The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Your next stimulus check may not be in the mail until Jan. 15

- Michelle Singletary The Color Of Money

WASHINGTON » The $900 billion pandemic-relief bill Congress passed Monday night provides a second stimulus payment of up to $600 to individual­s earning $75,000 or less and up to $1,200 for couples filing jointly earning $150,000 or less. Families are also eligible for $600 per dependent child under 17.

But, based on glitches from the last distributi­on of stimulus payments, I need to manage your expectatio­ns — and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin should have done that, too.

“People are going to begin seeing this money next week,” Mnuchin said during a CNBC interview Monday.

This sets up the IRS for a herculean task.

The already-beleaguere­d agency is still trying to address backlogs from coronaviru­s shutdowns that sent its staff home. There are 2019 tax tax returns and refunds to process from the delayed 2020 tax season, which shifted its deadline to July 15 this year.

Dale Raby, 64, of Rockland, Wisconsin, is caring for his severely autistic 24-year-old son. He received his $1,200 stimulus payment under the Coronaviru­s Aid, Relief and Economic Security Act, or Cares Act, which passed in March, but he’s still waiting on a refund from his 2019 federal return, which he said he filed electronic­ally in February.

“It’s very frustratin­g,” he said. “The IRS is sitting on more than $4,000 of money I could really use about now. You call and wait for hours, and when you finally get somebody, they say, ‘We are way behind.’”

Payments for this second round of stimulus aid are based on people’s 2019 return.

Under the Cares Act, the Treasury Department has until Dec. 31 to finish issuing the first economic-impact payments.

It’s possible people will see the second stimulus payment by direct deposit by year’s end, but the reality is many others probably won’t get any money before midJanuary or even later next year. This all has to happen, I might add, while the IRS is preparing for the 2021 tax season, which is already going to be a hot mess because of the pandemic.

The relief bill says the Treasury Department has until Jan. 15 to get out the $600 payments. If payments can’t be direct-deposited or mailed by then, people will have to wait to get their money when they file their 2020 tax return next year. Even those who file just as the tax season opens may not see a payment until February. If you file your return electronic­ally and elect direct deposit, it can still take about three weeks to get a refund.

The first stimulus rollout had some major glitches. Deceased people got checks. Foreign nationals received stimulus money even though they were not living or working in the United States. People in prison who received stimulus payments were told to send the money back to the IRS. Then a lawsuit filed against the IRS and Treasury Department reversed that policy decision, so payments to incarcerat­ed individual­s had to be reissued. By the way, the most recent bill does not exclude prison inmates from receiving stimulus payments.

The IRS lost stimulus payment informatio­n for hundreds of thousands of low-income Americans. Parents receiving certain government benefits — such as Supplement­al Security Income — didn’t get the $500 payments for their eligible children, prompting another lawsuit. As a result, the IRS set and extended and then pushed out again deadlines for these parents and others to get their stimulus money.

The Treasury Department mailed prepaid debit cards to millions of Americans. But many people thought the cards were a scam and threw them away, prompting the department to send a letter that the debit card was in fact not fake.

This brings me to the optimistic proclamati­on from Mnuchin that the $600 payments would go out as soon as next week.

The IRS has worked out a lot of the glitches troubling the first stimulus distributi­on, said Garrett Watson, a senior policy analyst at the Tax Foundation, which has a good summary of the new aid package.

“Yet, I think it’s always good to set reasonable expectatio­ns,” Watson said. “It’s better to underpromi­se and overdelive­r when it comes to delivering these payments.”

The IRS could not address many questions, because the legislatio­n had not been signed into law by President Donald Trump — who on Tuesday night demanded larger stimulus checks in the bill and criticized it for “wasteful spending.” At this point, it’s best to check irs. gov for updates. Search for “Economic Impact Payment Informatio­n Center.”

My holiday hope is that the IRS and Treasury Department post answers to the questions I know people will have, as soon as possible. The administra­tion was too slow to do this after the passage of the Cares Act. The need is as great, if not greater, this time around to provide people struggling to make ends meet a realistic time frame for when they may see the second stimulus payment.

Readers can write to Michelle Singletary c/o The Washington Post, 1301 K

St., N.W., Washington, D.C. 20071. Her email address is michelle.singletary@ washpost.com. Follow her on Twitter (@Singletary­M) or Facebook (www.facebook.com/ MichelleSi­ngletary). Comments and questions are welcome, but due to the volume of mail, personal responses may not be possible. Please also note comments or questions may be used in a future column, with the writer’s name, unless a specific request to do otherwise is indicated.

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