The Internal Revenue Service is giving taxpayers a break if the checks they mailed in to pay their taxes still haven’t been opened up yet and are sitting in the trailers the IRS had to set up during the novel coronavirus pandemic.
This spring, as many IRS offices remained shuttered, a backlog of millions of pieces of unopened mail accumulated in trailers set up outside IRS facilities. As more IRS employees returned to work to deal with tax season, they began to sort through and process the mail, but that hasn’t stopped more correspondence from coming in every day.
Steve is a partner in PwC's Risk Modeling Services practice. He leads PwC's US Climate Risk Modeling team and has more than 24 years of experience in actuarial risk and financial modeling. Steve's team is comprised of actuaries, financial analysts, PhD climate scientists, data scientists, geospatial engineers, and other climate risk specialists. His approach blends climate science with geospatial analysis and financial modeling to help clients identify, measure, and manage climate risk exposure. Projects include climate change risk assessments and quantification for both physical and transition risk, emissions optimization, and other financial and risk modeling projects. Steve has a degree in Mathematics from Saint Joseph's University in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. He is a fellow of the Society of Actuaries and a Chartered Enterprise Risk Analyst.
Osho Jha is a co-founder of Arbol currently serving as its Chief Data Scientist. He is also a founding partner of dClimate, the first decentralized climate information ecosystem. As Chief Data Scientist at Arbol, he oversees the development of data-driven parametric products and climate risk solutions. Osho comes to Arbol with over a decade of experience as a product-focused data scientist. His experience ranges from cutting edge NLP research for DARPA resulting in a speech-to-speech translation system deployed by the U.S. military to using exhaust data for trading global equities.
Kiran Kumar Boosam is the head of Global Insurance Strategy & Portfolio at Capgemini. In his current role, he is responsible for enabling the top-line growth of Capgemini's Insurance business. He has more than 25 years of experience in P&C and Life Insurance. Kiran is a graduate in Electrical & Electronics Engineering from Andhra University.
Last week, amid complaints that the IRS had begun sending balance due notices to some taxpayers, even though they had already sent in checks with their tax filings for trusts and estates, the IRS updated its web page on IRS operations during COVID-19 with new information on pending check payments and payment notices, saying that the payments will be posted as of the date received, as opposed to the date when the IRS finally gets around to processing them. The IRS warned taxpayers not to cancel their checks in the meantime, as the IRS will eventually get around to processing them.
“If a taxpayer mailed a check (either with or without a tax return), it may still be unopened in the backlog of mail the IRS is processing due to COVID-19,” said the IRS. “Any payments will be posted as the date we received them rather than the date the agency processed them. To avoid penalties and interest, taxpayers should not cancel their checks and should ensure funds continue to be available so the IRS can process them.”
That should help taxpayers avoid interest and penalties, as long as the check hasn’t been canceled, or it doesn’t bounce.
“To provide fair and equitable treatment, the IRS is providing relief from bad check penalties for dishonored checks the agency received between March 1 and July 15 due to delays in this IRS processing,” said the IRS. “However, interest and penalties may still apply.”
The problem has been particularly acute for taxpayers who are filing Form 1041 estate and trust tax returns and receiving the balance due notices.
“As many advisers have discovered due to clients (especially trusts) receiving notices regarding payments supposedly due on tax returns where payments had been mailed in when the return was filed at July 15, the IRS is behind in processing items mailed to the agency and that includes certain tax payments,” wrote Ed Zollars, a partner in the CPA firm of Thomas, Zollars & Lynch, in a blog post for Kaplan Financial Education.
Besides being short on staff for opening the mail, the IRS is also dealing with the perpetual problem of answering its busy phone lines for taxpayers, and it recommended against calling the agency.
“Due to high call volumes, the IRS suggests waiting to contact the agency about any unprocessed paper payments still pending,” said the IRS. “See www.irs.gov/payments for options to make payments other than by mail.”
The current delays in mail service reported around the country may be exacerbating the backlog at the IRS as well. The recently appointed Postmaster General, Louis DeJoy, has come under fire for reforms this summer at the U.S. Postal Service like curbing overtime, prohibiting return trips to pick up undelivered mail, discarding high-volume envelope-sorting machines and removing mailboxes, resulting in slower mail delivery. DeJoy, a logistics executive and former finance chairman for the Republican National Committee, has also reassigned longtime executives at the USPS, leading to accusations that he is trying to sabotage mail-in voting ahead of the elections in November at the behest of President Trump, who has ramped up his criticism of states’ moves to allow universal mail-in voting in response to the coronavirus pandemic, claiming it would lead to voter fraud. House Democrats plan to return to Capitol Hill next week to vote on a bill to stop the changes at the USPS, at least until after the election, and have summoned DeJoy to an oversight hearing.



