IRS teleconferencing service noted as example of how IT has improved services to the public in spite of budget constraints.

Wyatt Kash, former Editor, InformationWeek Government

March 31, 2014

4 Min Read
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The Internal Revenue Service has had its share of public scrutiny over the past year, first with accusations that IRS agents had unfairly targeted political advocacy groups for audits, and more recently, over concerns that a new IRS online tool that lets users view and print copies of past tax returns could become a target for identity thieves.

So IRS Commissioner John Koskinen was understandably relieved this past week to receive a bit of good news that a video technology service the IRS introduced had received top honors from ACT-IAC, a public-private partnership in the government IT community.

The award recognized the IRS's Virtual Service Delivery program, which allows a taxpayer to interact in real-time through video teleconference technology with an IRS employee.

In an age when consumers can dial up video chat applications on their smartphones, the new service might hardly seem like a breakthrough. But giving taxpayers who need to meet face-to-face with the IRS the ability to resolve their issues electronically marks a significant turning point for the IRS. The agency, which processes 234 million tax returns and and collects $2.4 trillion annually for the federal government, has struggled with how to balance those needs against the cost of providing staff in many cities.

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The teleconference service began operation in October 2011 but has gradually expanded. Taxpayers can now get personalized help with account inquiries, adjustments, multilingual assistance (more than 150 languages translated), anwers to tax issues, tax law assistances, and other information, according to the agency's information website. 

The service helps the IRS as much as taxpayers. It allows the IRS to interact with individuals and business representatives on tax matters in cities with no IRS staff and to supplement service in understaffed and high-traffic locations, according to IRS staffers. Commissioner Kostinen and his IT team, in accepting an award for the program last week, noted that ''92% of taxpayers were happy with the service and would use it again,'' according to their early internal research.

The IRS was one of more than two dozen government agency finalists and seven winners announced at ACT-IAC's 14th annual Excellence.Gov Awards, which were announced March 24. Kimberly Hancher, CIO of the federal government's Equal Employment Opportunity Commission and co-chair of the awards program, speaking on behalf of the program's 40 judges, said the agency programs and the IT initiatives that supported them this year ''defined new levels of government service and benchmarks for operational efficiency.''

The Overall Excellence Award went to a team at the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS), whose work led to the development of diagnostic and progression biomarkers that helped advance the medical research community's efforts in addressing Parkinson's disease.

In addition to the award given to the IRS, awards also went to:

  • The Army Judge Advocate General (JAG) Corps, for creating JAGConnect on MilBook, a secure enterprise social network for the Department of Defense's 10,000 legal professionals.

  • The Risk Management Agency of the US Department of Agriculture, for developing the Crop Insurance Program Compliance and Integrity Data Warehouse, which helps the Federal Crop Insurance Corporation avoid spending billions of dollars annually in potentially fraudulent payments.

  • The US Army's Medical Communications for Combat Casualty Care unit, for its comprehensive medical information system, which provides electronic medical records from the battlefield and streamlines medical logistics and patient care.

  • Benefits.gov, which provides all US citizens with a single, online source of information and prescreening services for federal benefit programs that citizens might be eligible for. The program brings together benefits programs from 17 federal agencies and is operated by the Department of Labor.

  • The Veterans Administration's Program Integrity Tools, which reduces improper payments made by the VA to community providers for the care of veterans and their families.

These five higher-education CIOs are driving critical changes in an industry ripe for digital disruption. Also in the Chiefs Of The Year issue of InformationWeek: Stop bragging about your agile processes and make them better. (Free registration required.)

About the Author(s)

Wyatt Kash

former Editor, InformationWeek Government

Wyatt Kash is a former Editor of InformationWeek Government, and currently VP for Content Strategy at ScoopMedia. He has covered government IT and technology trends since 2004, as Editor-in-Chief of Government Computer News and Defense Systems (owned by The Washington Post Co. and subsequently 1105 Media). He also was part of a startup venture at AOL, where he helped launch AOL Government. His editorial teams have earned numerous national journalism awards. He is the 2011 recipient of the G.D. Crain Award, bestowed annually on one individual nationally for outstanding career contributions to editorial excellence in American business media.

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