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

IRS forgoes mailing of forms

Carole Feldman Associated Press

WASHINGTON – The start of tax season used to be heralded by the arrival of tax forms in the mail.

No more.

The Internal Revenue Service decided this year not to automatically mail them to individual and business taxpayers. “It’s a sign of the times,” said Terry Lemons, IRS senior spokesman. “More people are going electronic. We’re interested in saving taxpayers money.”

He said the agency realizes that not everyone has access to the Internet or to computers. “We think most people are going to have options to get this information,” he said.

Forms will be available at many public libraries, post offices and other community sites. They also can be ordered through the IRS Web site, www.irs.gov . In addition, there are programs such as Volunteer Income Tax Assistance and Tax Counseling for the Elderly, Lemons said.

Kathy Pickering, executive director of the Tax Institute at H&R Block, said the decision against mass mailing of forms has another benefit. “With late passage of the tax bill, the IRS did not have to send out forms that were obsolete,” she said. “It provided them with some agility.”

Congress passed a tax bill, which included extension of the Bush-era tax cuts, during a post-election session that ended just before Christmas.

Lemons said only 8 percent of individual taxpayers got paper tax packages in the mail last year. Those people were mailed postcards last fall informing them about the decision against mass tax-form mailings and telling them where they could get the required forms. Still, some may have missed the postcard.

“Some people are just waiting for their forms to come before they file,” said Barbara Weltman, author of some of J.K. Lasser’s tax publications. “Don’t wait,” she said. “It’s not coming.”