The Internal Revenue Service is extending until June 30, 2021, the period in which it will accept digitally signed and emailed documents due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
In August, the IRS expanded the use of e-signatures as a way to make it easier to file various tax forms and other documents through the end of this year (see story). The IRS also opened a secure messaging service that would allow some documents to be emailed to IRS employees during the pandemic as a way of getting around the millions of pieces of paper mail that accumulated at IRS facilities while they were closed earlier this year. In a memo early this month, Sunita Lough, deputy commissioner of services and enforcement at the IRS, extended the date until the middle of next year.
Craig Kurtzweil is the chief data & analytics officer for UnitedHealthcare's commercial business. In this role, he leverages the nation's largest health care data set to identify and share insights that can help people and care providers make more informed health care decisions, make health care more affordable for everyone and improve outcomes. This includes exploring new ways to apply data through machine learning and artificial intelligence, creating the next generation of health care analytics and making data a differentiator in the marketplace for the company.
Craig joined UnitedHealthcare in 2005. Since then, he has focused on enhancing how data and analytics support UnitedHealthcare's largest employer customers. His team works with large and complex clients that require a broad view of data, ranging from cost and utilization to productivity and disability exposure. As part of this work, Craig formed the Center for Advanced Analytics to focus on analytic innovations that change the way we evaluate health care value.
Prior to joining UnitedHealthcare, Craig served as an actuarial consultant at Deloitte.
Trinity Davis, managing director at 360 Privacy, spent 18 years in protective services, focused in the UHNW private family office and tech sector.
He built and led cross-functional teams in executive protection, residential security, travel security management and protective intelligence, spending the last six years in Silicon Valley working in social media and fintech. He moved to 360 Privacy in 2022 to focus on educating the industry on digital executive protection and how physical threats begin in the digital landscape.
Brandon Milhorn has nearly three decades of advocacy, policy, legal and regulatory experience, primarily in and around Washington, D.C., including five years in critical senior leadership roles with the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., seven years in the private sector with Raytheon and over a decade of public service as staff director and chief counsel for the Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs, general counsel for the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, as an attorney at the CIA and in two federal court clerkships.
The memorandum extends through June 30, 2021, IRS employees’ ability to accept images of signatures (either scanned or photographed) as well as digital signatures on documents related to the determination or collection of tax liability. The memo also extends until June 30 the date when documents can be sent by email and documents can be transmitted to taxpayers by IRS employees using some secure messaging systems.
“As part of our response to the Coronavirus COVID-19 situation, we are taking steps to protect
employees while still delivering on our mission-critical functions,” Lough wrote. “We are maximizing the ability to execute on critical duties in a remote working environment where employees, taxpayers and their representatives are working from alternate locations.”
The IRS will accept images of signatures in tiff, jpg, jpeg or pdf format, as well as Microsoft Office and Zip compressed files. The IRS will also accept digital signatures that employ encryption techniques such as DocuSign.

To eliminate mailing documents as much as possible, Lough also recommended IRS employees should use e-fax or secure messaging systems to receive and transmit documents. However, it’s up to the taxpayer’s if they want to transmit documents electronically. If taxpayers aren’t able to e-fax a document or provide it through an established secure messaging service, they can use email with attachments to transmit a document to the IRS if employees take the following steps:
1. Use the IRS’s existing policies for taxpayer contacts to authenticate the identity of the taxpayer or representative by phone to ensure they are authorized to send and receive taxpayer information. In addition, IRS employees need to verbally verify the email address.
2. Advise the taxpayer or representative by phone that communications through unencrypted email via the internet aren’t secure. Employees have to explain that, except for minimal identifying information in the body of the email, such as the name and last four digits of a Taxpayer Identification Number, they should keep sensitive information out of the subject line and body of emails as much as possible, and should use password-protected encrypted attachments via SecureZip or some other encryption method.
3. The taxpayer or representative should include a statement, either in the form of an attached cover letter or within the body of the email, saying, “The attached [name of document] includes [name of taxpayer]’s valid signature and the taxpayer intends to transmit the attached document to the IRS.” If a taxpayer fails to include such a statement, IRS employees will ask for it in a follow-up phone call. Retransmitting attachments isn’t required, however.
4. After IRS employees receive the document via email, they will make a notation in the case files and include the document as well as the email or cover letter in the case file.
5. If a taxpayer transmits a document that requires a manager’s signature at the IRS, such as an executed Form 872, IRS employees will forward the document via encrypted email to their manager for a signature.


