The Daily Telegraph

HMRC missed 100,000 calls during IT ‘shuttering’

- By Rachel Mortimer

HM Revenue & Customs missed the calls of almost 100,000 taxpayers when its phone lines went down last week in the run up to a crucial tax deadline.

No one was able to reach the taxman on the phone between the afternoon of Thursday Dec 1 until Monday Dec 5, with the department also forced to shut some online services.

The four-day outage came in the runup to the online self-assessment deadline next month and during a crucial window for millions of taxpayers to contact HMRC before Christmas.

The taxman blamed the blackout on an IT glitch which meant users of its web services “experience­d lost connection and a slow running service”.

This included its New Computeris­ed Transit System (NCTS) – used when moving goods in and out of the country – and PAYE services used by employers. The outage was so severe that HMRC advised traders delivering goods not to travel to ports.

In a letter to MPS, Jim Harra, chief executive of HMRC, said: “In order to restore the performanc­e of [the] NCTS and keep freight flowing across the border, we decided to ‘shutter’ PAYE Online from users and to close all of our telephony helplines.”

Mr Harra estimated the taxman had missed 99,000 calls during the outage.

It took HMRC four days to restore its services and it has come under heavy criticism for leaving taxpayers in the lurch.

Harriett Baldwin, the Conservati­ve MP who chairs the Treasury select committee, said: “It’s worrying to hear 99,000 taxpayer calls were potentiall­y missed during this outage.

“I am especially concerned that crucial income tax, customs and telephone systems appear so vulnerable.

“HMRC must investigat­e what went wrong here, and report back to us on what lessons can be learnt as soon as possible.”

Millions of taxpayers are also adjusting to a deluge of tax rises announced in last month’s Autumn Statement, when Jeremy Hunt, the Chancellor, reduced the threshold for the top rate of income tax, extended the freeze on the personal allowance and cut tax-free allowances on dividends and capital gains tax.

Mr Harra added that all of HMRC’S services were now operating normally.

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