Daily Southtown

GAO report: Millions may miss out on virus relief payments

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WASHINGTON — A government watchdog reported Monday that millions of Americans are in danger of missing coronaviru­s relief payments of up to $1,200 per individual because of incomplete government records.

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 GAOreport on the handling of the $2.6 trillion in support passed by Congress last spring to cushion the impact from a sharp recession triggered by the global pandemic.

GAOsaid 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 by Sept. 30.

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

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 that as of July 31, 5.3 million individual­s had used an online IRS tool for non-filers 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 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 economic impact paymentswe­re made by the

IRS using direct deposit, paper checks and debit cards.

All adults earning up to $75,000 in adjusted gross income annually were entitled to $1,200. That amount steadily declined for those earning more and was phased out entirely for people earning over $99,000. Up to $500 per qualifying child alsowas paid.

In addition, an earlier GAO report found that coronaviru­s relief payments totaling some $1.6 billion went to dead people.

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