Oireachtas Joint and Select Committees

Wednesday, 29 May 2013

Joint Oireachtas Committee on Finance, Public Expenditure and Reform

Property Tax: Discussion with Revenue

3:30 pm

Ms Josephine Feehily:

As my opening statement has been circulated, I will shorten it in my delivery. It is important to remind ourselves of the background. At the end of July of last year, the Government decided to introduce a local property tax, LPT, and that, without prejudice to the policy decisions, this would be collected by Revenue. Together with my Commissioner colleagues, we began to develop an implementation pathway in circumstances in which we were missing key policy decisions, a register, legislation and an IT system.

Nine months later, by the end of March, two LPT Bills had been drafted and enacted, a register had been compiled and an IT system had been built. We were more than half way through the issue of LPT returns in respect of more than 1.66 million properties, the first 25,000 returns had been already filed and the first €1 million had been already transferred to the Exchequer. In other words, we had a fully functioning new tax within nine months.

Since the register was compiled from several databases, we knew that some people would receive letters in error. We flagged this from the beginning publicly and in our letters to customers. We also knew that we would be missing properties. Given the scale, we knew from the start that Revenue did not have the necessary infrastructure to manage the volume of queries that was inevitable with a new tax. We made arrangements to manage it with a mix of Revenue and external resources. We identified risks and put in place contingency plans. We continued to build the register even as the issue of returns was ongoing. We issued LPT returns to just over 1.69 million properties either by post or by way of their Revenue Online Service, ROS, inboxes. We carried out an extensive communications campaign and advised property owners that, if we did not contact them, they still had an obligation to file. We were supported in our communication campaign by the Citizens Information Services. I am grateful for its help.

I will turn to the credit card issue, as the committee asked that I address it specifically. While we certainly had not foreseen it, the systems and people we had in place ensured that we were able to respond quickly after it happened. Late on Thursday, 9 May, senior Revenue officials were informed that a member of the public had contacted Revenue's LPT branch via the LPT helpline and reported that unauthorised access to his credit card had been attempted. He advised that he had recently used the helpline to file his property tax return. Revenue immediately contacted Abtran, the company that operates the LPT helpline on our behalf. Using sophisticated call recording technology, Abtran quickly identified the agent who took the call, confirmed to us early on Friday morning that it had identified the individual and reported the incident to the Garda. Subsequently, Abtran also confirmed that the Garda had met and interviewed the person in question. Given the fact that the issue is still under investigation, it would not be appropriate for me to comment any further.

Given the nature of the breach, we reported the issue to the Data Protection Commissioner on the Friday in question. While we are continuing to work with his office, he has stated publicly that he is satisfied that Revenue acted correctly by reporting the incident and in the way we handled it.

Over the weekend in question, Revenue officials were in constant contact with Abtran. It subsequently transpired that the agent had inappropriately obtained the credit card details of 11 customers in total. We issued a comprehensive public statement on Sunday, 12 May and engaged extensively with the media on Monday, 13 May to reassure the public. I have already circulated copies of the relevant statements to the committee.

Most importantly, I can confirm to the committee that, while the individual in question tried to effect transactions using some of the credit card details, he was not successful and no one suffered a loss. I can also confirm that he was not a member of any payments authorised team within Abtran, had no authority to ask for those details and should not have done so.

Senior Revenue officials have since met Abtran and conducted a full review of data security and personnel vetting arrangements. The company, which is accredited to internationally recognised standards, including certification for payments security and ISO 27001, has on foot of its own internal investigations assured us that the incident was an isolated matter involving a single individual.

Regarding systems and technology, I wish to clarify that no Abtran employee has any access to Revenue's computer systems. These are fully secure and were not impacted on in any way by this incident.

Thankfully, the issue does not seem to have had a negative impact on the number of customers choosing to file their property tax returns by telephone. In fact, one of the reasons we decided to extend the filing deadline until 8 p.m. today was the volume of requests received yesterday to file over the telephone, approximately 8,000.

The outcome of the voluntary phase of the LPT has been successful to date and I am pleased to be able to advise the committee that LPT returns have been filed in respect of 1.52 million properties, a slight increase on the number cited in the information provided to members. Returns are being received this morning at the rate of 2,000 per hour. Next week, when the Department of Finance announces the May Exchequer figures, I expect that it will include more than €100 million of this new tax, transferred by Revenue to the Exchequer. This result is a credit to the work of teams of people in Revenue and, more importantly, to the taxpayers who responded and shows once again that voluntary tax compliance is high in this country.

These numbers do not include about 160,000 properties for which local authorities or social housing groups are liable, and for which special payment provisions were made in legislation. Those bodies will be filing by separate arrangements with us, and including these will bring the voluntary compliance figure to 1.68 million properties.

I need to explain at the outset that detailed analysis of the returns will take some time and I hope the committee will appreciate that I do not have many detailed facts and figures today, bearing in mind that more than 400,000 returns have been filed since last Friday evening. We have, however, done some work at a high level this morning and I have some preliminary data which I can share with the committee. For example, 22% of filers filed a paper return, 73% filed online and 5% filed by telephone or through the local tax office network. Provisionally, I can say that approximately 3% opted for deferral or exemption, and this figure is smaller than was originally estimated by the Department of Finance. I can also give some preliminary information on the range of payment options chosen. For example, 46% paid using debit or credit cards, 15% of people have paid by cheque or single debit authority, 27% have opted for direct debit, 5% have opted for voluntary deduction at source and 7% have opted to pay through the external service providers. These percentages were reasonably constant, even when numbers increased.

As I mentioned, the next steps in this project include activating the various payment options chosen, including by sending files to employers and Departments. After that we will be moving into compliance mode and we have already begun to identify non-engagers for follow-up action. We owe no less to all the compliant taxpayers who have voluntarily filed their returns in such large numbers.

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