Published
for the Fort Bliss/El Paso, Texas Community
July
1 , 2004
Reservists,
Guard may be eligible for cash back from FICA
Sgt. 1st Class
Doug Sample
American Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON —
An interpretation of a government rule may mean that mobilized National
Guard and Reserve members and their employers may be in for a refund
on some taxes the employers paid the federal government.
While researching last year for a slide presentation on tax rules for
deployed National Guard members and reservists, retired Army Reserve
Lt. Col. Frank Scattene, a certified public accountant, stumbled upon
an interesting fact.
He read on an Internal Revenue Service Web site about a government rule
stating Guard and Reserve service members were exempt from paying taxes
on “supplemental income” used by employers to pay into such
programs as Medicare and Social Security under the Federal Insurance
Contribution Act and Federal Unemployment Tax Act.
According to Scattene, the IRS doesn’t consider the supplemental
wages as taxable income because they are not paid for services rendered
to the civilian employer.
Scattene, who is associated with the Lehigh Valley Military Affairs
Council, a nonprofit, tax-exempt Pennsylvania corporation that assists
National Guard and Reserve members, soon learned of several cases of
service members who had employers taking out the tax erroneously.
“The reservists didn’t know the rule; neither did the employers,”
he said.
Although supplemental wages are not subject to FICA taxes, the payments
still are income to the Guard and Reserve members and are subject to
income tax, he said.
Wayne Spruell, principal director for manpower and personnel for the
assistant secretary of defense for reserve affairs, said Guard and Reservists
who had FICA taxes erroneously withheld while on extended active duty
should request reimbursement from their employer.
“Individuals who had an employer erroneously withhold the FICA
tax cannot receive it back by amending their tax return,” he said.
He said employers may file an amended tax return, using Form 941 to
seek proper adjustment under special rules of Section 6413 of the Internal
Revenue Code and Treasury Regulations 31.6413(a)-2.
Under this procedure, the employer would receive not only the employee’s
share of the erroneously paid FICA tax, but also the employer’s
share, he explained.
“Employers should want to do this, since they would get their
half of the FICA tax back as well,” he added.
However, Spruell further explained that if the employer declines to
reimburse the FICA, the Guard or Reserve member may file a refund claim
using IRS Form 843.
“They will still need to contact the employer and get a statement
that the employer is not seeking reimbursement of the FICA taxes,”
he said.
Spruell noted that if the employer is unable or unwilling to file the
tax forms, the Guard and Reserve members can obtain forms from the IRS.
And he advised that it would also be helpful to consult a tax expert.
“If I had not been researching this to give the presentation to
make it thorough, I probably would not have thought about it,”
Scattene said. Refunds could range from a few hundred dollars to several
thousand, depending on income, he added.
“This appears to be fairly widespread,” he said. “There
are probably a lot of people who are not getting this money in their
pockets.”
Since Sept. 11, 2001, some 360,000 members of the National Guard and
Reserve have been mobilized to support the global war on terrorism,
including operations in Afghanistan and Iraq.