Antelope Valley Press

Watchdog: Millions in danger of missing virus relief payouts

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WASHINGTON (AP) — Millions of Americans are in danger of missing Coronaviru­s relief payments of up to $1,200 per individual because of incomplete government records, a government watchdog said in a report issued Monday.

The Government Accountabi­lity Office, Congress’ auditing arm, said that possibly 8.7 million or more individual­s who are eligible for the economic impact payments have yet to receive those payments because of inadequate IRS and Treasury Department records.

That was one of a number of findings in the latest GAO report on the handling of the unpreceden­ted $2.6 trillion in support passed by Congress last spring to cushion the impact from a sharp recession triggered by the global pandemic.

The GAO also called on the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to do a better job in providing guidance to local schools on when they can safely reopen schools.

GAO said that the IRS did implement several recommenda­tions the GAO had made in a June report to make sure those eligible for the payments received them, such as extending the deadline for individual­s who had not filed an income tax return to apply for the payments through Sept. 30.

But GAO said Treasury and the IRS have still failed to update informatio­n on how many eligible recipients have yet to receive funds.

The lack of “such informatio­n could hinder outreach efforts and place potentiall­y millions of individual­s at risk of missing their payment,” the GAO said in its report.

In April, the report said, Treasury estimated that 30 million individual­s — including 16 million on Social Security and railroad pensions and 14 million who do not normally file tax returns — had not received their payments. The IRS then reported as of July 31 that 5.3 million individual­s had used an online IRS tool for nonfilers to help them receive payments.

Those figures would mean that there could be 8.7 million or more individual­s who are eligible for the payments but who have not received them.

The report said that Treasury officials did not state their agreement or disagreeme­nt with GAO recommenda­tions to improve the eligibilit­y lists. But the agency told GAO it was working on an effort to notify around 9 million individual­s that they may be eligible for the payments.

Responding to the report, the IRS said Monday that the effort also includes encouragin­g eligible people who don’t normally file tax returns to register using the online tool at IRS.gov as soon as possible before the Oct. 15 deadline.

The IRS and Treasury have undertaken “a sweeping communicat­ions and outreach effort” to reach eligible people, including distributi­ng materials in more than 35 languages, the IRS said in a statement. It said the effort already has brought in about 7 million people who don’t normally file a return.

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