The Puyallup School District planned to tell its 2,600 employees in a letter late Monday that it didnt withhold enough federal income tax from the paychecks of most workers from January through October, and they will have to pay back the difference.
The largest sum any one employee will owe is about $480, the district said. Some wont owe anything.
The total amount that was under-collected is about $850,000, school district officials said.
The district wont automatically deduct the full amount from workers December paychecks; instead, it will cover the total shortage upfront and collect repayment from employees. Workers can choose to have the full amount taken from their December or January paychecks, or deducted in installments from Jan. 30 through June 30, 2012, the district said.
We apologize for and regret this terrible error, said Superintendent Tony Apostle in an interview. We stand accountable for making it right for every employee. We wish we had not experienced this human error but it is just that, and human errors happen from time to time.
Puyallup is Pierce Countys second-largest school district. An employee recently caught the mistake, which wasnt obvious because the amount withheld isnt a flat percentage but instead is based on workers taxable wages and W-4 information, according to information from the district.
The error happened because revised 2011 federal income tax withholding tables werent loaded into the districts new software system, officials said.
The district switched to new financial software last fall, a move that was especially complicated for the payroll department, district officials said. Last December, about 85 percent of the workforce was paid a day late for one paycheck because of a wrong date that was entered.
District officials said theyre conducting an internal investigation of the tax mistake to find out exactly how it happened, and are putting extra oversight in place so a similar error doesnt happen in the future.
The Puyallup School Board has been notified. In addition to the group letter scheduled to go out Monday night, another letter will be sent to individual workers with the amount if any they owe. Letters also will go to affected employees who retired or no longer work for the district.
Three question-and-answer sessions for employees also are scheduled with district payroll staff in December.
The correct amounts now are being withheld, so employees may see a change in their net take-home pay, officials said. They said employees 2011 W-2 forms will be correct.
If we had not discovered this error now, employees would end up having a larger tax bill next April, Corine Pennington, executive director of business services, wrote in the letter to employees. Because we discovered this error now, we are able to correct your W-2 tax reporting, we wont have to deduct the tax shortage from your December check and we are able to allow employees the ability to have the tax payments taken out of their check over six months (next year).
Pennington recently took over the position. Her predecessor, John Knutson, left earlier this year; district officials said Monday his departure was unrelated to the payroll problems.
The district is required to collect federal income tax and cant make up the difference itself because that would amount to an illegal gift of public funds, Puyallup officials said.
Neither the school board president nor the president of the Puyallup teachers union could be reached Monday for comment.
Sara Schilling: 253-552-7058
sara.schilling@thenewstribune.com
blog.thenewstribune.com/street





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