San Diego Union-Tribune

IRS TO REACH OUT ON RELIEF CHECKS

Agency chief addresses nonpayment­s

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The head of the IRS, on the defensive over millions of Americans in danger of missing coronaviru­s relief payments, said Wednesday the agency is reaching out to low-income and homeless people, military personnel and veterans and those with limited English to notify them they may be eligible for the aid.

People who don’t normally file tax returns are among those being targeted, Internal Revenue Service Commission­er Charles Rettig told a hearing by a House oversight panel.

A congressio­nal watchdog found that millions could miss the payments of up to $1,200 per individual because of incomplete government records. Nearly 9 million individual­s who are eligible for the so-called economic impact payments hadn’t yet received them, the Government Accountabi­lity Office recently estimated.

“People can’t afford to just wait. They need that assistance now,” said Democratic Rep. Gerald Connolly of Virginia, who heads the House Oversight Committee’s government operations panel.

A day after cutting off talks with Democratic leaders in Congress over a new COVID-19 relief package, President Donald Trump pressed Wednesday for passage of fresh $1,200 relief checks, among a few other items.

The universal payments were mandated in late March as part of Congress’ unpreceden­ted $2.6 trillion in aid to cushion the blow from the staggering recession and economic shutdowns set off by the global pandemic. Since then, Rettig testified, the IRS has delivered about 170 million payments totaling over $270 billion, mostly by direct deposit but also in paper checks or prepaid debit cards.

“Although the IRS has sent out the vast majority of these payments, it contin

ues its extensive outreach efforts into the historical­ly underserve­d communitie­s of our nation,” he told the hearing.

All adults earning up to $75,000 in adjusted gross income annually are entitled to $1,200 ($2,400 for married couples filing jointly) — with those amounts steadily declining for those earning more and phasing out entirely for people earning over $99,000. There are payments of up to $500 for each qualifying child.

Lawmakers on the panel decried the diminished funding for the IRS, now further strained by the pandemic. Delayed income tax refunds, hampered audit and enforcemen­t efforts, and a revenue drain for the Treasury are the results, they said. Technology lapses in an outdated agency system forced the shutdown of call centers and Taxpayer Assistance Centers in this year’s filing season.

Funding for the IRS, long a punching bag for Republican lawmakers who have accused it of overreachi­ng into taxpayers’ lives, has plummeted by about 21 percent since 2010.

An independen­t IRS watchdog has warned that the funding cuts have eroded the agency’s ability to upgrade its technology and fulfill its role of collecting taxes and enforcing the law to prevent cheating.

Democrats charged that the limited resources have brought a double standard of stricter auditing for lowincome people while the aff luent can hide earnings and claim dubious deductions to escape their full tax obligation­s. “Some taxpayers, often the most wealthy among us, including potentiall­y the current president of the United States, fail to properly pay their taxes,” Connolly said.

He cited Trump’s having claimed a $70,000 deduction for hair styling expenses during his TV show “The Apprentice.”

“Not a deduction available to most of us,” quipped Connolly.

Trump declared hundreds of millions in losses in recent years, thereby allowing him to pay just $750 in federal income tax the year he entered the White House, and no income tax at all in 11 of the 18 years reviewed by The New York Times report last week.

 ?? TASOS KATOPODIS AP ?? IRS Commission­er Charles Rettig testified at a House Oversight hearing on Wednesday.
TASOS KATOPODIS AP IRS Commission­er Charles Rettig testified at a House Oversight hearing on Wednesday.

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