IRS Watchdog: Elderly and Disabled Taxpayers Not Allowed to Leave Messages
IRS Watchdog: Elderly and Disabled Taxpayers Not Allowed
to Leave Messages
Posted by ATR on Wednesday, January 14th, 2015, 4:42 PM
In its annual Report to Congress today, the office of the
National Taxpayer Advocate outlined a series of Internal Revenue Service
failures. In the “Access to the IRS” section, the report details the trouble
taxpayers face reaching the right person in order to meet their tax
obligations:
"The IRS does not answer the phone at local offices
and has even removed the option it once provided for taxpayers, including the
elderly and disabled, to leave a message.”
Until 2013, taxpayers — including the elderly and
disabled — were allowed to leave a voicemail requesting an in-person
appointment. But now, elderly and disabled taxpayers attempting to navigate the
automated helpline maze are asked to email the IRS to set up an appointment.
The automated message instructs as follows:
“If you are disabled or elderly and require special
accommodations for service, please email us at…"
But this leaves many taxpayers in the dark. As the report
states:
"Demographic research data show only 57 percent of
adults over age 65 use the Internet compared with 87 percent of all adults.
According to 2010 Census data, only 41 percent of those with a non-severe
disability use the Internet and only 22 percent of those with a severe
disability age 65 and older use the Internet. For those without Internet
access, the only viable ways to reach the IRS are by phone, or in person."
On its helplines, the IRS is required to provide
taxpayers the option to speak with a live person. But as the report states, the
IRS won’t even answer questions about what lines are considered helplines:
"TAS [Taxpayer Advocate Service] twice inquired of
the IRS in a formal information request whether it considers the 3709 lines to
be ‘helplines' for the purpose of § 3705(d) of RRA 98, which would require them
to have an option to speak with a live person. TAS also asked what lines the
IRS does consider to be helplines. Twice, the IRS declined to answer these
questions."
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