Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Taxpayers face overloaded IRS as filing season opens

- Fatima Hussein

Worker shortage, backlogs expected to cause delays

WASHINGTON – Count 30-year-old Ethan Miller among that subset of Americans who are actually eager to file their taxes once income tax filing season opens Monday.

The financial planner who lives in Silver Spring, Maryland, is looking forward to claiming the new deductions that will come from buying a home. He also wants to get a jump on a tax season that promises to bring lots of extra headaches and delays for filers this year.

“I’m trying to get a head start on my taxes as much as possible,” Miller said, adding that he is not too nervous about forecasts of extra delays because he will file online and will not be waiting for too big a refund.

Plenty of other filers, though, may be in for more heartburn.

An IRS worker shortage, an enormous workload from administer­ing pandemic-related programs and stalled legislatio­n that would have given the agency billions of dollars for more expeditiou­sly processing returns will combine to cause taxpayers pain.

“The IRS right now has unacceptab­le backlogs and the customer service that people are receiving is not what the American public deserves,” White House press secretary Jen Psaki acknowledg­ed Friday. “The agency has not been equipped with the resources to adequately serve taxpayers in normal times, let alone during a pandemic.”

She stressed that the problems predate the Biden administra­tion and she urged understand­ing for beleaguere­d workers already saddled with huge backlogs. “It’s going to take some work, it’s going to take some time and I think people need to understand that they need funding,” Psaki said.

Agency officials are already warning filers that “in many areas, we are unable to deliver the amount of service and enforcemen­t that our taxpayers and tax system deserves and needs,” as IRS Commission­er Chuck Rettig put it earlier in the month.

Delays in processing are to be expected – especially because the IRS says it still is working through 2020 tax returns.

During the 2020 budget year, the IRS processed more than 240 million tax returns and issued roughly $736 billion in refunds, including $268 billion in stimulus payments, according to the latest IRS data. In that same time frame, 59.5 million people called or visited an IRS office.

Donald Williamson, an accounting and taxation professor at American University in Washington, said he expects “weeks and weeks” of IRS delays in 2022.

“You can blame Congress or the IRS. I imagine they’re trying to do the right thing but it just adds to further complexity,” he said. “My advice in 2022 is file early, get started tomorrow and try to put your taxes together with a qualified profession­al.”

Williamson said he advises his clients to file electronic­ally, and those who expect hefty refunds in the tens of thousands should expect greater delays. Most backlogged returns were filed on paper and are amended returns.

Deadlines to file have been extended in the past two years due to the pandemic. It is unclear whether this year the agency will offer similar leeway to taxpayers.

There will be plenty of new issues to navigate this year.

For example, individual­s who are eligible to claim the child tax credit and have gotten advance payments throughout the year may get a smaller refund than they normally would see.

People who did not get stimulus checks that they were qualified for as part of the pandemic relief package might yet be able to claim a “recovery rebate credit ” on their taxes.

The IRS anticipate­s that most taxpayers will receive their refund within 21 days of when they file electronic­ally.

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