Current:Home > MyFor IRS, backlogs and identity theft are still problems despite funding boost, watchdog says -Prime Money Path
For IRS, backlogs and identity theft are still problems despite funding boost, watchdog says
View
Date:2025-04-17 02:32:53
WASHINGTON (AP) — The IRS is still too slow in processing amended tax returns, answering taxpayer phone calls and resolving identity theft cases, according to an independent watchdog within the agency.
The federal tax collector needs to improve its processing and taxpayer correspondence issues despite a massive boost in funding provided by the Democrats’ Inflation Reduction Act, according to an annual report Wednesday to Congress from Erin M. Collins, who leads the organization assigned to protect taxpayers’ rights under the Taxpayer Bill of Rights.
The report serves as a reality check of sorts as IRS leaders say the funding boost is producing big improvements in services to taxpayers. GOP critics, meanwhile, are trying try to claw back some of the money and painting the agency as an over-zealous enforcer of the tax code.
The IRS is experiencing “extraordinary delays” in assisting identity theft victims, taking nearly 19 months to resolve self-reported cases, which the report calls “unconscionable” since a delay in receiving a refund can worsen financial hardships.
Additionally, the backlog of unprocessed amended returns has quadrupled from 500,000 in 2019 to 1.9 million in October last year. And taxpayer correspondence cases have more than doubled over the same period, from 1.9 million to 4.3 million, according to the report.
The report also says IRS employees answered only 35% of all calls received, despite the agency claiming 85%. The IRS doesn’t include calls where the taxpayer hangs up before being placed into a calling queue.
And while the agency has been on a hiring spree — thousands of workers since 2022 — the new employees are in need of proper training, the report says. The 2023 Federal Employee Viewpoint Survey shows that a quarter of IRS employees don’t think they receive adequate training to perform their jobs well.
“It is critical that the IRS make comprehensive training a priority and ensure that new hires receive adequate training before they are assigned to tasks with taxpayer impact,” Collins said.
IRS Commissioner Daniel Werfel said in a statement that the Taxpayer Advocate “raises a number of very important areas that we are looking at to make improvements” with Inflation Reduction Act funding.
“Many of these issues identified in her report ultimately depend on adequate IRS resources,” he said. “This is another reason why the Inflation Reduction Act funding and our annual appropriations are so critical to making transformational changes to the IRS to help taxpayers and the nation.”
The federal tax collection agency originally received an $80 billion infusion of funds under the Inflation Reduction Act but that money is vulnerable to potential cutbacks.
Last year’s debt ceiling and budget cuts deal between Republicans and the White House resulted in $1.4 billion rescinded from the agency and a separate agreement to take $20 billion from the IRS over the next two years and divert those funds to other nondefense programs.
Collins said in the report that she believes some of the law’s funding that was provided for enforcement should be redirected to improving taxpayer services “to enable the IRS to make the changes necessary to transform the taxpayer experience and modernize its IT systems in the next few years.”
“I encourage the IRS to put more emphasis on reducing its paper processing backlog in 2024,” Collins said in her report.
The report comes shortly after the IRS announced that the 2024 filing season begins on Jan. 29. Agency leaders say better customer service and tech options will be available to taxpayers and most refunds should be issued in less than 21 days.
The agency has been pulling itself out of decades of underfunding — by the end of the 2021 filing season, it faced a backlog of over 35 million tax returns that required manual data entry or employee review.
Last April, IRS Commissioner Daniel Werfel released details of IRS plans to use its IRA money for improved operations, pledging to invest in new technology, hire more customer service representatives and expand the agency’s ability to audit high-wealth taxpayers.
Additional money for the IRS has been politically controversial since 2013, when the agency during the Obama administration was found to have scrutinized political groups that applied for tax-exempt status. A report by the Treasury Department’s internal watchdog found that both conservative and liberal groups were chosen for close review
veryGood! (2)
Related
- Current, future North Carolina governor’s challenge of power
- Amazon reveals the best books of 2024 (so far): The No. 1 pick 'transcends its own genre'
- San Francisco park where a grandmother was fatally beaten will now have her name
- The Sphere in Las Vegas really is a 'quantum leap' for live music: Inside the first shows
- Megan Fox's ex Brian Austin Green tells Machine Gun Kelly to 'grow up'
- Kansas governor and GOP leaders say they have a deal on tax cuts to end 2 years of stalemate
- Court upholds law taking jurisdiction over mass transit crimes from Philly’s district attorney
- Euro 2024 squads: Full roster for every team
- Warm inflation data keep S&P 500, Dow, Nasdaq under wraps before Fed meeting next week
- Google CEO testifies at trial of collapsed startup Ozy Media and founder Carlos Watson
Ranking
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- US diplomat warns of great consequences for migrants at border who don’t choose legal pathways
- See Savannah Guthrie's Son Adorably Crash the Today Show Set With Surprise Visit
- Bloodstained Parkland building will be razed. Parent says it's 'part of moving forward'
- Jorge Ramos reveals his final day with 'Noticiero Univision': 'It's been quite a ride'
- Algae blooms prompt 2 warnings along parts of New Hampshire’s Lake Winnipesaukee
- Trump once defied the NRA to ban bump stocks. He now says he ‘did nothing’ to restrict guns
- Opal Lee gets keys to her new Texas home 85 years after a racist mob drove her family from that lot
Recommendation
Angelina Jolie nearly fainted making Maria Callas movie: 'My body wasn’t strong enough'
New coral disease forecast tool shows high risks of summer outbreaks in Hawaii
'House of the Dragon' star Matt Smith on why his character Daemon loses his swagger
Horoscopes Today, June 13, 2024
Small twin
Stock market today: Asian shares mixed after AI hopes nudge Wall St to records. BOJ stands pat
This week on Sunday Morning (June 16)
Report finds Colorado was built on $1.7 trillion of land expropriated from tribal nations