The Mercury News

IRS hung up on 8 million filers’ calls

Agency’s chief tells Congress it’s due to cuts in budget

- By Stephen Ohlemacher

WASHINGTON — The IRS’ overloaded phone system hung up on more than 8 million taxpayers this filing season as the agency cut millions of dollars from taxpayer services to help pay to enforce President Barack Obama’s health law.

For those who weren’t disconnect­ed, only 40 percent actually got through to a person. And many of those people had to wait on hold for more than 30 minutes, IRS Commission­er John Koskinen said Wednesday.

The number of disconnect­ed callers spiked just as taxpayers were being hit with new requiremen­ts under the health law. Last year, the phone system dropped 360,000 calls, Koskinen said.

For the first time, taxpayers had to report whether they had health insurance last year on their tax returns. Those who received government subsidies had to respond whether they received the correct amount. People without insurance faced fines, collected by the IRS, if they did not qualify for an exemption.

A new staff report by Republican­s on the House Ways and Means Committee criticized the agency’s spending priorities. The report said the IRS diverted $ 134 million in user fees that had been spent on customer service last year to other areas this year.

“It looks to me like you’re purposely harming taxpayers,” Rep. Kristi Noem of South Dakota told Koskinen at a hearing Wednesday.

Koskinen said the user fees were spent on computer upgrades to implement the health law as well as a new law requiring foreign banks to report informatio­n about U. S. account holders.

He said budget cuts approved by Congress left him no choice. The agency’s budget has been cut by $ 1.2 billion since 2010. It now stands at $ 10.9 billion.

“Customer service, both on the phone and in person has been far worse than anyone would want,” Koskinen told the Ways and Means oversight subcommitt­ee. “It’s simply a matter of not having enough people to answer the phones and provide service at our walkin sites as a result of cuts to our budget.”

Republican­s in Congress adamantly oppose Obama’s health law, so some have been working to starve the IRS of funds just as its role in implementi­ng the law ramps up.

It won’t work, Koskinen said. The IRS is required by law to help implement the health program and the foreign reporting law, leaving the agency with few other places to cut. He said the agency requested a total of $ 600 million over the past two years for computer upgrades to deal with the new laws.

“In both years the Congress gave us zero dollars so we had no choice but to look elsewhere,” Koskinen said.

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