Lawmakers question why dead people are getting coronavirus checks

Greg Nash

A bipartisan group of lawmakers is urging the Trump administration to take action to prevent additional payments of coronavirus relief checks to dead people.

“While it is essential that our constituents receive stimulus payments quickly, these improper payments to deceased individuals represent significant government waste and a burden to constituents who mistakenly accept the payments,” the lawmakers wrote in a letter Thursday to Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, IRS Commissioner Charles Rettig and Social Security Commissioner Andrew Saul.

Lawmakers who signed the letter include Sens. Tom Carper (D-Del.) and John Kennedy (R-La.) and Reps. Cheri Bustos (D-Ill.) and Greg Gianforte (R-Mont.).

The $2.2 trillion coronavirus relief package that Congress passed in March provided for one-time direct payments to most Americans. Individuals making under $75,000 and married couples making under $150,000 are entitled to the full amount of $1,200 per adult and $500 per child under 17.

The IRS has moved quickly in getting out the majority of the payments, with Treasury and the IRS saying on Friday that they have delivered about 130 million payments. But the rollout of the payments hasn’t been perfect, and one of the issues that has come up is that some people have received payments for dead relatives.

The IRS said on a frequently asked questions web page on Wednesday that payments made to someone who has died should be returned to the agency. It also provided instructions for how the payments should be returned. 

The lawmakers said that the issue of federal agencies making payments to the deceased is not new. They said that the Social Security Administration (SSA) has the most thorough database of people who have been reported to have died but that only a few federal agencies have access to that list. Systems that don’t have access include Treasury’s Do Not Pay system, which is used to help federal agencies prevent improper payments, the lawmakers said.

The lawmakers said they appreciated the IRS’s guidance but that “additional questions remain about the steps needed to address this issue going forward.”

They asked Treasury, the SSA and the IRS to provide answers to several questions, including whether there are situations where relief checks sent to dead people would not be considered improper, how many payments were sent to dead people, what steps are being taken to prevent future improper payments to dead people and what death record databases were utilized before sending out payments.

House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Richard Neal (D-Mass.) said in a separate statement Friday that nothing in the law requires people to return payments they’ve received for their dead relatives and that “the administration should be careful not to overreach in its implementation.”

“This is a moment that requires people exercise their best judgement and humanity,” Neal said. “A family that doesn’t need a deceased loved one’s check should return the money. However, some families receiving these payments could use the assistance to cover costs associated with losing a loved one due to the virus. People with that kind of need should be able to put the money to use as they grapple with the ongoing crisis.”

—Updated at 12:28 p.m.

Tags Cheri Bustos Coronavirus economy Greg Gianforte John Kennedy relief bill Richard Neal Steven Mnuchin stimulus payments taxes Tom Carper Treasury

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