November 22, 2024

Bucks Blog: Those Claiming Higher Ed Credits Must Wait to File Taxes

Thursday is the official opening of tax filing season, but taxpayers who are claiming certain higher education credits must wait a bit longer.

Those using Form 8863, Education Credits, will have to wait to file until mid-February, the Internal Revenue Agency says, after it finishes updating its systems for processing the form.

The form is used to claim both the American Opportunity Tax Credit and the Lifetime Learning Credit.

The AOTC, as its known, gives families of eligible college students a tax credit of up to $2,500 per year for up to four years; students must be enrolled in a degree program. The credit was extended for five years by Congress in the “fiscal cliff” legislation, formally known as the American Taxpayer Relief Act, passed on Jan. 1.

(The Lifetime Learning Credit offers a credit of up to $2,000; students don’t have to be enrolled in a degree program. This credit wasn’t at risk from the “fiscal cliff,” according to SavingforCollege.com.)

The I.R.S. offered this explanation for the delay in accepting returns using Form 8863: “As it does every year, the I.R.S. reviews and tests its systems in advance of the opening of the tax season to protect taxpayers from processing errors and refund delays. The I.R.S. discovered during testing that programming modifications are needed to accurately process Forms 8863.”

In early January, the I.R.S. said it would have to delay receipt of tax returns until Jan. 30 because of the extensive tax changes passed by Congress in the Taxpayer Relief Act. The agency said it had to update forms and instructions and make adjustments to its processing systems before it could begin accepting returns.

Typically, the agency said, about 3 million tax returns filed through mid-February include Form 8863, or less than a quarter of those filed during the year.

The delay doesn’t affect filers claiming other education-related tax benefits, like the deduction of tuition and fees and the interest on student loans, the I.R.S. said. Those taxpayers may start filing Thursday, with most other taxpayers.

Are you planning on claiming one of the tax credits affected by the delay? How will the delay affect you?

Article source: http://bucks.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/01/29/those-claiming-higher-ed-credits-must-wait-to-file-taxes/?partner=rss&emc=rss

United Flights Resume After Five-Hour Computer Failure

Would-be passengers accustomed to using smartphones as tickets received handwritten boarding passes for flights that could not take off because connectivity problems had shut down departures, reservations and airport processing systems for more than five hours.

“While we will be experiencing some residual effect on our flight operations throughout the weekend, United is committed to restoring normal operations as soon as possible,” Alexandria Marren, an executive for systems operations control, said in a statement from United Airlines.

Mary Clark, a spokeswoman for the airline, said it canceled 16 flights on Friday and 15 on Saturday. Ms. Clark said she could not comment further about the underlying cause of the system crash.

Though the process of rescheduling flights was unlikely to take more than a day, passengers struggled to make new arrangements on Saturday morning.

“I’ve been waiting in line for seven hours,” Juergen Schmerder said on his cellphone from San Francisco International Airport.

He was checked in for his flight to Frankfurt after the system was restored late Friday night, he said, but the flight was ultimately canceled anyway. He could go home, he said, “If I only knew where my luggage is.”

Mr. Schmerder said there were five customer service agents working through a line of 200 to 300 people, down from about a thousand earlier in the morning.

“It’s moving at a speed of one customer every 5 or 10 minutes,” he said. His new flight to Germany is on Monday.

The network problems started around 8:15 p.m. Eastern time on Friday, according to United. Around 2 a.m. Saturday, the company sent a message over Twitter saying the systems were up again. United offered customers traveling through several major airports, including those in Newark, Chicago, Washington and Tokyo, on Friday or Saturday a “one-time date or time change, and the change fees will be waived.”

The company recommended that passengers print their boarding passes at home and arrive at the airport early. United officials encouraged passengers to check the company’s Web site, as they might have been automatically rebooked on a new flight, and noted updates on United’s Twitter feed.

But many customers found social media a better outlet for expressing frustration than finding information.

“NEVER FLY UNITED! they canceled our flight last night … did not comp us for the rooms,” Shelby Kerr said on Facebook on Saturday morning. After landing, she continued, the flight sat on the tarmac for so long that she missed her connection.

This article has been revised to reflect the following correction:

Correction: June 18, 2011

An earlier version of this article misidentified the parent company of United. It is United Continental Holdings, not Continental Airlines,

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=fb5c75e9bb610437e2fdce488b9dab84