Las Vegas Review-Journal

IRS SAYS IT’S BUSY ROOTING OUT FR AUD

- Casey.harrison@gmgvegas.com / 702 990-2681 / @Casey_harrison1

review. By August 2022, after reaching out multiple times, the IRS told him they couldn’t find the applicatio­n, Robeck said. By September 2022, Robeck reached out to Cortez Masto’s team after being told by the IRS the applicatio­n was still nowhere to be found.

That started a monthslong push by the senator to press the IRS for updates with Bridge’s claim, Cortez Masto’s office told the Sun. After reviewing Bridge’s case, Cortez Masto subsequent­ly urged the IRS “dozens of times” to not only find but expedite and process the applicatio­n.

“They got on the IRS and started working with them while we tried to work directly with the IRS as well,” Robeck said. “But finally, we got word through the senator’s office that they had somebody assigned to our case because it was considered a more challengin­g case.”

By March of this year, Robeck still hadn’t heard back from the IRS about the tax credit and had told Cortez Masto’s office plans were in place to shut down the Alta office.

As a last-ditch effort, Bridge submitted another applicatio­n to the IRS. Meantime, Cortez Masto pushed to have the case transferre­d to the Taxpayers Advocate Office, which her office said would assure the case would at least be heard.

As May came, Robeck still hadn’t heard back about the credit. Plans to close the Alta Drive office started looking more like a reality.

“They (the IRS) would just say we’re working on it, and that was the only thing they would say,” Robeck said. “And that wasn’t very helpful.

Fortunes finally changed for Bridge in early June, when it was notified that its claim had been approved, and the tax credit would be dispersed in the coming weeks. That relief arrived June 30.

“Mental health care is essential for so many Nevadans, and it was unacceptab­le for the IRS to drag its feet on this critical tax relief for an organizati­on serving thousands of Nevadans in Las Vegas,” Cortez Masto said in a statement. “I am pleased Bridge Counseling will be able to keep its doors open and continue to provide these essential services to our communitie­s.”

Bridge, which opened in 1971, operates two of Nevada’s eight Certified Community Behavioral Health Centers, or CCBHCS, and are the only two that serve Clark County, home to more than 70% of the state’s population.

A CCBHC is a federally certified model that is required to serve anyone who requests mental health or substance abuse care — regardless of their ability to pay, according to the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administra­tion.

When contacted by the Sun, an IRS spokesman said the agency did not discuss individual cases.

But late last month, IRS Commission­er Danny Werfel said at a roundtable discussion in Atlanta that the agency had “successful­ly” cleared a backlog of valid ERC claims. Now, the IRS is placing resources and institutin­g additional procedures to deal with potential ERC fraud, according to a release.

“The further we get from the pandemic, we believe the percentage of legitimate claims coming in is declining,” Werfel told attendees at the Atlanta forum. “Instead, we continue to see more and more questionab­le claims coming in following the onslaught of misleading marketing from promoters pushing businesses to apply (for the credit). To address this, the IRS continues to intensify our compliance work in this area.”

The IRS notes the tax credit was enacted by Congress as part of the Coronaviru­s Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act (CARES Act) in March 2020 to help businesses beleaguere­d by the pandemic and added that “aggressive marketing” from third parties has overshadow­ed the program. Businesses can file a claim for the credit until April 15, 2025.

Since the credit’s inception, more than 2.5 million claims have been filed, and the agency said the glut and complexity of amended tax returns that accompany the credit contribute­d to long processing times.

“The IRS has made substantia­l progress on these claims this year,” the agency said in its release, noting 99% of claims were approximat­ely 3 months old as of mid-july. “The additional effort has been critical in helping legitimate businesses receive the money they can claim legally under the law.”

For businesses going through a similar experience redeeming the tax credit, Robeck recommends reaching out to a federal lawmaker, whether that be Cortez Masto, U.S. Sen. Jacky Rosen, or any of Nevada’s four members of the U.S. House.

“I will continue to make sure our government works for Nevadans,” Cortez Masto said. “No matter what.”

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