The International Revenue Service (IRS) has reported a decline in new tax fraud cases for FY 2017, citing a lack of manpower to handle any more.
One of the toughest occupations, from biblical times to present, is being a tax collector, and the new tax rules are going to make things busy and tough for folks at the IRS.
The big new tax overhaul law that Congress passed this week touches off a gigantic software do-over job for IRS programmers.
The council also wants the IRS to consider how it can help the agency in the future.
Frances Regan was one of two federal employees honored with the Roger W. Jones Award from the American University School of Public Affairs.
Outgoing commissioner credits his legacy to career employees.
Crystal Philcox, assistant commissioner for operations at the General Services Administration's Technology Transformation Service, is a good example of how federal service can run in families.
The Commerce Department is planning to use U.S. Postal Service workers to help with its 2018 end-to-end tests.
October was the unofficial start of the federal buyout system. The catch, this year, is that there are no buyouts, or at least very few.
President Trump has announced the interim appointment of Treasury official David Kautter to head the IRS and spearhead his push for tax reform legislation in Congress.
The agency says it is on track to implement new hiring policies, and doubled down on its tax ID fraud defenses.
The Government Accountability Office has been tracking IRS technology investment performance for the same 25 years. How are things looking in fiscal 2018?
The IRS stopped more than 880,000 confirmed ID theft returns in calendar 2016.
The ruling only addresses the year-long contract, not the most recent short-term bridge contract between Equifax and IRS.
The suspension means taxpayers cannot create new online accounts using Secure Access.