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TIME: Almanac 1990
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1990 Time Magazine Compact Almanac, The (1991)(Time).iso
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040389
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04038900.029
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1990-09-22
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NATION, Page 27American NotesTAXESA Kinder Collector
Anyone who shortchanges Uncle Sam at tax time can expect that,
with virtually the same certainty as death, a dunning notice will
follow. But when someone overpays the IRS, the reaction is
sometimes silence. Thanks to Linda Johnson, an IRS examiner in
Memphis, that will soon change. She complained to her Senator,
Democrat Albert Gore, that when taxpayers in certain categories
failed to subtract already withheld sums in calculating what they
owe the Treasury, the IRS simply pocketed their surplus payment
without telling them. Urging superiors to change the rules so these
people will get refunds, she argued, "It was stealing from the
taxpayers."
Gore raised the injustice with IRS Acting Commissioner Michael
J. Murphy, who agreed that the policy was wrong. Henceforth, he
ruled, overly generous taxpayers will get refunds. The problem
arises mainly for workers who retire or quit and get lump-sum
pension payments but forget to claim a credit for the taxes that
were withheld. Taxpayers who detect such an error as far back as
1985 can apply for repayment. The Government will even pony up
interest on its unfair use of the citizens' money.