The
IRS also will create a new 700-person "surge team" to process
new returns at its campuses in Kansas City, Austin, Texas and
Ogden, Utah, the Treasury said.
As of Feb. 5 the National Taxpayer Advocate's office said the
IRS had a backlog of some 23.5 million tax returns that still
needed some form of manual processing, including 13.5 million
from individuals, 7.2 million from businesses and 2.8 million
from unspecified filers.
The backlog is due partly to delayed filing seasons over the
past two years due to the COVID-19 pandemic, and the Treasury
also blamed a decade of IRS budget cuts that has left the agency
with a workforce the same size as in 1970 despite a 60% increase
in the U.S. population and a more complex American economy.
The IRS said it will hold job fairs at the Kansas City, Austin
and Ogden locations to fill 5,000 open positions and 5,000 new
positions.
The Treasury said the agency also is requiring mandatory
overtime work for more than 6,000 employees processing original
returns, and overtime pay also is available for some 10,000
other employees processing amended returns and taxpayer
correspondence.
(Reporting by David Lawder; Editing by Diane Craft and Andrea
Ricci)
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