San Diego Union-Tribune

MILLIONS OF TAX RETURNS HAVE NOT BEEN PROCESSED IN IRS BACKLOG

More than twice as many as normal await completion

- BY DEBORAH B. SOLOMON Solomon writes for New York Times.

Millions of 2021 taxpayer returns filed with the Internal Revenue Service have yet to be completed, and the agency is facing a largerthan-normal backlog at this point in the tax season, the Treasury Department said Tuesday.

More than twice as many tax returns await processing “compared to historical norms at this point in the calendar year,” according to a letter sent to lawmakers by top Treasury and IRS officials.

Most of the backlog relates to paper returns, which take longer to process than those filed electronic­ally. The IRS began this tax season with 8 million unprocesse­d tax returns from the previous year. Because the IRS deals with returns in the order they are received, the agency spent much of this year trying to catch up on older taxes before turning to current ones.

Treasury and IRS officials have blamed the initial backlog on severe resource challenges after Republican lawmakers gutted the agency’s budget in recent years. Staffing shortages and antiquated technology have eroded many of its abilities, a situation that worsened in the wake of the pandemic, when the IRS became the primary conduit for sending stimulus payments to households.

In a letter to lawmakers, Wally Adeyemo, the Treasury Department’s deputy secretary, and Charles P. Rettig, the IRS commission­er, said the agency expected to finish processing all individual tax returns without errors that were received last year by the end of

the week, with business returns filed in 2021 completed “shortly thereafter.”

“Despite this progress, there are real challenges ahead,” Adeyemo and Rettig

wrote. They noted that “because the IRS entered this filing season with a significan­t backlog, millions of paper returns received in 2022 have not yet been processed.”

The backlog has prompted stiff criticism from Republican­s and Democrats, who have demanded answers about why millions of taxpayers have waited months to get their tax returns and federal refunds.

The Biden administra­tion has pointed to the agency’s budget as a reason for its woes, saying it needs more money to hire qualified staff and improve its technology.

“The IRS has been stretched thin at a time when its workforce, already depleted to 1970s levels, has been battling personal and familial health challenges posed by the pandemic, resulting in fewer employees working on inventory at IRS campuses in the past two years than in any recent period in the agency’s history,” the officials wrote in their letter.

President Joe Biden has called for investing $80 billion in the agency over a decade to help crack down on tax cheats, estimating that would raise $400 billion in tax revenue. Republican­s have seized on the IRS’ problems as proof that it should not be given more money or responsibi­lity, with at least one lawmaker calling for the tax collector to be abolished.

In a call with reporters, a senior Treasury official said the IRS had hired 1,500 new staff members and diverted existing employees to help clear the backlog. But much more work remains to be done. In March, the agency said it intended to hire 10,000 employees in the next year and planned to make about half those hires in the following few months.

Audit rates for millionair­es have fallen by 70 percent over the past decade, the official said, while fewer than 20 percent of calls to the IRS are answered.

The Treasury’s taxpayer advocate is expected to release a report Wednesday further documentin­g the agency’s shortcomin­gs.

 ?? STEFANI REYNOLDS NYT ?? The IRS had hired 1,500 new staff members and diverted existing employees to help clear the backlog.
STEFANI REYNOLDS NYT The IRS had hired 1,500 new staff members and diverted existing employees to help clear the backlog.

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