The Internal Revenue Service has awarded Avineon, a provider of information technology, geospatial and program management services, a contract to develop a prototype electronic system for filing and disseminating federal tax lien notices.
Avineon said it will help develop and support a system design for Electronic Lien (E-Lien) software. The new system will streamline processes, reducing costs and time while increasing efficiency, the company said.
The company will also design an E-Lien system capable of sending liens electronically, receiving confirmation and interfacing with the IRS Integrated Financial System.
The IRS files more than 1 million lien documents annually with about 4,000 federal, state and local recording offices. They typically require extensive paperwork because of a lack of minimal standardization. Myriad local statutory requirements force the IRS to adapt to state and local requirements that are burdensome, time-consuming and expensive to manage. Although the IRS current Automated Lien System generates lien notices electronically, the document recorded with the local recording official remains in paper form.
A fully electronic system that eliminates paper documents will reduce costs for both the IRS and state and local offices, George Crump, E-Lien project manager at the IRS, said in a statement.
This is Avineons first win under the companys Treasury Information Processing Support Services-3 contract to provide information systems to the Treasury Department and its bureaus. The company won the TIPSS-3 contract administered by the IRS in October 2005.