Religious Hiring Debate Back on Center Stage for Judiciary Committee

According to the Roundtable on Religion: The question of whether Congress should expand laws to allow publicly-funded faith-based organization to employ staff based on their religious beliefs was once again brought to the front burner last week, producing a heated debate and legislative wrangling.

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Tax Cheats Cost Treasury $70 Billion a Year

So here's something to help defray the federal budget deficit a bit: make people who owe taxes actually pay those taxes. Sen. Carl Levin's (D-MI) staff conducted an investigation into off-shore tax havens. His minority report, which was adopted by the full Senate Permanent Investigations subcommittee, finds that superrich tax cheats are gaming the system to the tune of $70 billion per year. David Cay Johnston reporting in The New York Times:

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IRS Wants Comments on Fines for Nonprofit Tax Shelters

According to the Chronicle of Philanthropy: The Internal Revenue Service has asked nonprofit groups and others to comment on how the agency should enforce a law Congress passed last month to impose steep fines on charities, churches, and other tax-exempt groups that participate in abusive tax shelters.

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Bill With Charitable Provisions To Move To Floor Tomorrow

Majority Leader Bill Frist will file a motion to proceed on the House-passed pension reform bill (H.R. 4) tomorrow, Aug. 2. As discussed in a previous blog entry, H.R. 4 contains charitable incentives and reforms. For a summary of those provisions, see the Council on Foundations analysis.

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Reps. Oppose Reduction of IRS Estate Tax Attorneys

Following up on reports that the IRS plans to eliminate almost half of its estate and gift tax audit team, Chief IRS overseer and all-around good guy Rep.

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Minimum Wage and The Estate Tax: Who Benefits?

Joel Friedman and Aviva Aron-Dine at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities have put together a great article comparing the benefits of a minimum wage hike and a reduction of the estate tax. [The Economic Policy Institute] estimates that the average yearly wage increase for the 6.6 million workers who would benefit directly from the minimum wage change would total about $1,200. [...]

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Should Lobbyists Serve As Treasurers on Campaigns?

Interesting article in US News: "It creates a huge conflict of interest for the members of Congress," says Alex Knott of the Center for Public Integrity. "They are going to be indentured to these lobbyists because they often rely on them for campaign fundraising." Lobbyists have served as treasurers of at least 68 campaign committees or joint campaign committees with other members since 1998, according to the center. It's unclear whether the number is increasing because reform groups have just started to track these relationships.

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Charitable Provisions in Pension Bill - Passed House, Now On to Senate

Late on Friday night, the House approved pension reform legislation (H.R. 4), which includes a scaled-back package of charitable reforms and incentives. The incentives include the IRA rollover, and book and food deductions for charities. The legislation also includes some reforms aimed at the nonprofit sector. For a summary, click here.H.R. 4 now heads to the Senate for consideration. Because the bill is not a conference report, it is subject to amendment and potentially unlimited debate (i.e., “normal” order in the Senate).

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Ohio AG Drops Accountability Proposal

According to the Cleveland Plain Dealer: Ohio Attorney General Jim Petro has revised his proposal to make hospitals and other charitable groups more accountable to the public, a month after proposing the new state rules. In the second draft of the rules, released Friday, Petro dropped controversial recommendations for policies related to conflicts of interest, executive compensation and billing practices. Instead, said Brian Cook, chief deputy attorney general and head of the public-protection division, the latest proposal calls for a new advisory panel to recommend such model policies.

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Estate Tax Blackmail (AKA "Minimum Wage Hike Hostage-Taking")

The New York Times editorial page gets it:

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