ATO Practice Statement Law Administration

PS LA 2003/10

SUBJECT: Management of Priority Technical Issues
PURPOSE: To advise of procedures to ensure that the highest priority technical issues are appropriately prioritised, managed and maintained on Siebel

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FOI status: may be released
This Practice Statement is issued under the authority of the Commissioner and must be read in conjunction with Law Administration Practice Statement PS LA 1998/1. It must be followed by Tax officers unless doing so creates unintended consequences. Where this occurs officers must follow their Business Line's escalation process.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
STATEMENT
1
Definitions
PTI Committee
PTI process guide
Determination of priority
Approval process
Potential PTIs with unassessed risks
Identification of potential issues by TCN or CoE officers
Escalation to the PTIC
Management of PTIs
Allocation of PTI Owners
Responsibilities of SES Risk Owners and Risk Contact
Responsibilities of PTI Owners
Responsibilities of PTI SES
Responsibilities of Band 2 SES officers
Recording on Siebel
Finalising PTIs
Attachment A
Attachment B

STATEMENT

1. This practice statement requires Tax Office staff to follow special procedures in relation to Priority Technical Issues (PTIs). These procedures are designed to ensure that processes for identification and resolution of PTIs are aligned with the Tax Office Risk Management policy and corporate strategies and processes to address risks. They are also designed to ensure that proper planning, management and governance is applied to all PTIs.

2. Accordingly, this practice statement must be read in conjunction with PS CM 2003/02 Risk and Issues Management, which provides guidance on the risk management framework within the Tax Office and PS CM 2003/03 (G) Corporate Management: Governance.

3. The outcomes of the approach outlined in this practice statement should result in:

optimal integration of the resolution of PTIs with other elements of strategies developed to address areas of risk
the Tax Office's senior technical officers working on the highest level technical issues
correct identification and prioritisation of technical issues with systemic implications that cross taxpayer markets, industry segments or revenue line boundaries
optimal use of intelligence gathered from technical issues in identifying and assessing areas of risk, and
conformance with corporate governance requirements through more accurate reporting (see PS CM 2003/03 Corporate Management: Governance).

4. Strategies developed by business lines to address particular risks often identify a technical issue that requires resolution. The Tax Counsel Network (TCN) and Centres of Expertise (CoE) are actively involved where the resolution of the technical issue is important to addressing the risk.

5. Nevertheless, nothing in this practice statement should preclude the ability of an SES Risk Owner (the business line SES officer with responsibility for the management of the risk) to request special assistance from TCN (or vice versa) where a corporate need exists, including collaborative processes for issue identification in relation to significant cases.

6. In urgent situations, where it is not practical at the time to follow the processes set out in this practice statement, a matter can be referred directly to a Deputy Chief Tax Counsel (DCTC) or a Senior Executive Service (SES) officer from a Centre of Expertise (CoE). However, the processes in this practice statement should be considered and applied as soon as possible after the referral.

7. This practice statement does not alter existing business line escalation processes for referring technical issues to a CoE as prescribed by Law Administration Practice Statement PS LA 2004/4 Referral of issues to Centres of Expertise for the creation of precedential ATO view, and early engagement of internal technical specialists in active compliance cases and litigation. It only applies to work that has been (or is likely to be) escalated to SES level from Tax Office risk management processes and potentially requires specialist attention by TCN and/or CoE resources.

8. The emphasis in this practice statement is on technical issue resolution and does not cover the management of cases which may depend upon such resolution, or the wider implementation of the view taken.

9. In resolving the technical issues, it is essential that all relevant business lines and stakeholders cultivate productive working relationships to that end. The respective responsibilities of a business line, a CoE and TCN are set out in the Online Resource Centre for Law Administration (ORCLA). It is important that all officers ensure they provide timely and constructive feedback about the capability of, and the level of assistance provided by, the other officers with whom they have been working. This feedback should be provided formally to the respective areas of those officers when deemed appropriate.

10. It is important that PTIs are actively managed to effect a timely resolution. The resolution of a PTI has priority over other work, unless that work has been risk assessed to a higher level than that associated with the PTI. Progress of PTIs is reviewed regularly by the PTI Committee (see paragraph 13 of this practice statement).

Definitions

11. For the purposes of this practice statement, a PTI is a technical issue which has been ranked in accordance with this practice statement to be of Priority 1, 2 or 3 (see paragraph 17 of this practice statement).

12. For the purposes of this practice statement, a technical issue is an issue of an interpretative nature that requires resolution by way of:

the formation and/or application of the ATO view of the law
provision of advice, including all policy advice or need for legislative change, to the ATO Executive, the Department of the Treasury[1] or the Government, and/or
clearance of content, relating to any of the above, in a Tax Office publication; for example, TaxPack and Taxpayer Alerts.

PTI Committee

13. A corporate level PTI Committee (PTIC) chaired by the Chief Tax Counsel has been established to provide guidance and direction, and to monitor the management of PTIs within the established corporate framework. Issues that become 'blocked' at any stage can be escalated to PTIC for assistance (see paragraphs 25 and 26 of this practice statement).

14. An expanded Strategic PTIC, chaired by the Second Commissioner (Law), is also held twice yearly to discuss progress of issues, evaluate priorities and monitor alignment of the PTI process with business line risk management approaches.

PTI process guide

15. In addition to what is outlined in this practice statement, detailed procedures for prioritising, approving and managing PTIs are outlined in the PTI process guide.

Determination of priority

16. Prioritisation will only be applied to those technical issues which are considered by an SES Risk Owner to be potential PTIs based on an assessment of the risks involved. All issues raised by the National Tax Liaison Group or a National Tax Liaison Group sub-committee must also be subject to risk assessment and prioritisation.

17. Table 1 below sets out the relative priority levels of PTIs and how these are derived. The method is based on the premise that the level of priority assigned will be obtained by considering together:

the rating of the risk associated with a technical issue as determined during formal business line risk assessment processes using the ATO Risk Matrix, and
the importance (critical, required or incidental) of resolution of the technical issue as part of the whole mitigation strategy for that risk.

Table 1 Prioritisation Matrix
Responsibility of Risk Owner Joint Responsibility of SES Risk Owner with a DCTC or an SES officer from a CoE
Risk Rating as per Risk Rating Matrix Importance of resolution of a potential PTI (Priority Technical Issue) to the Risk Mitigation Strategy
Risk Rating as per Risk Rating Matrix Critical Element Required Element Incidental Element
Severe PTI Priority 1 PTI Priority 1 PTI Priority 2
High PTI Priority 1 PTI Priority 2 PTI Priority 3
Significant PTI Priority 2 PTI Priority 3 PTI Priority 3
Moderate PTI Priority 3 Business as usual Business as usual
Low Business as usual Business as usual Business as usual

Critical Element means that the risk mitigation strategy totally or very heavily depends on resolving the technical issue. For example, substantial education and enforcement action cannot proceed until a public ruling issues. The resolution of the technical issue via the public ruling is on the 'critical path' of the mitigation strategy.

Required Element means that the technical issue clearly must be resolved and is an important element of the overall risk mitigation strategy. However, that strategy can proceed and is not dependent on the technical resolution, at least initially. The resolution is 'essential' but not 'urgent'. As the deadline for the technical resolution approaches a 'required' decision may escalate in importance to 'critical'.

Incidental Element means that resolution of the technical issue is an ancillary element of the overall risk mitigation strategy. The resolution would, for example, clarify the ATO view but if the matter is not resolved there would not be a major impact on the success of the overall strategy.

For example, a technical issue will be designated Priority 1 if the associated risk is judged to have a risk rating of high and the resolution of the technical issue is a critical element in the risk mitigation strategy.

By way of contrast, if the associated risk is rated as moderate but resolution of the technical issue is only an incidental element in the risk mitigation strategy, the resolution of the technical issue will not be managed as a PTI and will be resolved by existing business-as-usual processes by the relevant business line technical area including reference to a CoE where creation of a precedential ATO view is required.

Approval process

18. Where the related risk has already been identified, assessed and rated following approved business line procedures, and the issue is considered potentially to be a PTI requiring specialist attention by TCN or CoE resources, the priority of the issue should be determined following the methodology in paragraph 17 of this practice statement. This determination must be confirmed by agreement between a minimum of two SES officers - the SES Risk Owner together with either a DCTC or an SES officer from the relevant CoE, as follows:

Issues where a precedential ATO view is not required - by agreement of the SES Risk Owner and a DCTC.
Issues where a precedential ATO view is required - by agreement of the SES Risk Owner and an SES CoE officer. Where it is proposed to assign a Priority 1 level to the issue, the proposal must be referred by the SES CoE officer to a DCTC for endorsement.

19. It is only after this approval process is complete, and only if the technical issue is agreed to be Priority 1, 2 or 3, that appropriate TCN and/or CoE resources may be allocated to the resolution of the technical issue as a PTI. The officer who is allocated will be designated as the PTI Owner (see also paragraphs 29 to 31 and 33 of this practice statement). The relevant business line officers are expected to provide assistance to the PTI Owner in the resolution of the technical issue.

20. Any issue that is not agreed to be Priority 1, 2 or 3 is, by default, considered to be business-as-usual and will be resolved through the usual business line or CoE processes; for example, finalisation of a private ruling or the creation of an ATO ID.[2] It should be noted that the precedent setting function of a CoE generally falls within the description of business-as-usual.

Potential PTIs with unassessed risks

21. It is recognised that a technical issue, or a series of related technical issues, might be an important source of intelligence about risks which have not been assessed and rated in accordance with approved business line procedures. Such issues might be identified from a wide range of sources including provision of advice work, field work, industry and professional liaison, the media, etcetera. In these circumstances a potential PTI can be prioritised pending a formal risk assessment following approved business line procedures.

22. In this situation, the two relevant SES officers (see paragraph 18 of this practice statement) will consider the apparent level of risk and whether the resolution of the technical issue is likely to be a critical, required or incidental element of the risk mitigation strategy. This process will allow the early allocation of technical resources, pending formal risk assessment and strategy development which should be expedited by the SES Risk Owner as soon as possible.

23. Prioritisation in these circumstances will be subject to formal risk assessment and strategy development in accordance with approved business line procedures. These should be reviewed at least every three months in view of the most up to date information available about the nature of the risk.

Identification of potential issues by TCN or CoE officers

24. In the course of their day-to-day work, TCN or CoE officers may identify that a particular issue involves sufficient risk that it is potentially a PTI. In these circumstances, the officer must refer the issue to the appropriate business line gatekeeper for consideration of the risk.

Escalation to the PTIC

25. In the event that the two relevant SES officers (see paragraph 18 of this practice statement) fail to agree that an issue is a PTI, a PTI proposal and supporting submission may be referred to the PTIC, subject to engaging the Deputy Commissioner (DC). Where such an issue crosses more than one line the PTIC will, in conjunction with the relevant DC, decide where accountability for that issue will belong.

26. Where resolution of a PTI becomes impeded or is not being progressed in a timely manner, the issue can be escalated to PTIC for assistance. This is in addition to the escalation process undertaken by PTI Owners and SES Risk Owners for issues that miss milestone and completion dates (see paragraph 28 of this practice statement).

Management of PTIs

27. Consistent with good management principles, PTIs must be supported from the outset by a plan which sets out the treatment strategy for resolution of the issue. The plan, which is documented by way of the resolution schedule, should be agreed to by the PTI Owner, PTI SES[3] and SES Risk Owner, and must state an expected completion date and dates for key milestones or activities which form part of the treatment strategy.

28. Progress against the plan must be regularly reviewed. Where it becomes apparent that a key milestone will be missed, requiring a change to the expected completion date, the relevant SES Band 2 officers[4] must be provided with an explanation and a revised resolution schedule. Their approval to extend the key milestone and completion dates must be obtained.

Allocation of PTI Owners

29. Each PTI will be assigned a PTI Owner (see paragraph 19 of this practice statement). The responsibilities of the PTI Owner are described in paragraph 33 of this practice statement.

30. PTIs requiring the establishment of a precedential ATO view will be assigned to a CoE officer as PTI Owner. Issues not requiring establishment of a precedential ATO view will be assigned to a TCN officer as PTI Owner. TCN may also become involved in precedential matters, following the requirements of paragraph 31 of this practice statement, but ordinarily only after the matter has been referred to the appropriate CoE. The need for the involvement of TCN should be assessed immediately after the issue has been referred to the CoE and reviewed as work on the issue progresses.

31. The following requirements also apply:

For Priority 1 and 2 issues, the PTI Owner assigned must be of at least an EL 2 classification.
Where the suggested treatment of the technical issue is a public ruling or legislative amendment an appropriate TCN officer must have involvement with the issue.
Potential PTIs associated with legislative projects approved by the Policy Implementation Forum are to be approved by an SES CoE officer although the PTI Owner will be an appropriate TCN officer.
For Priority 1 issues an appropriate Senior Tax Counsel must have involvement with the issue, for example, approving a public ruling.

Responsibilities of SES Risk Owners and Risk Contact

32. The SES Risk Owner, together with the nominated Risk Contact who reports to them, is responsible for:

managing the overall mitigation strategy (or project, should one exist, of which resolution of the PTI is a part) for the relevant risk including, for example, Taxpayer Alerts, call centre scripts, communication strategies, systems requirements, follow up compliance strategies, advice to Government
ensuring that the risk associated with the PTI is recorded and maintained on the ATO or business line Risk Register where relevant
with the PTI Owner, regularly reviewing the level of risk and the importance of resolving the PTI, and therefore the priority level of the PTI
advising the PTI Owner of any new intelligence, changes to the importance of resolution of the technical issue to the risk mitigation strategy or changes to the rating of the associated risk
ensuring that the PTI Owner is given every assistance in resolving the technical issue
liaising with the PTI Owner and stakeholders in articulating the technical issue and ensuring the resolution strategy deals appropriately with the business risks
with the PTI Owner and PTI SES, developing a plan to resolve the PTI, including the establishment of milestones and deadlines and the conduct of a consultative process
in consultation with the PTI Owner, engaging as early as possible all relevant stakeholders including other business lines and parties external to the Tax Office
regularly reviewing progress of resolution of the technical issue (with the PTI Owner, PTI SES and stakeholders) to ensure that milestones and deadlines are being met and/or updated
with the PTI Owner, escalating changes to key milestones and completion dates to relevant Band 2 SES officers for approval
ensuring that any related cases are maintained and managed in the appropriate case management systems and finalised once the technical issue is resolved
determining any residual risk and evaluating the risk mitigation strategy on completion, and
ensuring that all relevant information about management of the risk is maintained in Risk-PTI case on Siebel.

Responsibilities of PTI Owners

33. PTI Owners are responsible for:

liaising with the SES Risk Owner, Risk Contact and all other stakeholders in articulating the technical issue
with the SES Risk Owner, Risk Contact and PTI SES, developing a plan to resolve the PTI, including the establishment of milestones and deadlines and the conduct of consultative processes
regularly reviewing progress of resolution of the technical issue (with the SES Risk Owner, Risk Contact, PTI SES and stakeholders) to ensure that milestones and deadlines are being met and/or updated
with the SES Risk Owner and Risk Contact, escalating changes to key milestone dates and completion dates to relevant Band 2 SES officers for approval
coordinating all work undertaken in relation to the resolution of the technical issue (including work done in the business line)
anticipating downstream or consequential impacts and ensuring that they are addressed in the strategy to resolve the technical issue. For example, whether the issuing of a public ruling on income tax matters might give rise to the need for a companion public ruling on GST or FBT (or vice versa)
assisting the SES Risk Owner and Risk Contact to engage as early as possible all relevant stakeholders including other business lines and parties external to the Tax Office
with the SES Risk Owner and Risk Contact, regularly reviewing the level of risk and the importance of resolving the PTI, and therefore the priority level of the PTI, and
ensuring that all relevant information about management of the technical issue is maintained in the PTI case on Siebel.

Responsibilities of PTI SES

34. PTI SES are responsible for:

ensuring appropriate resources are allocated to resolve the issue
with the PTI Owner, SES Risk Owner and Risk Contact, developing a plan to resolve the PTI, including the establishment of milestones and deadlines and the conduct of consultative processes
regularly reviewing progress of resolution of the technical issue (with the SES Risk Owner, PTI Owner and stakeholders) to ensure that milestones and deadlines are being met and/or updated, and
providing leadership and assistance to the PTI Owner and/or SES Risk Owner where required.

Responsibilities of Band 2 SES officers

35. Band 2 SES officers are responsible for:

the overall management of PTIs, including management of the technical issue and management of the associated risk
the review and approval of changes to key milestones and expected completion dates, and
providing leadership and assistance to the PTI Owner and/or SES Risk Owner where required.

Recording on Siebel

36. The corporate information technology system for managing the PTI process is Siebel and its proper use consistent with this practice statement is mandatory.[5]

37. A Risk-PTI case is used for management of the risk and escalation of the PTI proposal, whereas a PTI case is used for management of the technical issue after approval of the PTI proposal.

38. The Intranet contains detailed instructions on how to create and maintain a Risk-PTI case and a PTI case on Siebel.

39. Case officers should note that:

a PTI case should focus on the issues rather than any associated audit case or taxpayer circumstances. They should not contain details that may identify a taxpayer unless those details are a matter of public record
an officer who identifies an issue but finds an apparent Risk-PTI or PTI case for that issue already on Siebel should liaise with the owner of the case to clarify the situation and/or contribute new intelligence, and
the technical issue should be accurately described so that its full scope is clearly understood. Judgment needs to be exercised regarding whether a PTI case should be created for groups of related technical issues or as separate PTI cases. For example, where a number of related issues are to be dealt with in a single public ruling it would be usual for all of those issues to be managed in a single PTI case.

40. Failure to properly manage Risk-PTI and PTI cases on Siebel could lead to major risks going undetected or risks not being properly managed or prioritised. Accordingly, Risk-PTI cases and PTI cases:

should be linked to other Risk-PTI cases, PTI cases, audit cases, private ruling requests, litigation etc, as relevant
should at a minimum, be reviewed and updated monthly, especially:

-
the resolution schedule
-
the current action and treatment status, and
-
progress against key milestones and completion dates, and

should be updated immediately the facts, priority or status of the risk and/or importance of resolving the technical issue change.

Finalising PTIs

41. A PTI is ordinarily ready for finalisation when the issue has been resolved by one or more of the methods of resolution outlined in paragraph 12 of this practice statement. However, a PTI should not be finalised until the engagement of the PTI Owner is no longer required in relation to the particular issue. Where the PTI results in litigation, the PTI case must be closed and managed in the Litigation Case on Siebel.

42. In some instances, there may be a need for the PTI Owner to continue to be involved and for the PTI to remain open, even though an ATO view has been established. For example, a final ruling may have issued but it is expected to be challenged. Similarly, if a draft ruling has issued, the PTI cannot be finalised until the ruling has been issued in final form. Also, although an ATO view has been established, the issue may have been referred to Treasury for consideration of policy implications, requiring the PTI Owner to continue their involvement until Treasury has reached a conclusion on the policy question.

43. Once the PTI has been finalised, the SES Risk Owner is responsible for ensuring that any dependent cases or other outstanding actions with regard to the overall risk mitigation strategy are completed as appropriate.

44. Proper risk management requires that the risk be reassessed after important elements of the strategy are implemented. For example, it would be necessary to assess the residual risk after issue of a public ruling.[6] It also requires an evaluation of the risk mitigation strategy including, for example, the contribution of any public ruling, private ruling or other communication of the ATO view, issued as part of the strategy. Such evaluation should be an integral component of the overall documented and structured approach for identifying, assessing, prioritising and treating the risk.

Attachment A

Attachment B

Amendment history

Date of amendment Part Comment
13 May 2010 Other references Updated
September 2009 Various Updated to allow for requirements to record and manage Risk-PTI and PTI cases on Siebel and procedural changes in regard to litigation.
Contact details Updated
9 January 2009 Various Update to allow for practice management changes introduced in July 2008, including escalation to Band 2 SES.
28 February 2008 Contact details Updated
4 December 2006 Paragraph 16 Update link for ATO Risk Matrix.
1 July 2006 Various Update hyperlinks.
Paragraph 29 (third dot point) Rewritten for clarification.
Contact details Updated
1 June 2005 Paragraph 12 Include reference to priority private binding rulings.
7 April 2005 Paragraphs 4, 5, 6, 13, 15 and 24 Rewritten and re-inserted.
Paragraph 12 Addition of 'an interpretative nature'.
Paragraphs 7-12 and 35-38 Rewritten for clarification.

Date of Issue: 6 April 2005

Date of Effect: 6 April 2005

[1]
See PS CM 2003/14 Provision of formal Tax Office advice to Treasury.

[2]
Where an issue that has arisen (for example, from a private ruling request, compliance activity or a call centre request) requires an ATO precedential view to be established and promulgated.

[3]
In the case of PTIs requiring a precedential ATO view, the PTI SES will be the relevant CoE Manager. In the case of PTIs that do not require a precedential ATO view, the PTI SES will be the relevant DCTC.

[4]
Further details are provided in the PTI process guide.

[5]
See PS LA 2002/16 Mandatory use of ATO Information Technology systems for interpretative work.

[6]
See also Part 13 of the Public Rulings Manual.

File 2002/010803, 03/11927-28, 03/11931

Related Practice Statements:
PS CM 2003/02
PS CM 2003/05
PS CM 2003/14
PS LA 2003/3
PS LA 2002/16
PS LA 2005/10

Other References:
ATO Risk Matrix
ORCLA
Public Rulings Manual
PTI process guide
PTI Proposal template
PTI homepage
How to create & manage a Risk-PTI case in Siebel
How to create & manage a PTI case in Siebel

Subject References:
priority technical issues
PTI
risk management
significant issues

Authorised by:
Michael D'Ascenzo

Other business lines consulted: All

PS LA 2003/10 history
  Date: Version:
  7 September 2009 Updated statement
You are here 13 May 2010 Updated statement
  23 July 2010 Updated statement
  5 January 2011 Updated statement
  18 May 2012 Archived
This practice statement was originally published on 6 April 2005. Versions published from September 2009 are available electronically - refer to the online version of the practice statement. Versions published prior to this date are not available electronically. If needed, these can be requested by emailing TCNLawPublishingandPolicy@ato.gov.au.

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