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Dec 23, 2016

I.R.S. Drops Coal In The Stockings Of Poor Disabled People

     From the Washington Post:
The Treasury Department refuse[d] to stop forcing permanently disabled people to pay taxes on student loans that have been canceled, leaving a vulnerable population susceptible to thousands of dollars in charges, according to Senate staffers.
 Anyone with a severe disability is eligible to have the government discharge their federal student loans. The process is widely considered difficult to navigate, so the Obama administration allows people to use their Social Security designation to apply, yet few take advantage. As a result, the Education Department began identifying borrowers too disabled to repay their federal loans and guiding them through debt cancellation. The trouble is, every dollar forgiven by the government is considered taxable income.
Congressional lawmakers have urged Treasury to use its administrative authority to fix the problem, but the department is not taking action.
At a meeting Wednesday, Treasury officials informed Senate staffers that it will not issue guidance addressing the tax penalty for disabled borrowers, according to people in attendance who were not authorized to speak publicly. They said Treasury officials conceded that roughly two thirds of affected borrowers are insolvent, a designation that would allow Treasury to waive any taxes connected to discharged loans. Claiming insolvency, however, involves complex paperwork. ...

7 comments:

  1. Congressional lawmakers have urged Treasury to use its administrative authority to fix the problem, but the department is not taking action.

    Or, heaven forbid, Congress could actually take some action.

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  2. This shouldn't be that difficult. That is something they could do now.

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  3. 221

    Sorry, but they will be too busy cutting taxes on the rich, increasing the taxes on the middle class and kicking the poor to the curb.

    Pray, pray that this is not what is going to come to pass.

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  4. @ 9:16 That has ever been the agenda when the right is in power, so yeah we got at least four years of that.

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  5. What practical effect does this have on the desperately poor? No income = no taxes withheld. Maybe an earned income tax credit is captured?

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  6. 6:14, don't do that. Don't you even mention the biggest fraud ever, the EIC..... Income redistribution, from the tax payers to the entitled, based on nothing but their word, and they have nothing to lose by lying about bogus children..

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  7. 2:02

    counterpoint--the EIC sucks because one must have taxable income to get it/max it out; we should give out much more money per kid to everyone.

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