U.S. lawmaker seeks answers on shutdown's
effect on tax filings
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[January 05, 2019]
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A senior U.S.
lawmaker asked the Internal Revenue Service and the Treasury Department
on Friday how the ongoing partial government shutdown would affect the
processing of income tax filings and refunds this year.
Representative Richard Neal, a Democrat who is the new chairman of the
House of Representatives tax-writing committee, expressed concern that
the IRS, the U.S. tax agency, has already furloughed most of its work
force and stopped issuing tax refunds since the partial government
shutdown began Dec. 22.
President Donald Trump is withholding his support for a bill that would
fully fund the government until he secures $5.6 billion for a wall on
the U.S.-Mexican border. As a result, about 800,000 federal workers have
been unpaid due to the closure of about a quarter of the federal
government.
Neal wrote to Charles Rettig, the head of the IRS, and Treasury
Secretary Steven Mnuchin to request information about how the shutdown
will affect the IRS's ability to process tax returns and provide
refunds.
"I understand that the IRS furloughed nearly 70,000 IRS employees (87.5
percent of the workforce), ceased needed taxpayer services, and stopped
issuing tax refunds during the government shutdown," Neal wrote. "These
actions are causing undue hardship to American taxpayers and the IRS
civil servants."
An IRS spokesman, Matt Leas, declined to comment on the letter.
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Rep. Richard Neal (D-MA) speaks as the House-Senate Conferees hold
an open conference meeting on the "Tax Cuts and Jobs Act" on Capitol
Hill in Washington, U.S., December 13, 2017. REUTERS/Joshua
Roberts/File Photo
The average tax refund last year was $2,800, money that many
families rely on to help pay for rent, food and child care, Neal
said in the letter. He also noted that another problem for taxpayers
is that as the shutdown continues, mortgage lenders will be unable
to obtain tax transcripts to verify income for loan.
The U.S. tax filing season normally starts early in the year, ahead
of the April 15 deadline for filing income tax returns. Neal asked
the IRS when the filing season would launch this year, noting that
in 2018 the IRS announced on Jan. 4 that it would start accepting
tax returns on Jan. 29.
(Reporting by Susan Cornwell; Editing by Leslie Adler)
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