Results 1 to 10 of 10

Thread: " Federal Workers Owe Billions in Unpaid Taxes"

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Nov 2005
    Location
    Tampa,Montreal,Paris
    Posts
    4,186

    " Federal Workers Owe Billions in Unpaid Taxes"

    http://www.rawstory.com/showarticle....6sid%3D1034585

    WASHINGTON - As the 2006 tax season approaches, the federal government is still trying to recover nearly $3 billion from its own employees who failed to file income tax returns for 2005.

    More than 450,000 active and retired federal employees did not voluntarily comply with federal income tax requirements for the 2005 tax year, according to documents obtained by WTOP through the Freedom of Information Act. (See Excel spreadsheets in the Related Links below.)

    The total balance owed is $2,799,950,165.

    The documents show that every federal agency has employees who failed to comply with federal tax laws.

    Seventy-one employees in the Executive Office of the President, which includes the White House, owe $664,527 in taxes for 2005. About 20 of those employees have entered into an IRS payment plan, bringing the EOP balance down to $455,881owed by 50 employees.

    The White House did not respond to repeated requests for comment.

    In fact, about one third of the delinquent employees, or 149,500, entered into a payment plan, but the total owed is still more than $2 billion.

    At the IRS, employees can be fired for failure to pay federal income taxes. But an IRS spokesperson tells WTOP it's no easier to collect from federal employees than it is to collect from the general public.

    In the past, IRS officials have been quick to compare the federal workers' rate of compliance with the general public's. But this year, the IRS is not able to track the compliance rate for the general public. The percentage of federal employees who still owe back taxes for the 2005 year is 3.3 percent of the workforce including retirees.

    The federal agency with the highest number of delinquent taxpayers is the United States Postal Service, where 56,652 employees owe more than $320 million. So far, about 22,000 of those employees have agreed to a payment plan.

    A spokesperson for the Postal Service says the agency hopes all of its employees follow the law, but will leave enforcement to the IRS.

    The agency with the best compliance rate is the Department of Treasury, which includes the IRS. Fewer than 2 percent of Treasury employees failed to pay their taxes. About 3,000 Treasury employees owed $13,489,683 -- 1,437 of those feds also have made payment plans.

    The IRS tracks the compliance rate of federal employees each year in an effort to increase compliance. Agency directors are made aware of their department's compliance rate and then memos are sent to staff encouraging them to file their taxes.

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Jul 2004
    Location
    Germany
    Posts
    1,553
    You should see how much corporations owe in taxes...

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Nov 2005
    Location
    Tampa,Montreal,Paris
    Posts
    4,186
    Quote Originally Posted by scriptfactory
    You should see how much corporations owe in taxes...

    Yeah but there is no irony in that.
    Also we are comparing governmenatal employees to a corporation not the same tax. This is personel income tax

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Jul 2004
    Location
    Germany
    Posts
    1,553
    Quote Originally Posted by Prada
    Yeah but there is no irony in that.
    Also we are comparing governmenatal employees to a corporation not the same tax. This is personel income tax
    True. Still, 2 billion isn't a lot of money when you view taxes as a whole...

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Nov 2005
    Location
    Tampa,Montreal,Paris
    Posts
    4,186
    Quote Originally Posted by scriptfactory
    True. Still, 2 billion isn't a lot of money when you view taxes as a whole...
    Yeah, its just a drop in the bucket.

    You would tend to think that the tax collectors or IRS would be able be collect from their own employees.

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Dec 2003
    Location
    Chicago/Israel
    Posts
    946
    hypocrisy
    Last edited by singern; 01-18-2007 at 12:44 PM.

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Location
    USA
    Posts
    4,740
    Quote Originally Posted by Prada
    http://www.rawstory.com/showarticle....6sid%3D1034585

    WASHINGTON - As the 2006 tax season approaches, the federal government is still trying to recover nearly $3 billion from its own employees who failed to file income tax returns for 2005.

    More than 450,000 active and retired federal employees did not voluntarily comply with federal income tax requirements for the 2005 tax year, according to documents obtained by WTOP through the Freedom of Information Act. (See Excel spreadsheets in the Related Links below.)

    The total balance owed is $2,799,950,165.

    The documents show that every federal agency has employees who failed to comply with federal tax laws.

    Seventy-one employees in the Executive Office of the President, which includes the White House, owe $664,527 in taxes for 2005. About 20 of those employees have entered into an IRS payment plan, bringing the EOP balance down to $455,881owed by 50 employees.

    The White House did not respond to repeated requests for comment.

    In fact, about one third of the delinquent employees, or 149,500, entered into a payment plan, but the total owed is still more than $2 billion.

    At the IRS, employees can be fired for failure to pay federal income taxes. But an IRS spokesperson tells WTOP it's no easier to collect from federal employees than it is to collect from the general public.

    In the past, IRS officials have been quick to compare the federal workers' rate of compliance with the general public's. But this year, the IRS is not able to track the compliance rate for the general public. The percentage of federal employees who still owe back taxes for the 2005 year is 3.3 percent of the workforce including retirees.

    The federal agency with the highest number of delinquent taxpayers is the United States Postal Service, where 56,652 employees owe more than $320 million. So far, about 22,000 of those employees have agreed to a payment plan.

    A spokesperson for the Postal Service says the agency hopes all of its employees follow the law, but will leave enforcement to the IRS.

    The agency with the best compliance rate is the Department of Treasury, which includes the IRS. Fewer than 2 percent of Treasury employees failed to pay their taxes. About 3,000 Treasury employees owed $13,489,683 -- 1,437 of those feds also have made payment plans.

    The IRS tracks the compliance rate of federal employees each year in an effort to increase compliance. Agency directors are made aware of their department's compliance rate and then memos are sent to staff encouraging them to file their taxes.

    I hope that the IRS will pursue the same measures with them as they would with you and I...........

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Jul 2004
    Location
    Germany
    Posts
    1,553
    Quote Originally Posted by Prada
    Yeah, its just a drop in the bucket.

    You would tend to think that the tax collectors or IRS would be able be collect from their own employees.
    That's for damn sure.

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Nov 2005
    Location
    Tampa,Montreal,Paris
    Posts
    4,186
    Quote Originally Posted by Logan13
    I hope that the IRS will pursue the same measures with them as they would with you and I...........
    I sure damn hope so. It's a free country, not happy with the system? You're free to emigrate. I mean I've see the tax rates (i.e Income, Gas, Corporate and so on) in other western countries and in the US you have much more disposable income to do whatever the hell you want.

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Location
    USA
    Posts
    4,740
    Quote Originally Posted by Prada
    I sure damn hope so. It's a free country, not happy with the system? You're free to emigrate. I mean I've see the tax rates (i.e Income, Gas, Corporate and so on) in other western countries and in the US you have much more disposable income to do whatever the hell you want.
    It's one thing to "fudge" one's taxes, but not filing at all is just arrogant.

Thread Information

Users Browsing this Thread

There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •