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Tax season off to a slow start, lawmakers complain to IRS

Leaders of the tax-writing House Ways and Means Committee are sounding the alarm over the slow start to tax season, reflected in the initial week of data from the IRS.

In the first week of tax season, the Internal Revenue Service reported processing only one-third of the number of tax returns processed by this time last year. Tax season was delayed this year by about three weeks to give the IRS extra time to distribute the Economic Impact Payments authorized by Congress in the stimulus package last December. However, House Ways and Means Committee chairman Richard E. Neal, D-Massachusetts, and Oversight Subcommittee chairman Bill Pascrell, Jr., D-New Jersey, are concerned over the numbers they’re seeing from the IRS, indicating the shortened filing season seems to be off to a sluggish beginning, at least in the first week.

They believe the troubling data underscores their concern about taxpayers receiving much-needed financial relief during the COVID-19 pandemic. Congress is currently in the midst of negotiating another round of relief, including $1,400 stimulus payments, as part of the Biden administration’s $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan. But Democrats and Republicans remain at odds over the size of the relief needed right now after the last stimulus package with $600 checks passed only a few months ago.

“Today, which would normally be the third week of the filing season, the Committee on Ways and Means (Committee) received its first weekly report from the IRS on the status of the 2021 tax return filing season and the news is alarming,” Neal and Pascrell wrote in a letter Friday to IRS Commissioner Charles Rettig. “One week into a shortened filing season, the IRS reported that it received about 20 million returns on February 12, the opening day of the 2021 return filing season, and processed only 14 million returns. This pace is significantly behind the nearly 40 million returns received and processed last year through February 14, 2020.”

They want to know why more tax returns aren’t going through the system. The IRS opened the Free File program weeks ago, but held back processing tax returns submitted through the programs for several weeks.