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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

IRS spending $42 million to mail rebate warnings

Devlin Barrett Associated Press

WASHINGTON – At a cost of nearly $42 million, the IRS wants you to know: Your check is almost in the mail.

The Internal Revenue Service is spending the money on letters to alert taxpayers to expect rebate checks as part of the economic stimulus plan.

The notices are going out this month to an estimated 130 million households who filed returns for the 2006 tax year, IRS spokesman John Lipold confirmed.

The $41.8 million cost works out to about 32 cents to print, process and mail each letter. It doesn’t include the tab for another round of mailings planned for those who didn’t file tax returns last year but may still qualify for a rebate.

Democrats accused the Bush administration of wasting time and postage.

“There are countless better uses for $42 million than a self-congratulatory mailer that gives the president a pat on the back for an idea that wasn’t even his,” said Sen. Charles Schumer, arguing the IRS could better use the money to catch tax cheats.

Keith Hennessey, director of the president’s National Economic Council, said the letters are being sent to explain how the tax rebates will work.

“Any time you do something as a government tens of millions of times, there is ample room for people to get confused. And so if you’re going to have tens of millions of taxpayers getting checks, you want to get the information out so that you have as few people as possible confused about what’s happening, they understand what’s coming, and it reduces the number of incoming requests that IRS and Treasury have to figure out how to deal with it,” said Hennessey.

The actual rebate checks are scheduled to go out starting in May, after the IRS has finished separately mailing out routine refunds for the 2007 tax year.