Collins, Thune Introduce Bill to Hold the IRS Accountable, Protect Taxpayers

Press Release

Date: Sept. 16, 2022
Location: Washington, DC
Issues: Taxes

U.S. Senators Susan Collins (R-ME), and John Thune (R-SD) introduced the Increase Reliable Services Now Act, legislation that would prohibit the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) from hiring new enforcement employees until basic taxpayer service targets -- including improved phone services and more efficient tax return processing -- are reached. The bill would also prohibit the IRS from using enforcement appropriations in the so-called Inflation Reduction Act to audit taxpayers with annual incomes of less than $400,000 at a greater rate than at the date of the IRA's enactment.

"Americans deserve a government that is responsive, yet the IRS has consistently failed to provide taxpayers with the service they should expect. Incredibly, four out of five phone calls from taxpayers seeking assistance go unanswered, and tax refunds have been unacceptably delayed," said Senator Collins. "Our legislation would fix the IRS' misplaced priorities by requiring the agency to focus on improving customer service and reducing backlogs."

"The IRS continually fails to deliver basic customer service to taxpayers. Rather than improving those services, Democrats have prioritized doubling the size of the agency in order to raise revenue to help pay for their reckless and partisan tax-and-spending spree," said Senator Thune. "More tax collectors will not bring relief to Americans who are waiting on their tax refunds, nor will it help them more easily get ahold of an IRS representative. Our bill proposes actionable steps to prioritize and improve basic customer service at the IRS, from which all taxpayers can immediately benefit."

The Increase Reliable Services Now Act would prohibit the IRS from hiring new "examinations and collections" (enforcement) employees until basic taxpayer service targets are reached. Specifically, the bill would prohibit the hiring of new IRS enforcement employees until the agency maintains adequate taxpayer phone service (at least 70 percent of phone calls being answered for six consecutive months and an average speed of answering phone calls in five minutes or less). It would also require at least 90 percent of IRS employees to work in person at their job sites.

In addition, the bill would prohibit any hiring, other than return processing and call center personnel, until the backlog of processing taxpayer correspondence, tax forms, and payments is not in excess of one million cases and eligible tax return refunds are issued by the IRS within six weeks or less, on average, of receipt.


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