| Bankruptcy credit counseling gets
mixed reviews |
| Page
| 1
| 2
| 3
| 4
| 5 | |
|
|
The term "brick-and-mortar services" describes
companies that have a physical presence and offer face-to-face experiences
as opposed to just the Internet and telephone.
Ensuring proper counseling
Limprecht says the agencies are approved only after extensive review.
"Staff at the Executive Office for U.S. Trustees, as well
as in the field offices, review the applicant's materials for sufficiency
and completeness, seeking additional information from the applicant
if there are questions or deficiencies," says Limprecht. She
says, as of early February, 25 applications for approval as a credit
counseling agency had been denied.
In addition, the Internal Revenue Service is also keeping watch.
Nonprofit credit counseling organizations have been under review
by the IRS over the past couple of years.
"The IRS, because it administers the tax-exempt status of
these organizations, and the Federal Trade Commission, because it
oversees consumer issues, announced a joint effort in 2003 to take
a hard look at the tax-exempt agencies," says IRS spokeswoman
Nancy Mathis. "Both federal agencies had received numerous
consumer complaints."
A provision in the tax code passed by Congress allows credit counseling
agencies to be exempt from paying income taxes if they provide charitable
or educational programs to their clients, such as an educational
program for low-income people in debt.
Mathis also points out that over the past decade, consumer debt
exploded and tax-exempt credit counseling agencies increased.
"Instead of providing charitable or educational programs, some
credit counseling agencies used high-pressure tactics to obtain
exorbitant fees from their clients and shuffled them off to ineffective
debt-management programs," she says. "There were also
issues of the top executives at these supposedly charitable organizations
receiving extremely high salaries."
The IRS began looking at approximately 60 credit counseling agencies.
"At the end of last year, the IRS concluded it should revoke
the tax-exempt status of about 30 agencies," Mathis says. "These
30 represent about half of the industry's revenue."
Credit counseling agencies have the right to appeal the revocation
through the internal IRS Appeals Office.
|