LOS ANGELES (CBS)
— A bill authored by a Senator Barbara Boxer that could potentially allow the
federal government to prevent any Americans who owe back taxes from traveling
outside the U.S. is one step closer to becoming law.
Senate Bill 1813 was introduced back in November
by Senator Barbara Boxer (D-Los Angeles) to “reauthorize Federal-aid highway
and highway safety construction programs, and for other purposes” .
In
addition to authorizing appropriations for federal transportation and
infrastructure programs, the “Moving Ahead for Progress in the 21st Century
Act” or “MAP-21″ includes a provision that would allow for the “revocation or
denial” of a passport for anyone with “certain unpaid taxes” or “tax
delinquencies”.
Section
40304 of the legislation states that any individual who owes more than $50,000
to the Internal Revenue Service may be subject to “action with respect to
denial, revocation, or limitation of a passport”.
There does not appear to be any specific language requiring a taxpayer to be
charged with tax evasion or any other crime in order to have their passport
revoked or limited — only that a notice of lien or levy has been filed by the
IRS.
Boxer
vowed last week to push House Republicans to pass the bipartisan transportation
bill that would keep the Highway Trust Fund from going bankrupt.
“Thousands
of businesses are at stake, and eventually we are talking about nearly three
million jobs at stake,” she said in a statement. “There are many people on both
sides of the aisle in the Senate who want to get our bill, MAP-21, passed into
law, and I am going to do everything I can to keep the pressure on the
Republican House to do just that.”
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