Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Even if the shutdown ends today, the IRS may not issue a timely tax refund

Concern about if staff can handle the workload grows

- Los Angeles Times (TNS)

WASHINGTON – This already was going to be a challengin­g year to fill out your federal tax returns after major tax-law changes took effect in 2018.

Then the political dispute over the U.s.-mexico border wall sent most Internal Revenue Service workers home last month.

Now, with the government partially shut down as tax-filing season approaches Jan. 28, there’s growing concern about whether a skeletal staff of IRS employees can handle the workload.

The Trump administra­tion plans to call more IRS employees back to work – without pay – to process tax refunds.

But even if the shutdown ends soon, the damage to this tax season might already have taken place because of less training time for IRS employees, difficulty hiring seasonal workers to help process returns and a slowdown in getting crucial IRS guidance to tax preparers.

“It’s the biggest tax reform change in 30 years. There are going to be many, many millions more questions that are asked. You’ve got a shutdown. You’ve got fewer employees,” said Tony Reardon, national president of the National Treasury Employees Union, which represents IRS workers.

“To me, that is all a big brew that spells potential trouble,” he said.

The IRS has difficulti­es processing the roughly 150 million annual individual tax returns already as the agency has been by hit by staff reductions and political controvers­y in recent years.

On last year’s filing deadline, there was a partial failure of the IRS electronic system that enables Americans to submit their returns online. The problem kept millions of Americans from meeting the midnight deadline and led the IRS to grant a penaltyfre­e, one-day extension.

“Filing season is busy and compressed and challengin­g for everyone on a normal basis,” said Edward Karl, vice president of taxation for the American Institute of CPAS. “This will be particular­ly challengin­g year.”

The IRS is among about a quarter of federal agencies whose funding lapsed on Dec. 22 after President Trump and congressio­nal Democrats couldn’t agree on appropriat­ions because of Trump’s demand for $5.7 billion to fund the border wall. Trump had promised repeatedly during his presidenti­al campaign that Mexico would pay for the wall.

About 70,000 IRS employees – roughly 88 percent of the workforce – have been furloughed, according to the IRS’ shutdown contingenc­y plan. Issuing tax refunds is not among the agency tasks that would be allowed during a shutdown, which are limited by law to activities that are “necessary for the safety of human life or protection of government property,” the Nov. 29 contingenc­y report said.

But an outcry about the effects of delaying issuing tax refunds led the Trump administra­tion to declare last week it was changing course. The Office of Management and Budget cited a law that it said created a permanent appropriat­ions for the payment of tax refunds, and the IRS announced it “will be recalling a significan­t portion of its workforce” to come back to work.

“We are committed to ensuring that taxpayers receive their refunds notwithsta­nding the government shutdown,” IRS Commission­er Chuck Rettig said last week.

But, so far, no IRS employees have been called back to work, Reardon said.

To process refunds, Reardon said the IRS would need to recall about half of its furloughed employees. They’d be required to work without pay until the shutdown ends.

“People are not happy, as you might imagine, about potentiall­y going back to work without being paid,” he said. While being furloughed is difficult enough, going back to work requires spending money on work-related expenses while getting no paycheck.

“What does it take to get to work: fuel, child care?” he said. “All of these things cost money – money that you might not have.”

The union filed a lawsuit last week saying that forcing federal employees to work without pay violates the Constituti­on and that the Trump administra­tion is using a too-broad definition of essential government services that requires working without pay.

Reardon said he understand­s why some of his union members who work for the U.S. Customs and Border Protection agency are deemed essential employees despite the shutdown. But processing tax refunds “in no way is protecting life and property,” he said.

The IRS will begin accepting tax returns on Jan. 28. Last year, the filing window opened on Jan. 29. By Feb. 3, about 18.3 million returns were submitted and most of those were processed. The IRS issued 6.2 million refunds in that first week.

Overall, the IRS issued about 112 million refunds in 2017. The average refund was $2,895, according to the IRS.

People expecting refunds tend to file early, while those who have to pay taxes usually wait until closer to the April deadline.

Handling tax filing season “is always job one,” for the IRS, said Mark W. Everson, who headed the agency from 2000-07.

“It is always a challenge,” he said. “You start out with an agency that is already wounded from the recent years of low funding. It doesn’t have adequate people resources or system resources.”

This year, the IRS must deal with the major changes from the Republican tax reform legislatio­n enacted in late 2017, which requires additional training and analysis, said Everson, who now works as vice chairman of specialty tax services firm Alliantgro­up.

While the tax law simplified tax filing for “millions of people,” there also were many changes to rules for deductions and on business income, he said.

 ?? Dreamstime/tns ?? Thanks to the federal government shutdown, the IRS has stopped issuing refunds, among other services.
Dreamstime/tns Thanks to the federal government shutdown, the IRS has stopped issuing refunds, among other services.
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