Pursuant to a congressional request, GAO reviewed the performance of the
Internal Revenue Service's (IRS) Service Center Recognition/Image
Processing System (SCRIPS) in 1996, focusing on: (1) the primary causes
for performance problems that occurred in 1995; (2) whether SCRIPS
performance improved in 1996 as of September 30, 1996; and (3) the
status of IRS future plans for SCRIPS.
GAO found that: (1) SCRIPS experienced significant performance problems
in 1995; (2) two problems were system downtime and slow processing
rates; (3) because of performance problems, two of the five centers
stopped processing Forms 1040EZ on SCRIPS and reverted to using manual
data entry; (4) SCRIPS performance deficiencies in 1995 stemmed
primarily from both hardware and software problems; (5) although IRS had
expected that SCRIPS would be processing five document types, forms
1040EZ, 941, and 1040PC, federal tax deposit (FTD) coupons, and
information returns, IRS postponed plans to process forms 941 and 1040PC
on SCRIPS; (6) of the three remaining document types, the Cincinnati
test certified the software application only for FTD coupons, therefore,
the software applications for information returns and Form 1040EZ were
not thoroughly tested before they were put into production, (7) to
improve the performance of SCRIPS for 1996, IRS made hardware and
software modifications, some of which were made before the start of the
1996 filing season; (8) as a result of some of these enhancements and
more staff familiarity with SCRIPS, according to IRS officials in all
five SCRIPS service centers, SCRIPS performed significantly better
during the 1996 filing season than it did in 1995; (9) in addition to a
slower processing rate for information returns, SCRIPS is not processing
all the forms that it was expected to process in 1996, is expected to
cost more than originally estimated, and is expected to provide lower
labor cost savings than IRS originally anticipated; (10) the latest cost
estimate for SCRIPS is $288 million, considerably more than previous
cost estimates, which, according to IRS' post-implementation review
report on SCRIPS, ranged from +$133 million to $209 million; (11) July
1995, IRS decided to terminate all software programming for the 1040PC
because of SCRIPS' instability, lack of system capacity, and a number of
software application problems; (12) IRS has also decided not to use
SCRIPS to process Forms 941 beyond fiscal year (FY) 1997; and (13) in
addition to funding constraints, according to IRS officials, a decision
on using SCRIPS for Forms 941 will depend on the results of a September
1996 capacity test of SCRIPS, which were not available when GAO
completed its audit work, and decisions by IRS' Investment Review Board.
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