Reorganization Plan No 1. of 1952 (Bureau of Internal Revenue).: Hearings ... Eighty-second Congress, Second Session, on H.R. 494U.S. Government Printing Office, 1952 - 260 pages |
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... improvement program of the Bureau of Inter- nal Revenue _ _ 88888 206 198 9 39 Faces 7 8 32 32 38 888 44 APPENDIXES Appendix A. - Internal Revenue Bureau - Table showing collections , ex- penditures , population , tax per capita , cost ...
... improvement program of the Bureau of Inter- nal Revenue _ _ 88888 206 198 9 39 Faces 7 8 32 32 38 888 44 APPENDIXES Appendix A. - Internal Revenue Bureau - Table showing collections , ex- penditures , population , tax per capita , cost ...
Page 2
... improvements have been made in the Bureau's operations . The use of automatic machines has been greatly in- creased . The handling of cases has been simplified . One major advance is repre- sented by the recently completed arrangements ...
... improvements have been made in the Bureau's operations . The use of automatic machines has been greatly in- creased . The handling of cases has been simplified . One major advance is repre- sented by the recently completed arrangements ...
Page 3
... improvements in procedure cannot meet the need for organizational changes . Part of the authority necessary to make a comprehensive reorganization was provided in Reorganization Plan No. 26 of 1950 , which was one of several uniform ...
... improvements in procedure cannot meet the need for organizational changes . Part of the authority necessary to make a comprehensive reorganization was provided in Reorganization Plan No. 26 of 1950 , which was one of several uniform ...
Page 7
... improvement over the past few years . Those studies were conducted by groups within and without the Department . They came from congressional sources - for example , from this com- mittee , particularly in the stimulus it gave to ...
... improvement over the past few years . Those studies were conducted by groups within and without the Department . They came from congressional sources - for example , from this com- mittee , particularly in the stimulus it gave to ...
Page 10
... improvements which experience has shown to be needed . The reorganization plan will permit us to bring the revenue service fully up to the requirements of the day . It will enable us to establish maximum efficiency of operation and ...
... improvements which experience has shown to be needed . The reorganization plan will permit us to bring the revenue service fully up to the requirements of the day . It will enable us to establish maximum efficiency of operation and ...
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Common terms and phrases
administrative agency agent in charge answer Assistant Commissioner Assistant General Counsel audit authority BENDER bill BLATNIK BONNER BROWNSON Budget Bureau of Internal career CHAIRMAN chart CHURCH Civil Service Commission collection collectors of internal Commissioner of Internal committee CONGRESS THE LIBRARY correct CURTIS of Nebraska deputy collectors deputy district commissioner DUNLAP duties economy effect efficiency executive field offices fiscal fraud functions gentleman give going Government HARDEN HOFFMAN HOLIFIELD Hoover Commission improvements income tax inspection service January 14 KARSTEN KELLEY KING LANHAM LANTAFF LAWTON legislation LIBRARY OF CONGRESS LYNCH matter McCORMACK McVEY MEADER ment merit system operations organization personnel political appointment positions postmaster President procedure proposed qualified question RAMSPECK recommendations record referred Reorganization Plan responsibility revenue service RIEHLMAN ROBERT RAMSPECK savings Secretary SNYDER staff statement status taxpayer thing tion Treasury Department understand Washington
Popular passages
Page 5 - Prepared by the President and transmitted to the Senate and the House of Representatives in Congress assembled, April 24, 1958, pursuant to the provisions of the Reorganization Act of 1949, approved June 20, 1949, as amended CIVILIAN MOBILIZATION SECTION 1.
Page 186 - We will recess until 2 o'clock. (Whereupon, at 12:15 pm, the committee recessed to reconvene at 2 pm the same day.) AFTERNOON SESSION Mr.
Page 1 - To the Congress of the United States: I transmit herewith Reorganization Plan No.
Page 4 - ... and shall receive compensation which shall be fixed from time to time pursuant to the classification laws as now or hereafter amended except that the compensation may be fixed without regard to the numerical limitations on positions set forth in section 505 of the Classification Act of 1949, as amended (5 USC 1105) . SEC.
Page 4 - I have also found and hereby declare that it is necessary to include in the accompanying reorganization plan, by reason of reorganizations made thereby, provisions for the appointment and compensation of new officers specified in sections 2 and 3 of the plan.
Page 5 - That it will furnish to the native inhabitants of said islands of St. George and St. Paul annually such quantity or number of dried salmon, and such quantity of salt and such number of salt barrels for preserving their necessary supply of meat as the Secretary of the Treasury shall from time to time determine.
Page 68 - One of the chief handicaps to effective organization of the Department is the political appointment of Collectors of Internal Revenue and of Customs, and certain other officials. These appointments are regarded by some as sinecures. In any event, they form a bar to orderly development of an experienced staff.
Page 5 - Code. The provisions of the foregoing sentence shall become effective with respect to each office abolished thereby at such time as the Secretary of the Treasury shall specify, but In no event later than December 1, 1952. The Secretary of the Treasury shall make such provisions as he shall deem necessary respecting the winding up of the affairs of any officer whose office is abolished by the provisions of this section. SEC. 2. Establishment of new offices. — (a) New offices are hereby established...
Page 3 - ... administrative ability. It is appropriate and desirable that major political offices in the executive branch of the Government be filled by persons who are appointed by the President by and with the advice and consent of the Senate. On the other hand, the technical nature of much of the Government's work today makes it equally appropriate and desirable that positions of other types be in the professional career service. The administration of our internal-revenue laws at the local level calls...
Page 109 - The CHAIRMAN. I would like to say to the committee that I...