Thursday January 9th, 2025 5:13AM

Bush to propose giving electronic tax filers an extra 10 days, free Web filing

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WASHINGTON - To encourage greater electronic tax filing, President Bush wants to give e-filers an extra 10 days to get their returns in and begin designing a system allowing more people to file directly to the IRS via the Internet for free. <br> <br> The president will make both proposals in his budget submission to Congress, which is due out next week. Details were provided Wednesday to The Associated Press by the Treasury Department. <br> <br> About 45 million taxpayers are expected to file electronically this year. But that means close to 90 million will not, even though e-filing promises faster refunds, far fewer errors, lower cost to the government and specific acknowledgment that the return made it to the Internal Revenue Service. <br> <br> One barrier is cost: Private companies can charge $12 to transmit a return, compared to 34 cents for a postage stamp. And many taxpayers are concerned about protecting personal financial information given to these companies. <br> <br> Treasury Secretary Paul O&#39;Neill said the 10-day deadline extension -- which wouldn&#39;t take effect until the 2003 tax filing season if approved by Congress -- is intended as extra encouragement for people to try electronic filing. <br> <br> The proposal for free Internet tax filing is potentially more far-reaching and could stir up some controversy. O&#39;Neill said the IRS will &#34;reach out and work in a new partnership&#34; with private companies, an attempt to head off resistance from businesses concerned about competition from the government. <br> <br> Electronic filing is currently done by private companies, some of which charge no fee, that are approved by the IRS. <br> <br> &#34;I don&#39;t intend for the IRS to get into the software business, but rather to open a constructive dialogue with those who already have established expertise in this field,&#34; O&#39;Neill said in a written statement. <br> <br> IRS Commissioner Charles Rossotti said the agency will hold a forum to listen to industry leaders, which include such companies as Intuit Inc., maker of TurboTax software, and H&R Block, which markets TaxCut software. <br> <br> <br> <br>
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