This is a familiar rant from me - if you don't wanna hear it again, I'll understand if you want to move on.
Recently there was a communique release from the Tennessee Department of Revenue. The headline was an announcement that the department was "modernizing the decades-old pattern of dealing with taxpayer problems."
Sounds wonderful, right? What is really going on: The department is slashing the personnel of the taxpayer assistance centers and depending on taxpayers to utilize the websites. My experience with other states is that an assessment is made, the taxpayer has no way to contact the state to fix the problem, and eventually the assessment goes to collections where a levy is ordered.
Why shouldn't people be deliriously happy with this futuristic solution? It is only a solution for the State.
1) The population base is becoming more computer literate, but not as quickly as institutions are bailing out of support.
2) A website cannot be programmed extensively enough to explain all the technicalities that taxpayers encounter. The best they usually have is a set of "frequently asked questions." And this becomes so voluminous that the taxpayers cannot navigate to what is relevant.
3) More than half of the ugly "balance due" notices are the result of errors by the taxing authorities, NOT the taxpayers. Nowhere on this "cure-all" website is there an allowance to correct errors by the State.
4) In recent years it has become quicker to write a letter than to find a real person to talk to. Letters tend to go into a "black hole" and it is no one's responsibility at the state to acknowledge or track correspondence.
5) Collection departments still have contact capabilities, obviously states will put forth some resources for collecting money. But the collection departments quickly disavow any responsibility for fixing a mess or rectifying a problem the taxpayer or state may be having.
Suggestions for confronting these problems?
a) Quit whining. We are hopeless unable to stop the rapid conversion to the wonderful world of the internet.
b) Start by copying the taxpayers' State Representative on every letter where the taxpayer has no remedy.
c) ????
d) ????
e) ????
Recently there was a communique release from the Tennessee Department of Revenue. The headline was an announcement that the department was "modernizing the decades-old pattern of dealing with taxpayer problems."
Sounds wonderful, right? What is really going on: The department is slashing the personnel of the taxpayer assistance centers and depending on taxpayers to utilize the websites. My experience with other states is that an assessment is made, the taxpayer has no way to contact the state to fix the problem, and eventually the assessment goes to collections where a levy is ordered.
Why shouldn't people be deliriously happy with this futuristic solution? It is only a solution for the State.
1) The population base is becoming more computer literate, but not as quickly as institutions are bailing out of support.
2) A website cannot be programmed extensively enough to explain all the technicalities that taxpayers encounter. The best they usually have is a set of "frequently asked questions." And this becomes so voluminous that the taxpayers cannot navigate to what is relevant.
3) More than half of the ugly "balance due" notices are the result of errors by the taxing authorities, NOT the taxpayers. Nowhere on this "cure-all" website is there an allowance to correct errors by the State.
4) In recent years it has become quicker to write a letter than to find a real person to talk to. Letters tend to go into a "black hole" and it is no one's responsibility at the state to acknowledge or track correspondence.
5) Collection departments still have contact capabilities, obviously states will put forth some resources for collecting money. But the collection departments quickly disavow any responsibility for fixing a mess or rectifying a problem the taxpayer or state may be having.
Suggestions for confronting these problems?
a) Quit whining. We are hopeless unable to stop the rapid conversion to the wonderful world of the internet.
b) Start by copying the taxpayers' State Representative on every letter where the taxpayer has no remedy.
c) ????
d) ????
e) ????
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