Ted, with the deepest respect, you and most other folks are wondering the same and with much logic. But, as with many things in life, answers are oftentimes much more complicated. Sure, IRS has the information on anyone who has filed, LAST YEAR, 2018, for folks who used direct deposit which is a large percentage but not all. So, for those who received a check in the mail, now what? Yes, send a check to the last known address. Sound
Sounds simple. It is not.
First, how much does each person get? That is going to be a computation based on 2018 income. Simple? The arithmetic is but the programming is certainly not. We are talking about highly complex, interrelated systems not just a few Excel spreadsheets. After the code is written it must then be tested, also a time-consuming process. I could go into greater detail but your eyes would begin to roll long before you finished reading.
Here is another question I have not seen in the legislation. Will IRS be required to send checks to taxpayers who owe money to the Treasury? That question, by the way, is another complicated programming requirement regardless of whether there will be an offset. If support money will be offset against outstanding liabilities, there will be programming required to account for this. If not, different programming to suppress the offsets. Then there will be many types of notices required. More systems, more programming. Eyes rolling yet.
And all of this is supposed to happen during the filing season during which programming resources every year are TOTALLY dedicated to ensuring that refunds go out for 2019. Where is the IRS supposed to get the resources to do all this new programming? And, the filing season has been extended to 7/15. There is more, lots more, but I think you get the point.