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						Fears of tax chaos loom as IRS readies for filing season
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		 [January 25, 2019]   
		By David Morgan 
 WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Internal 
		Revenue Service is due to start sifting through an avalanche of annual 
		tax returns on Monday, with a workforce hard-pressed by the partial 
		government shutdown and Congress uncertain how to avoid chaos for 
		taxpayers.
 
 In what could be a politically explosive chapter in the shutdown saga 
		that already is 34 days long, analysts said at least one in 10 taxpayers 
		could face problems with their returns due to the IRS funding shortfall. 
		The analysts said the situation may worsen if the impasse drags on even 
		longer.
 
 The annual tax filing season for Americans to file their 2018 returns is 
		scheduled to open on Jan. 28 and run through April 15, the annual filing 
		deadline. The IRS has designated more than 46,000 employees, or nearly 
		60 percent of its workforce, to work without pay on jobs such as 
		staffing taxpayer help lines and processing tax returns and refunds.
 
		
		 
		
 "People have figured out how explosive it could be, in terms of not 
		being able to pay down Christmas debt," said Representative Richard 
		Neal, Democratic chairman of the House of Representatives Ways and Means 
		Committee, which oversees tax policy.
 
 "But when you call back 40,000 people arbitrarily, without any guarantee 
		of remuneration, and ask them to pay for gas and things of that sort, 
		their lives aren't getting any easier because of it," Neal told 
		reporters.
 
 Lawmakers on Neal's committee hoped to learn details about the situation 
		at a hearing with Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin this week. But it was 
		canceled by Neal after Mnuchin, a top adviser to President Donald Trump, 
		declined to attend. Neal said he would propose more dates for Mnuchin to 
		consider and hoped a hearing could be set for as early as next week.
 
 "The fact that they've called people back is an indication of a chaotic 
		situation," Representative Bill Pascrell, a committee Democrat, said of 
		the IRS. "It's not just getting returns back to people in time, but 
		getting the taxes reviewed in time. That's very, very important."
 
		
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			U.S. Internal Revenue Services (IRS) employees rally in front of the 
			Federal Building against the ongoing U.S. federal government 
			shutdown, in Ogden, Utah, U.S., January 10, 2019. REUTERS/George 
			Frey/File Photo 
            
			 
Representative Kevin Brady, the panel's top Republican, said lawmakers need to 
hear about the shutdown's impact on the IRS from the administration. "This is a 
bipartisan area of interest, to make sure this tax-filing season goes well," 
Brady told reporters.
 The IRS issued a statement saying it continues to prepare for next week's start 
of the tax-filing season by recalling employees.
 
Most taxpayers filing electronically or using professional preparers should not 
face major problems, but delays could await people with returns flagged for 
potential issues and lower-income filers who use IRS assistance, analysts said.
 There could also be problems within the agency as it tries to guide taxpayers 
through a new tax policy landscape created by Trump's sweeping 2017 tax 
overhaul.
 
 "The longer you make people work without paying them, the more problems you're 
going to have," said Howard Gleckman, a senior fellow at the nonpartisan Tax 
Policy Center think tank.
 
 The National Treasury Employees Union, a union that represents IRS employees and 
has sued in court to prevent the government from forcing them back to work 
without pay, said increasing numbers of workers are facing financial hardship as 
bills mount.
 
 Representative Vern Buchanan, a Florida Republican, said he expects Trump and 
Congress to reopen the government within the next week or so. "If it doesn't, 
we're going to have to find a way to work with people financially, because there 
are a lot of people living paycheck to paycheck," Buchanan said.
 
 (Reporting by David Morgan; Editing by Kevin Drawbaugh and Will Dunham)
 
				 
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