Mbodell, on 2014-February-18, 01:06, said:
Also because H. R. Block and other tax preparers have lobbied the gov't to make it against the rules for the IRS to prepare people's taxes for them. The IRS could fairly easily do most people's taxes and get much of that money back, but they are not legally allowed to do that currently.
This stuns me, I wasn't aware of it. I know that the IRS, at least until quite recently, provided advice because I have used their service. And I thought that for people who only need to use the short form, they could just bring in W2s and a pen to sign with. No more? There are quite a few volunteer places to help with (slightly) more complex situations w/o charge, but it would make sense for the IRS to do so.
I think I will inject a few good words about the modern IRS. It has improved dramatically over my lifetime. When I was a graduate student there were various forms of support and the tax situation was murky. An NSF Fellowship was not taxed. At first the salary of a teaching assistant was taxed. But there was also the possibility of a professor supporting a grad student with money from his grant. Since often there was no specific work requirement, perhaps this was, for tax purposes, a ffellowship and should not be taxed. If you buy into that, well maybe the money for a teaching assistanship was partly for teaching, partly for support, and so should only be partly taxed. . I and others would call the IRS. If you called five times, you got five different and incompatible answers. That was the early 60s. Now is very different. My experience with them now is that they are much, much improved with the assistance that they provide.
But I am not totally up to date on this. Around the time I hit 70 I decided that I had been filling out these forms since I was 15 and I was tired of it. For the last few years we bring the stuff in to Jenny. She's good and, more importantly, she does it.
My wife and I have each helped an illiterate person learn to read, but that is at a very basic level. Both of these guys were self-supporting, they owned a house, their kids had gone to college. Neither would have been able to do his own taxes. In these two cases they were both married and their wives were more literate, but not highly. If the IRS no longer can provide tax assistance for them, it's a damn shame.
Added: Coincidentally, my wife just saw the following local item: Human Service Programs of Carroll County [address and date given] presents free tax preparation for anyone making less than $52,000. If the county can do this but the IRS cannot, that's downright weird.