km) long, rising in the S Sierra Nevada Mts., E Calif., and flowing south, then southwest to a reservoir in the extreme southern part of the San Joaquin valley. The river has Isabella Dam as its chief facility.  and Dennis-Escoffier, "Current Status of the Tax Curriculum in Accounting," 35 TTA 712 (November 2004). That survey found that while many undergraduate accounting programs offered electives, only 11.7% required two undergraduate tax courses. On average, 57.15% of accounting graduates took only one undergraduate tax course. Generally, they found that the first tax class emphasized property transactions and individual income taxation. Programs with only a single tax class covered individuals, property transactions and sometimes business entities. The survey found that the lecture method was the predominant pre·dom·i·nant  
adj.
1. Having greatest ascendancy, importance, influence, authority, or force. See Synonyms at dominant.

2.
 teaching method used. The authors concluded that it was time to reconsider re·con·sid·er  
v. re·con·sid·ered, re·con·sid·er·ing, re·con·sid·ers

v.tr.
1. To consider again, especially with intent to alter or modify a previous decision.

2.
 the tax curriculum in accounting programs.

The VITA program is a potential piece of the tax curriculum and, thus, a potential part of a university's accounting curriculum. Part I of this column describes the program in sufficient detail to inform those who make or influence curricular decisions on the issues relevant to offering such a program. It identifies two primary methods of motivating student involvement in the program and the advantages and disadvantages of each. It compares IRS goals and objectives with those of accounting faculty and describes the educational benefits and costs associated with sponsoring a VITA site. Part II of this column, in the November 2007 issue, will (1) address the relationships among VITA, the Modern Tax Curriculum (MTC mtc - A Modula-2 to C translator.

ftp://rusmv1.rus.uni-stuttgart.de/soft/Unixtools/compilerbau/mtc.tar.Z.
) and the 150-hour requirement and (2) identify several advantages of offering the VITA program as an elective elective

non-urgent; at an elected time, e.g. of surgery.

elective adjective Referring to that which is planned or undertaken by choice and without urgency, as in elective surgery, see there noun Graduate education noun
 accounting course and the major challenge to that approach.

The VITA Program

Since 1969, the Service has sponsored the Volunteer Return Preparation Program, offering free tax preparation services Tax preparation services

Firm that prepare tax returns for a fee.
 to taxpayers with relatively low incomes; see IRS Pub. 1084, IRS Volunteer Coordinator's Handbook, p. 1-5. This program is commonly referred to as the VITA program. The Service partners with national and local organizations whose members or constituents are interested in providing tax compliance services to taxpayers who otherwise cannot afford them. VITA is administered by the Stakeholder stakeholder n. a person having in his/her possession (holding) money or property in which he/she has no interest, right or title, awaiting the outcome of a dispute between two or more claimants to the money or property. , Partnerships, Education and Communication (SPEC (1) See specs and specification.

(2) (SPEC) (Standard Performance Evaluation Corporation, Warrenton, VA, www.specbench.org) An organization founded in 1988 to establish standard benchmarks for computers.
) office, which is part of the IRS Wage and Investment Division. Organizations that sponsor VITA sites are assisted by SPEC territory managers; the actual support is normally provided by tax specialists in the SPEC area offices. Through these offices, the Service provides training materials, technical assistance, tax software, forms, publications and some limited publicity for all VITA sites. (For a discussion of SPEC, see Banman et al., supra A relational DBMS from Cincom Systems, Inc., Cincinnati, OH (www.cincom.com) that runs on IBM mainframes and VAXs. It includes a query language and a program that automates the database design process. .)

Sponsors desiring to start VITA sites can request applications for site identification numbers (SIDNs) and electronic filing identification numbers (EFINs) from local SPEC offices and can also obtain training materials, name badges, site identification posters, tax return envelopes and other site supplies. SPEC staff members work directly with the site coordinators, the primary contacts for the sponsoring organizations. The coordinators are responsible for establishing and operating the sponsors' VITA sites.The IRS developed the IRS Volunteer Coordinator's Handbook to guide the site coordinators in their duties. It provides an overview of the program and those policies designed to ensure that quality services are provided to taxpayers in a nondiscriminatory manner. It covers site selection, recruiting, training, interviewing, tax return reviewing, electronic filing and marketing. It describes the various roles that volunteers can perform and provides a suggested timeline of activities for site coordinators.

Essential Steps

Timeline: The recommended timeline of activities is not specific to universities, but it generally covers the fall and spring semesters of an academic year; see IRS Pub. 1084, p. 1-11. The Service envisions that the sponsor of a new VITA site will have its site coordinator apply for its SIDN SIDN Stichting Internet Domeinnaamregistratie Nederland (organisation that issues and registers ‘.nl’ domain names.)
SIDN Site Identification Number (IRS)
SIDN Satellite Imagery Dissemination Network
 and EFIN EFIN Environmental Financing Information Network (EPA)
EFIN Electronic Filer's Identification Number
 from June through September. Thus, the VITA and academic years start at roughly the same time. While the IRS encourages electronic filing (e-filing) at VITA sites, site coordinators are allowed to choose. Some coordinators may preyer to use e-filing because it simulates today's tax practice. Other coordinators may want to teach volunteers manual tax preparation because of its educational value and to avoid e-filing's complications. If the coordinator chooses the latter approach, an EFIN application is not needed. If the site intends to offer e-filing, an EFIN is required; IRS Pub. 3189, Volunteer e-file Administrator's Guide, should be ordered.

Volunteer recruitment: Recruitment of volunteers should begin during the first few months of a new semester se·mes·ter  
n.
One of two divisions of 15 to 18 weeks each of an academic year.



[German, from Latin (cursus) s
. Sponsoring a VITA program is not possible without volunteers; this critical step is discussed below. Once an estimate of the total number of volunteers is established, IRS training materials may be ordered.

Training materials: Currently, the Service provides both online training materials and printed publications. The online training modules are found at the "Link and Learn" section of the IRS website. They may be used for self-study by individual volunteers or by an organized group of volunteers in a computer lab setting; see, e.g., IRS, "Link & Learn Taxes," 2006, available at www.irs.gov/app/vita/index.jsp. The Service has developed modules it labels as basic, intermediate, advanced, refresher and military/international. When a volunteer passes an examination, the results are electronically sent to the IRS and may be printed, signed and given to the site coordinator. All volunteers who prepare returns must pass the basic module. They are directed to prepare only those returns for which they have been certified See certification. .

If the site coordinator prefers training with publications, he or she may order training package kits that include IRS Pub. 678, Volunteer Student Guide, IRS Pub. 678-W, VITA/ TCE TCE

trichloroethylene.

TCE Environment A volatile chlorinated hydrocarbon that boils at 88ºC and is highly soluble–1000 ppm in water, with various industrial uses Toxicity Peripheral neuropathy, carcinogenic.
 Comprehensive Problems and Practice Exercises and the certification examination. The coordinator should also order IRS Pub. 1155, VITA/TCE Facilitator's Guide, for each instructor who will teach the VITA training sessions. This guide sets out a class syllabus A headnote; a short note preceding the text of a reported case that briefly summarizes the rulings of the court on the points decided in the case.

The syllabus appears before the text of the opinion.
 for each of the modules and provides other pedagogical help. Each module is organized into a 2- or 3day schedule of classroom instruction. The Service recommends allowing 40 hours for technical training and four to eight hours for software training and certification; see IRS Pub. 1084, p. 1-21.

It may be difficult for a site coordinator to know in October exactly how many training packages will be needed during the following tax season. At a minimum, the coordinator should order training materials equal to the number of computers available for training and tax preparation. If the program attracts more students than expected, multiple training sessions can be scheduled; the training materials can be distributed and collected at the end of each session. These same materials can later be distributed to volunteers for use as reference materials during each VITA session.

Location designation: The IRS timeline indicates that by October, a location for training and the actual site location should be identified. At a university, a computer lab with Internet access See how to access the Internet.  works well for training. If portable computers are intended for use in training and tax preparation, a room with wireless Internet access is preferable. Internet access is needed for downloading software updates and doing online tax research. If a university classroom or computer lab is selected as a site, it should be reserved according to procedures at that specific institution. At some institutions, scheduling may have to occur much earlier than October. Also in October, training dates for volunteers should be scheduled, and instructors should be identified to teach the training sessions. If several faculty members are participating in the program, they should allocate the curriculum and coordinate their efforts.

Ordering materials: By November, site materials should be ordered, based on an estimate of the number of taxpayers to be served during tax season. This can be calculated using the number of expected volunteers and the number of hours they indicate they will work in the program. Usually around the same time, site coordinators are invited to an IRS leader's workshop to receive training on any procedural changes to the program. The Service holds these training sessions in various cities in each state. According to the IRS timeline, volunteer training and certification should be done in November and December and completed by early January. In December, publicity efforts should begin; organizational meetings should be held to prepare volunteers for opening the site in early February. Posters advertising the site can be placed around campus; public service announcements can be drafted.

Reporting: Once the site opens (and until it closes in April), Form 13206, Volunteer Assistance Summary Report, should be filed each month, listing the volunteers' names, their roles and their certification dates. By March, a complete list of all volunteers should be submitted to the SPEC office, so that letters of appreciation and certificates of participation can be completed. Each certificate contains the volunteer's name and year of participation. The Service may also provide inexpensive gifts along with certificates for the volunteers. In late April, the site should be closed, and all Forms 8453, U.S. Individual Income Tax Declaration for an IRS e-file Return, should be submitted to the IRS Submission Processing Campus. Also in late April, a ceremony recognizing the volunteers should be scheduled for them to receive recognition certificates. In May, the site coordinator should provide feedback to the SPEC territory manager's office as to any problems that occurred, so that they can be resolved before the next tax season.

Recruitment Approaches

VITA program structure determines the importance of recruitment and how it is approached. Some universities offer VITA as a community activity open to all; see Dunlevy and Sherman, supra, at p. 2. Other universities offer it as a service activity operated by student organizations such as Beta Alpha Psi BAΨ (Beta Alpha Psi) is an honorary organization for accounting, finance and information systems students and professionals. Its primary objective is to encourage and recognize academic and professional excellence in the financial information field. ; see Riehl, "University of Iowa Not to be confused with Iowa State University.
The first faculty offered instruction at the University in March 1855 to students in the Old Mechanics Building, situated where Seashore Hall is now. In September 1855, the student body numbered 124, of which, 41 were women.
 Students Offer Free Tax Help," Knight Ridder
For the unrelated television series, see Knight Rider.


Knight Ridder (IPA: /ˈrɪdɚ/) was an American media company, specializing in newspaper and Internet publishing.
 Tribune Business News (3/5/05), p. 1. Some make program participation a requirement of a specific course in Federal income taxation; see Strupeck and Whitten, supra, at p. 107. Still others choose not to be VITA sites at all and create their own volunteer tax compliance organizations; see Gold and Schenk, "IRS Volunteer Income Tax Assistance Program The Volunteer Income Tax Assistance (VITA) program is an IRS program designed to help low and moderate-income taxpayers complete their annual tax returns at no cost. Every year around mid-January, certified volunteers receive training from the IRS to help prepare basic tax returns ," 50 CPA Journal 7 (July 1980).

The true-volunteer program: These different approaches can be categorized cat·e·go·rize  
tr.v. cat·e·go·rized, cat·e·go·riz·ing, cat·e·go·riz·es
To put into a category or categories; classify.



cat
 as either tree-volunteer programs or course-required programs. As used here, "true-volunteer programs" means service programs in which the volunteers are free to decide whether to participate. One advantage of this type of program is that participation is motivated mo·ti·vate  
tr.v. mo·ti·vat·ed, mo·ti·vat·ing, mo·ti·vates
To provide with an incentive; move to action; impel.



mo
 by civic responsibility and the desire to learn. These volunteers will have a very positive attitude. Student volunteers will typically be excited about participating in their first community service activity as accounting professionals. Another advantage is that the local community can provide a broad pool of potential volunteers of varying experience levels. In this way, more experienced individuals will be available to assist those less experienced.

One challenge with a true-volunteer program is that it may be difficult to recruit and train a sufficient number of volunteers. Even though the entire community is a source of recruits, it may be difficult to find individuals with sufficient time and inclination inclination, in astronomy, the angle of intersection between two planes, one of which is an orbital plane. The inclination of the plane of the moon's orbit is 5°9' with respect to the plane of the ecliptic (the plane of the earth's orbit around the sun).  to participate. While many people may be willing to pitch in for a one-day community-service event, fewer are willing to work over multiple weeks. Another challenge is that the volunteers are not under any real compunction to show up should a scheduling conflict arise. Volunteers who are employed have unexpected business trips and the expected busy season; students have projects, examinations, winter recess and spring break. If volunteers do not show up to work, the site coordinator may have insufficient staffing for any given session. Ultimately, taxpayers will have longer waits or will not be able to get their returns prepared. Further, the program's primary focus is on community service, not on educating accounting students. Volunteers may not be predominantly pre·dom·i·nant  
adj.
1. Having greatest ascendancy, importance, influence, authority, or force. See Synonyms at dominant.

2.
 accounting students, but could be other members of the local community.

Course-required programs: The course-required programs are those in which student volunteers receive some type of academic incentive for VITA participation in a required course in their accounting curriculum. In some programs, participation may be an explicit assignment in a specific tax or accounting course. Alternatively, VITA participation may be encouraged by bonus points or some other reward. The primary advantage of this approach is that it creates a reliable supply of program "volunteers." It targets accounting students to receive the program's educational benefits.

A disadvantage is that the learning experience must necessarily be brief. When VITA participation is but one of several course objectives, only limited student time can be assigned to VITA. Another disadvantage is that some student volunteers may not bring much enthusiasm to the program, because they are compelled to participate. Similarly, since students are not participating because they want to provide service to their community, they may not develop any sense of civic involvement from the experience.

IRS and Educational Objectives

The IRS offers the VITA program to accomplish certain tax administration and policy objectives. It supports the program as part of its efforts to educate and assist the public with return filing; see IRS Pub. 1084. The Service intends that VITA volunteers will provide accurate and confidential services to moderate-to-low-income taxpayers; serving this segment of the public justifies the government's expenditures for the program. From the government's point of view, the greater the number of qualifying taxpayers served, the better; the more trained and experienced the VITA volunteers, the better the quality of work. The program is also meant to help low-income taxpayers improve their financial positions by taking advantage of tax credits and other incentives. Since these taxpayers may not have easy access to transportation, offering VITA sites at convenient times and locations is important to the program's overall success. An administrative goal is to encourage individuals to e-file their Federal income tax returns. The IRS encourages site coordinators to use e-filing by making Service-provided tax software available to sites that prepare at least 35 electronic returns.

The primary objective for accounting educators is to teach accounting students technical knowledge and concepts, while helping them to develop skills relevant to their future careers. As a result of accounting reforms, such as the Sarbanes-Oxley Act See SOX.  of 2002, technical skills are clearly important for accountants; see Marshall and Heffes, "Trends Affecting Next Generation of Accountants," 21 Financial Executive 8 (September 2005). However, for some years now, educators have been told that accounting students should not receive a narrow silo of technical training, but a broad education that prepares them to make general business decisions using technology in a team environment; see Albrecht and Sack, Accounting Education: Charting the Course through a Perilous Future (American Accounting Association, 2000), vol. 16, p. 50. Interpersonal in·ter·per·son·al  
adj.
1. Of or relating to the interactions between individuals: interpersonal skills.

2.
 abilities and communication, technology and problem-solving skills are recognized as very important for accountants; see Messmer, "Next Generation Accountant," 46 Nat'l Pub. Acc't 20 (April 2001).

In addition to these skills, management, marketing and operational expertise is crucial; see Williams, "Are You a Next-Generation Accountant?" 83 Strategic Finance 17 (July 2001). Because of several recent accounting scandals Accounting scandals, or corporate accounting scandals are political and business scandals which arise with the disclosure of misdeeds by trusted executives of large public corporations. , pressure is building for additional ethical training in the accounting curriculum; see, e.g., Nat'l Ass'n of State Bds. of Acct'cy, Rules 5-1 and 5-2 Exposure Draft, 2005, available at www.nasba.org/nasbaweb/ NASBAWeb.nsf/PS/264D55C613B 9747D 862571B900755 C7F/$file/ UAA UAA

ochre codon, one of the three stop codons.
%20Education%20Rules%20 Exposure%20Draft.pdf. Research skills have been found to be sufficiently important that simulations requiring basic research skills have been added to the CPA examination (www.cpa-exam.org).

Educational Benefits and Costs

In an educational environment that stresses the importance of accounting knowledge and skill building, a VITA service-learning experience can be an important tool in accomplishing these goals. Faculty members coordinating a VITA site must use various skills and abilities to offer the program to the public, including planning, organizing, marketing, teaching, supervising, analyzing, problem-solving and communicating. Coordinators must acquire resources, do publicity and marketing, install software, maintain quality control, protect taxpayer confidentiality and recruit, train and supervise staff. Further, participating in a VITA program requires interpersonal skills "Interpersonal skills" refers to mental and communicative algorithms applied during social communications and interactions in order to reach certain effects or results. The term "interpersonal skills" is used often in business contexts to refer to the measure of a person's ability , professionalism, technical tax knowledge, technology skills, ethics ethics, in philosophy, the study and evaluation of human conduct in the light of moral principles. Moral principles may be viewed either as the standard of conduct that individuals have constructed for themselves or as the body of obligations and duties that a  and, possibly, a sense of civic responsibility. The knowledge and skills required of student volunteers depends on how much responsibility they are given. Preparing tax returns requires, at a minimum, knowledge of Federal and state income taxes and of computers, printers, tax software and the Internet.

Benefits: The program may, however, be designed to do much more for student volunteers. Operating a VITA site at a university can provide a clinical experience for both students and faculty. Depending on how the educational experience is structured, a VITA program can simulate simulate - simulation  operating a tax compliance business (albeit a nonprofit A corporation or an association that conducts business for the benefit of the general public without shareholders and without a profit motive.

Nonprofits are also called not-for-profit corporations. Nonprofit corporations are created according to state law.
 one).While the IRS places most of the site's responsibilities on the coordinator, many of those duties could be performed by student volunteers after appropriate training and with proper supervision; see Quinn et al. To the extent the university-sponsored VITA site is operated in a way that broadens student participation, students will develop and practice a wide array of skills important to accounting graduates.

Costs: The benefits do not, however, come without associated costs. To the extent that even part of the VITA training takes place in a Federal tax course, other content coverage will have to be omitted. The faculty coordinator must be willing to devote substantial time to training and supervising the VITA student volunteers. E-filing may result in returns having to be corrected and resubmitted by the faculty coordinator. Secretarial staff time may be needed to schedule taxpayer appointments. There will be printing and computer costs. While volunteers generally receive immunity from negligence under the Volunteer Protection Act of 1997, it is always possible that some litigation An action brought in court to enforce a particular right. The act or process of bringing a lawsuit in and of itself; a judicial contest; any dispute.

When a person begins a civil lawsuit, the person enters into a process called litigation.
 might result from the operation of a VITA program. If not managed carefully, a VITA program could generate ill will instead of goodwill. While taxpayers are typically grateful for free tax assistance, it is possible that some may become unhappy with their taxes owed or the time it took volunteers to complete their returns.

Part II of this column, in the November 2007 issue, will address integrating VITA into the accounting program.

Editor:

Annette Nellen, CPA, Esq.

Professor

Department of Accounting & Finance

San Jose San Jose, city, United States
San Jose (sănəzā`, săn hōzā`), city (1990 pop. 782,248), seat of Santa Clara co., W central Calif.; founded 1777, inc. 1850.
 State University

San Jose, CA

Authors:

Brett J. Long, CPA, J.D., LL.M LL.M Legum Magister (Master of Laws) .

Associate Professor

Department of Accounting and Business Law

University of Southern Indiana The University of Southern Indiana (USI) is a public university in Evansville, Indiana. This publicly-funded institution is rapidly growing and is the fastest growing comprehensive state university in Indiana.  

Evansville, IN

Mehmet C. Kocakulah, Ph.D.

Professor

Department of Accounting and Business Law

University of Southern Indiana

Evansville, IN

Prof. Nellen is a former member of the AICPA AICPA

See American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA).
 Tax Division's Tax Executive Committee and a current member of the Individual Income Tax Technical Resource Panel. For more information about this column, contact Prof. Nellen at anellen@sjsu.edu, Prof. Long at blong@usi.edu or Prof. Kocakulah at mkocakul@usi.edu.
COPYRIGHT 2007 American Institute of CPA's
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2007, Gale Group. All rights reserved.

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Title Annotation:Campus To Clients: Education for Today's Business Needs
Author:Long, Brett J.; Kocakulah, Mehmet C.
Publication:The Tax Adviser
Date:Aug 1, 2007
Words:3707
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