S-132-119
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Finance.
Sponsored by Catherine Cortez Masto (D-NV)
What it does
This bill would authorize the IRS to postpone federal tax deadlines — including filing returns, paying taxes, making retirement contributions, and tax assessments — for taxpayers affected by a state-declared disaster, upon written request from the state's governor. Currently, this postponement authority only applies to federally declared disasters. The bill would also double the automatic extension period from 60 to 120 days for certain taxpayers, including relief workers, injured individuals, and those whose homes, businesses, or tax records are in a disaster area.
Who benefits
Taxpayers in disaster-affected areas whose disasters receive a state but not a federal declaration — including homeowners, small business owners, and individuals who lose access to tax records. Relief workers deployed to state-declared disaster zones. Residents of U.S. territories (Puerto Rico, U.S. Virgin Islands, Guam, American Samoa, Northern Mariana Islands) and the District of Columbia, which are explicitly included. State governments that gain a formal mechanism to request federal tax relief for their residents without waiting for a federal disaster declaration. Taxpayers currently receiving only a 60-day automatic extension who would benefit from the additional time.
Who is hurt
The federal government would experience delayed tax revenue collection during postponement periods, creating a short-term cash flow effect. IRS administrative staff would face increased workload processing governor requests and managing expanded postponement periods. Taxpayers in non-disaster areas receive no equivalent benefit, which some may view as an unequal treatment. There is a potential for broader use of the mechanism if states declare disasters more frequently to obtain federal tax relief for their residents, which could complicate IRS administration.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the current system creates an arbitrary gap in relief: taxpayers hit by a serious disaster may receive no federal tax deadline relief simply because the federal government has not yet issued — or chooses not to issue — a federal disaster declaration, even when a state has already recognized the emergency. They contend that doubling the automatic extension from 60 to 120 days reflects the real-world timeline of disaster recovery, during which affected individuals are often displaced, without records, or focused on rebuilding rather than tax compliance.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that tying federal tax postponements to state-declared disasters — rather than federally declared ones — removes an important federal check on the scope of relief and could allow states to trigger federal tax delays for events of limited severity or geographic reach. They contend that the bill's definition of "qualified state declared disaster" (damage of "sufficient severity and magnitude") is vague and may be difficult for the IRS to apply consistently, potentially creating uneven treatment of taxpayers across states depending on how aggressively governors use the request mechanism.