Government Forgives Student Loans for Wounded Vet Will Milzarski But IRS Doesn't
Government Forgives Student Loans for Wounded Vet Will Milzarski But IRS Doesn't
The IRS is asking wounded Michigan veteran Will Milzarski to pay $62,000 in income taxes after the federal government forgave his student loans.First Lt. Milzarski had served two tours in Afghanistan, which left him with a traumatic brain injury, post-traumatic stress disorder, and hearing loss.After deeming him permanently and totally disabled, the federal government cancelled some $223,000 in student debt the veteran had accrued.Speaking to the Lansing State Journal, Milzarski said the brunt of his debt comes from law school. He hadn’t been expecting forgiveness to entail a hefty bill from the Internal Revenue Service.“One part of the government says, ‘We recognize your service, we recognize your inability to work,’” he said. “The other branch says, ‘Give us your blood.’ Well, the U.S. Army already took a lot of my blood.”Milzarski’s case has been taken on by Michigan State University’s Low-Income Tax Clinic.John Wease, the clinic’s director, said tax in Milzarski’s case isn’t logical.“If an individual has been deemed disabled and unable to pay their student loans, it seems incredible that they wouldn’t also be deemed unable to pay the taxes on the forgiveness of those same student loans,” explains Wease.Before attending the U.S. Army’s officer candidate school, Milzaski had been working as a lawyer in Bath Township, MI., and specialized in disability rights.He tried returning to his state job after last year, but retired not long after. Milzaski said he found himself struggling with his own concentration and memory, likely as a result of the injuries he’d suffered in Afghanistan.Unable to make his loan payments while living off disability checks, Milzaski was elated to learn that his $223,000 in outstanding debt had been forgiven by the U.S. Department of Education.His relief didn’t last long – soon thereafter, he received a notice from the IRS demanding tens of thousands of dollars in income tax, as well as a similar order from Michigan’s own tax department.Wease said the Tax Clinic’s first priority is to deal with the federal government, since Michigan tends to base its own tax decisions on precedent set by the Internal Revenue Service.
The Bath Twshp veteran was wounded after being hit by a deflected bullet. Image via the Lansing State Journal / Matthew Dae Smith
Sources
Putnam: Wounded Army vet wins the battle but loses the tax warWounded veteran sees student debt forgiven but $62K tax bill
About Ryan J. Farrick
Ryan Farrick is a freelance writer and small business advertising consultant based out of mid-Michigan. Passionate about international politics and world affairs, he’s an avid traveler with a keen interest in the connections between South Asia and the United States. Ryan studied neuroscience and has spent the last several years working as an operations manager in transportation logistics.