When you think of disaster preparation, you think first
about blankets and sandbags, potable water and crank radios. What most folks
don't think about are their finances and operations, but they are important as
well and should not be neglected. Here are the six things that the IRS believes
you should concentrate on when preparing for a disaster:
1.
Recordkeeping Take advantage of
paperless recordkeeping for financial and tax records. Many people receive bank
statements and documents by e-mail. This method is an outstanding way to secure
financial records. Important tax records such as W-2s, tax returns and other
paper documents can be scanned onto an electronic format. You can copy them
onto a ‘key’ or ‘jump drive’ periodically and then keep the electronic records
in a safe place.
2.
Document Valuables and Business
Equipment The IRS has disaster loss workbooks for individuals and
businesses that can help you compile a room-by-room list of your belongings or
business equipment. This will help you recall and prove the market value of
items for insurance and casualty loss claims.
3.
Check on Fiduciary Bonds
Employers who use payroll service providers should ask the provider if they
have a fiduciary bond in place. The bond could protect the employer in the
event of default by the payroll service provider.
4.
Continuity of Operations
Planning
for Businesses How quickly your company can get back to business after
a disaster often depends on emergency planning done today. Start planning now
to improve the likelihood that your company will survive and recover. Review
your emergency plans annually. Just as your business changes over time, so do
your preparedness needs. When you hire new employees or when there are changes
in how your company functions, you should update your plans and inform your people.
5.
Update Emergency
Plans
Emergency plans should be reviewed annually. Individual taxpayers should make
sure they are saving documents everybody should keep including such things as
W-2s, home closing statements and insurance records. Make sure you have a means
of receiving severe weather information; if you have a NOAA Weather Radio, put
fresh batteries in it. Make sure you know what you should do if threatening
weather approaches.
6.
Count
on the IRS In the event of a disaster, the IRS stands ready to help.
The IRS has valuable information you can request if your records are destroyed.
If you have been impacted by a federally declared disaster, you may receive
copies or transcripts of previously filed tax returns free of charge by
submitting Form 4506, Request for Copy of Tax Form, or Form 4506-T, Request for
Transcript of Tax Return, clearly identified as a disaster related request.
Resources
For more information, type Preparing for a Disaster
in the search box on the IRS.gov homepage or
see the following:
·
Disaster
Assistance and Emergency Relief for Individuals and Businesses
·
IRS Publication 584, Casualty, Disaster and
Theft Loss Workbook (PDF)
·
IRS Publication 584-B, Business Casualty,
Disaster and Theft Loss Workbook (PDF)
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