Miami Herald

A COVID-era program is awash in fraud. Congress aims to wind it down and expand the child tax credit

- BY KEVIN FREKING AND FATIMA HUSSEIN Associated Press

WASHINGTON

When IRS Commission­er Danny Werfel met privately with senators recently, the chairman of the Senate Finance Committee asked for his assessment of a startling report: A whistleblo­wer estimated that 95% of claims now being made by businesses for a COVID-era tax break were fraudulent.

“He looked at his shoes and he basically said, ‘Yeah,’” recalled the lawmaker who posed that question, Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore.

The answer explains why Congress is racing to wind down what is known as the employee retention tax credit. Congress establishe­d the program during the coronaviru­s pandemic as an incentive for businesses to keep workers on their payrolls.

Demand for the credit soared as Congress extended the tax break and made it available to more companies. Aggressive marketers dangled the prospect of enormous refunds to business owners if they would just apply. As a result, what was expected to cost the federal government $55 billion instead ballooned to nearly five times that amount as of July. Meanwhile, new claims are still pouring in to the IRS each week, ensuring a growing price tag that lawmakers are anxious to cap.

Lawmakers across the political spectrum who mostly agree on little else — from liberal Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., to conservati­ve Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wis. — agree that it’s time to end the program.

“I don’t have the exact number, but it’s like almost universal fraud in the program. It should be ended,” Johnson said. “I don’t see how anybody could support it.”

Warren added: “The standards were too loose and the oversight was too thin.”

The Joint Committee on Taxation estimates that winding down the program more quickly and increasing penalties for those companies promoting improper claims would generate about $79 billion over 10 years.

Lawmakers aim to use the savings to offset the cost of three business tax breaks and a more generous child tax credit for many low-income families. Households benefiting from the changes in the child tax credit would see an average tax cut of $680 in the first year, according to an estimate from the nonpartisa­n Tax Policy Center.

That tax credit is $2,000 per child, but only $1,600 is refundable, which makes it available to parents who owe little to nothing in federal income taxes. An agreement reached this month by congressio­nal tax writers would increase the maximum refundable child tax credit to $1,800 for 2023 tax returns, $1,900 for the following year and $2,000 for 2025 tax returns. The Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, a liberal think tank and advocacy group, projected that about 16 million children in low-income families would benefit from the expanded child tax credit.

The package was overwhelmi­ngly approved by a House committee last week, 40-3, showing that it has broad, bipartisan support.

But passage through Congress is not assured, because many key senators have concerns about aspects of the bill. Wyden said a strong vote in the House could spur the Senate to quicker action. Still, passing major legislatio­n in an election year is generally a heavy lift.

Under current law, taxpayers have until April 15, 2025, to claim the employee retention credit. The bill would bar new claims after Jan. 31 of this year. It also would impose stiff penalties on those who are promoting the employer retention tax credit if they know or have reason to know their advice will lead to an underrepor­ting of tax liabilitie­s.

When Congress created the tax break for employers at the pandemic’s onset, it proved so popular that lawmakers extended and amended the program three times. The credit, worth up to $26,000 per employee, can be claimed on wages paid through 2021.

To qualify, businesses generally must show that a local or state government order related to the COVID-19 pandemic resulted in their business having to close or partially suspend operations. Or the businesses must show they experience­d significan­t declines in revenue.

Larry Gray, a certified public accountant in Rolla, Mo., said he had concerns early on about how the program could be abused.

“There was no documentat­ion really to speak [of]” and the IRS just sent out the checks, Gray said. “They just started printing the checks and I believe Congress was wanting them to print the checks.”

His hunch has proved correct, judging by the filings that he has reviewed. He has even lost clients who didn’t want to hear that they did not qualify when others were telling them they did. Generally, he said, the businesses that do not qualify are failing to cite the government order that resulted in their closure or partial suspension. They also are routinely citing reasons for reimbursem­ent that do not meet the program’s criteria. For example, one company said it was struggling to find employees and had to raise wages as a justificat­ion for qualifying.

“If I go through the narratives on the filings that I’m looking at, every business in America qualifies,” Gray said.

In September last year, the IRS paused accepting claims for the tax credit until 2024 because of rising concerns that an influx of applicatio­ns is fraudulent. At that point, it had received 3.6 million claims.

Some fraud has been prolific. For instance, a New Jersey tax preparer was arrested in July on charges related to fraudulent­ly seeking over $124 million from the IRS when he filed more than 1,000 tax returns claiming the employment tax credits.

In an update issued Thursday about the program, the IRS said that it has thousands of audits in the pipeline and that as of Dec. 31, it had initiated 352 criminal investigat­ions involving more than $2.9 billion in potentiall­y fraudulent claims. Separately, it has opened nine civil investigat­ions of marketers that potentiall­y misled employers on eligibilit­y to file claims.

Werfel briefed the Senate Finance Committee recently on the steps that have been taken to address the fraud, including developing a special withdrawal program for those with unprocesse­d claims and a voluntary disclosure program for those who think they were improperly paid. The IRS has since seen a 40% decline in average weekly claims, he said.

Lawmakers emphasize that cutting down on the fraudulent claims should also help the IRS more quickly resolve the legitimate claims that businesses have filed and are still awaiting resolution. In early December, the IRS had a backlog of about 1 million claims.

Congress routinely has difficulty finding offsets to pay for new spending or tax cuts. But in this case, the employee retention tax credit appears to have few friends left on Capitol Hill.

“Well-intentione­d, but boy oh boy,” said Sen. Mark Warner, D-Va., in summing up the program.

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 ?? CHIP SOMODEVILL­A Getty Images via TNS ?? The IRS headquarte­rs building in Washington.
CHIP SOMODEVILL­A Getty Images via TNS The IRS headquarte­rs building in Washington.

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