Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yea, nobody just forgets to pay their taxes. Was 2022 the first year after a divorce or the first year with a job? If not, you did not forget. Sorry. And they know that, too.
I had been laid off right around the time taxes were due, filed an extension, and then forgot about it. I filed every other year!
Anonymous wrote:It's a big deal with the IRS.
You've rectified it (have you fully rectified - there are usually penalities and additional payments), and you've passed the background check.
You don't work for the federal government.
Therefore, I don't think you need to tell your boss. You're meeting the conditions of your current employer - passing background check for building access.
The IRS is seriously understaffed so this probably goes no further (and is probably why you got the letter about employment and being on thin ice - whoever sent it likely sent you the wong letter). But, if you want a higher security clearance or to work for the federal government, you might have a harder time. That might mean you need to keep records for a longer time so you can document what happened, and you'd probably have to answer probing questions about it. It might take a little longer because they'd want to check in other areas and make sure you're not a security risk, that this was truly a one-time error. But you'd probably pass a security clearance or other more intenstive background check, particularly after a few more years pass with nothing else on your tax records.
Anonymous wrote:OP, move on and forget about it. That’s it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s a pretty big deal not to file your taxes. You’re lucky that you passed the background check. The notice is a warning that you are on thin ice and you can’t screw up. It’s not aggressive at all given how serious the violation is.
And I too don’t believe you forgot. Unless you live in a cave, it’s hard to
Imagine missing all of the millions of reminders that we constantly get both at tax time and the extension deadline. Plus your attitude that this is insignificant and the warning was an overreaction shows that you don’t take that responsibility seriously.
Over a late tax return that was already filed and paid? Calm down, Gladys.
I literally work with an IT guy who admitted to doing drugs on his suitability for government employment form and he got his clearance, and is apparently suitable enough to handle government computers. Let's not act like everyone who works for the government is absolutely perfect and this is the first time they've ever seen a late tax return.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s a pretty big deal not to file your taxes. You’re lucky that you passed the background check. The notice is a warning that you are on thin ice and you can’t screw up. It’s not aggressive at all given how serious the violation is.
And I too don’t believe you forgot. Unless you live in a cave, it’s hard to
Imagine missing all of the millions of reminders that we constantly get both at tax time and the extension deadline. Plus your attitude that this is insignificant and the warning was an overreaction shows that you don’t take that responsibility seriously.
Over a late tax return that was already filed and paid? Calm down, Gladys.
I literally work with an IT guy who admitted to doing drugs on his suitability for government employment form and he got his clearance, and is apparently suitable enough to handle government computers. Let's not act like everyone who works for the government is absolutely perfect and this is the first time they've ever seen a late tax return.
Anonymous wrote:It’s a pretty big deal not to file your taxes. You’re lucky that you passed the background check. The notice is a warning that you are on thin ice and you can’t screw up. It’s not aggressive at all given how serious the violation is.
And I too don’t believe you forgot. Unless you live in a cave, it’s hard to
Imagine missing all of the millions of reminders that we constantly get both at tax time and the extension deadline. Plus your attitude that this is insignificant and the warning was an overreaction shows that you don’t take that responsibility seriously.
Anonymous wrote:It’s a pretty big deal not to file your taxes. You’re lucky that you passed the background check. The notice is a warning that you are on thin ice and you can’t screw up. It’s not aggressive at all given how serious the violation is.
And I too don’t believe you forgot. Unless you live in a cave, it’s hard to
Imagine missing all of the millions of reminders that we constantly get both at tax time and the extension deadline. Plus your attitude that this is insignificant and the warning was an overreaction shows that you don’t take that responsibility seriously.
Anonymous wrote:Yea, nobody just forgets to pay their taxes. Was 2022 the first year after a divorce or the first year with a job? If not, you did not forget. Sorry. And they know that, too.