Current:Home > InvestIRS says its agents will no longer make unannounced visits at taxpayers' doors-VaTradeCoin
IRS says its agents will no longer make unannounced visits at taxpayers' doors
View Date:2025-01-08 16:00:40
The IRS on Monday said its agents will end most unannounced visits to taxpayers, in what the agency calls a "major policy change" geared toward reducing "public confusion" and improving safety for its employees.
The announcement comes after some Republican lawmakers warned last year that new funding for the IRS would result in thousands of new agency employees that would boost the number of audits of middle-class Americans, even though the Biden administration has said audit rates won't change for people making less than $400,000. Some on social media also warned, without evidence, that the IRS planned to arm agents, stoking fear among some taxpayers.
The IRS noted that the new policy reverses a decades-long practice of IRS revenue officers — who are unarmed — visiting households and businesses to collect unpaid taxes and unfiled tax returns. But, effective immediately, unannounced visits will instead be replaced with mailed letters to schedule meetings, the agency said.
"We are taking a fresh look at how the IRS operates to better serve taxpayers and the nation, and making this change is a common-sense step," IRS Commissioner Danny Werfel said in a statement. "Changing this long-standing procedure will increase confidence in our tax administration work and improve overall safety for taxpayers and IRS employees."
The union representing Treasury workers, the National Treasury Employees Union, said on Monday that recent "false, inflammatory rhetoric about the agency and its workforce" had made their jobs less safe, and added that it supports the new policy. It noted that the union had flagged "dangerous situations" encountered by IRS Field Collection employees to the agency.
"As long as elected officials continue to mislead the American people about the legal, legitimate role that IRS employees play in our democracy, NTEU will continue to insist on better security for the employees we represent," NTEU National President Tony Reardon said in a separate statement.
He added, "It is outrageous that our nation's civil servants have to live in fear just because they chose a career in public service."
- In:
- IRS
veryGood! (8519)
Related
- New York races to revive Manhattan tolls intended to fight traffic before Trump can block them
- Jeffrey Carlson, actor who played groundbreaking transgender character on All My Children, dead at 48
- Kourtney Kardashian and Travis Barker Expecting First Baby Together: Look Back at Their Whirlwind Romance
- Planes Sampling Air Above the Amazon Find the Rainforest is Releasing More Carbon Than it Stores
- Nearly 80,000 pounds of Costco butter recalled for missing 'Contains Milk statement': FDA
- Americans are piling up credit card debt — and it could prove very costly
- T-Mobile says breach exposed personal data of 37 million customers
- Warming Trends: A Song for the Planet, Secrets of Hempcrete and Butterfly Snapshots
- Shawn Mendes Confesses He and Camila Cabello Are No Longer the Closest
- Get In on the Quiet Luxury Trend With Mind-Blowing Tory Burch Deals up to 70% Off
Ranking
- Ariana Grande's Brunette Hair Transformation Is a Callback to Her Roots
- A Delta in Distress
- Khloe Kardashian Congratulates Cuties Kourtney Kardashian and Travis Barker on Pregnancy
- Inflation is easing, even if it may not feel that way
- Caitlin Clark has one goal for her LPGA pro-am debut: Don't hit anyone with a golf ball
- T-Mobile says breach exposed personal data of 37 million customers
- All the Stars Who Have Weighed In on the Ozempic Craze
- Why the Poor in Baltimore Face Such Crushing ‘Energy Burdens’
Recommendation
-
Man charged with murder in fatal shooting of 2 workers at Chicago’s Navy Pier
-
Inside Clean Energy: Rooftop Solar Wins Big in Kansas Court Ruling
-
Torrential rain destroyed a cliffside road in New York. Can U.S. roads handle increasingly extreme weather?
-
Lessons From The 2011 Debt Ceiling Standoff
-
The View's Sara Haines Walks Off After Whoopi Goldberg's NSFW Confession
-
This snowplow driver just started his own service. But warmer winters threaten it
-
Why the Poor in Baltimore Face Such Crushing ‘Energy Burdens’
-
3 events that will determine the fate of cryptocurrencies