Congress chides IRS for wasting money on 'Star Trek' parody video

WASHINGTON (AP) - Nobody's going to win an Emmy for a parody of the TV show "Star Trek" filmed by Internal Revenue Service employees at an agency studio in Maryland.
Instead, the IRS got a rebuke from Congress for wasting taxpayer dollars.
The agency says the video, along with a training video that parodied the TV show "Gilligan's Island," cost about $60,000. The "Star Trek" video accounted for most of the money, the agency said.
The IRS said Friday it was a mistake for employees to make the six-minute video. It was shown at the opening of a 2010 training and leadership conference but does not appear to have any training value.
The video features an elaborate set depicting the control room, or bridge, of the spaceship featured in the hit TV show. IRS workers portray the characters, including one who plays Mr. Spock, complete with fake hair and pointed ears.
The production value is high even though the acting is what one might expect from a bunch of tax collectors. In the video, the spaceship is approaching the planet "Notax," where alien identity theft appears to be a problem.
"The IRS recognizes and takes seriously our obligation to be good stewards of government resources and taxpayer dollars," the agency said in a statement. "There is no mistaking that this video did not reflect the best stewardship of resources."
The agency said it has tightened controls over the use of its production equipment to "ensure that all IRS videos are handled in a judicious manner that makes wise use of taxpayer funds while ensuring a tone and theme appropriate for the nation's tax system."
The agency also said, "A video of this type would not be made today."
The video was released late in the day Friday after investigators from the House Ways and Means Committee requested it.
"There is nothing more infuriating to a taxpayer than to find out the government is using their hard-earned dollars in a way that is frivolous," said Rep. Charles Boustany, R-La., chairman of the Ways and Means oversight subcommittee. "The IRS admitted as much when it disclosed that it no longer produces such videos."
The film was made at an IRS studio in New Carrollton, Md., a suburb of Washington. The agency said it uses the studio to make training films and informational videos for taxpayers.
"The use of video training and video outreach through the in-house studio has become increasingly important to the IRS to reach both taxpayers and employees," the agency said. "In the current budget environment, using video for training purposes helps us save millions of dollars and is an important part of successful IRS cost-efficiency efforts."
IRS YouTube videos have been viewed more than 5 million times, the agency said. A video on the IRS website called "When Will I Get My Refund?" has been seen 950,000 times this filing season.
The disclosure of the "Star Trek" video comes as agencies throughout the federal government face automatic spending cuts, including employee furloughs at many of them.
Acting IRS Commissioner Steven Miller has told employees they could be furloughed five to seven days this summer. The furloughs, however, will be delayed until after tax filing season so refunds should not be affected.
The agency said the "Star Trek" video "was a well-intentioned, light-hearted introduction to an important conference during a difficult period for the IRS."
Congressional investigators initially sought both the "Star Trek" video and the "Gilligan's Island" video but after viewing them determined that the "Gilligan's Island" video was a legitimate training video. The IRS did not release the "Gilligan's Island" video.
"The video series with an island theme provided filing season training for 1,900 employees in our Taxpayer Assistance Centers in 400 locations," the IRS said. "This example of video training alone saved the IRS about $1.5 million each year compared to the costs of training the employees in person."
Instead, the IRS got a rebuke from Congress for wasting taxpayer dollars.
The agency says the video, along with a training video that parodied the TV show "Gilligan's Island," cost about $60,000. The "Star Trek" video accounted for most of the money, the agency said.
The IRS said Friday it was a mistake for employees to make the six-minute video. It was shown at the opening of a 2010 training and leadership conference but does not appear to have any training value.
The video features an elaborate set depicting the control room, or bridge, of the spaceship featured in the hit TV show. IRS workers portray the characters, including one who plays Mr. Spock, complete with fake hair and pointed ears.
The production value is high even though the acting is what one might expect from a bunch of tax collectors. In the video, the spaceship is approaching the planet "Notax," where alien identity theft appears to be a problem.
"The IRS recognizes and takes seriously our obligation to be good stewards of government resources and taxpayer dollars," the agency said in a statement. "There is no mistaking that this video did not reflect the best stewardship of resources."
The agency said it has tightened controls over the use of its production equipment to "ensure that all IRS videos are handled in a judicious manner that makes wise use of taxpayer funds while ensuring a tone and theme appropriate for the nation's tax system."
The agency also said, "A video of this type would not be made today."
The video was released late in the day Friday after investigators from the House Ways and Means Committee requested it.
"There is nothing more infuriating to a taxpayer than to find out the government is using their hard-earned dollars in a way that is frivolous," said Rep. Charles Boustany, R-La., chairman of the Ways and Means oversight subcommittee. "The IRS admitted as much when it disclosed that it no longer produces such videos."
The film was made at an IRS studio in New Carrollton, Md., a suburb of Washington. The agency said it uses the studio to make training films and informational videos for taxpayers.
"The use of video training and video outreach through the in-house studio has become increasingly important to the IRS to reach both taxpayers and employees," the agency said. "In the current budget environment, using video for training purposes helps us save millions of dollars and is an important part of successful IRS cost-efficiency efforts."
IRS YouTube videos have been viewed more than 5 million times, the agency said. A video on the IRS website called "When Will I Get My Refund?" has been seen 950,000 times this filing season.
The disclosure of the "Star Trek" video comes as agencies throughout the federal government face automatic spending cuts, including employee furloughs at many of them.
Acting IRS Commissioner Steven Miller has told employees they could be furloughed five to seven days this summer. The furloughs, however, will be delayed until after tax filing season so refunds should not be affected.
The agency said the "Star Trek" video "was a well-intentioned, light-hearted introduction to an important conference during a difficult period for the IRS."
Congressional investigators initially sought both the "Star Trek" video and the "Gilligan's Island" video but after viewing them determined that the "Gilligan's Island" video was a legitimate training video. The IRS did not release the "Gilligan's Island" video.
"The video series with an island theme provided filing season training for 1,900 employees in our Taxpayer Assistance Centers in 400 locations," the IRS said. "This example of video training alone saved the IRS about $1.5 million each year compared to the costs of training the employees in person."
How many languages was the film dubbed in? I have called the irs and had to try several times to get someone whose English I could understand
Pull the refund from their pensions.Â
This is why the taxpayers are mad. It's the frivolous spending on the backs of others.Â
I'm still mad at Obama for closing the WH, while he traveled the country saying there was no funds due to the sequester.Â
@washcomom Cuts education for Vets but sends billions to Pakistan for their higher education
But congress had no problem with the VA wasting money on their Patton parody.
Old Star Trek Enterprise bridge with the crew wearing Star Trek Next Generation uniforms? They completely botched it. I'm outraged.
@Unknown  No worries. IRS employees can't even get the tax laws straight.
We ought to "chide" congress about how much of our tax dollars they throw away each year, and suggest they actually work an entire year for their compensation like most of us.Congress is made up of America's biggest windbags liars and losers, and this country would benefit from a much smaller streamlined approach to our legislative branch.We are quite simply over-represented by an over sized overpaid behemoth that has become disfunctional and out dated.
So I guess they won't be releasing their Harlem Shake video now?
Interesting..Â
'In the video, the spaceship is approaching the planet "Notax," where alien identity theft appears to be a problem.'
At least that is a tacit acknowledgement of the problem. Â Now, they need to communicate with the SSA to find people that use stolen SSNs to really root out the problem.Â
On balance, I would rather they expend that 60k on finding and prosecuting identity thieves, tax evaders, bogus filers, etc. myself.
  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KdFUjNqwpok
The commentary on the 'current leadership' is no doubt why congress chided them . . . .
@NorthernBlackBear  Well, that's 5 and a half minutes I'll never get back...
I wonder if they executed the actors when they were done? :-P
The government gets mad when the IRS wastes 60k but they can waste 2.2 trillion on the Iraq war and that is okay????? Â
@B Smizzle Think about the bigger waste that welfare, social security and medicare are! Where's the anger?
They'll be doing a "When will I get my healthcare?" video next. Just as soon as the IRS army + bullets is finally assembled for next year.
"I'm just APPALLED to think the government would EVER do anything frivolous."
(Really, I'm trying to keep a straight face when saying that!)
I think $60,000 dollars to train IRS agents with Star Trek and Gilligans Island is funny because money was not an issue. Star trek indicated money was obsolete in the 21st century and Thurston howell could not pay with cash. Call and get all the money you can and then some.
agents, put your audits on stun
Remember the castaways did not get off the Island until they had a movie deal. Union
[IMG]http://i49.tinypic.com/rco3s7.jpg[/IMG]
'Congress chides IRS for wasting money on 'Star Trek' parody video' Really? The IRS being chastised for wasting $60k by the congress who have no problems at all in wasting billions and trillions of taxpayers dollars. Kind of ironic.
I was going to say the same thing.
And the average taxpayer gets to play the role of the expendable member of the away team.
@di_da_is_alpha In star trek I believe the term is "red shirt"
JERKS!!!!!!
This is chump change to the kind of money ol'Joe can squander.....
http://abcnews.go.com/blogs/politics/2013/03/hotel-contracts-for-biden-trip-to-london-paris-totaled-1-million/
@kramr And that is chump change to the kid of money ol' Bush can squander
http://www.military.com/daily-news/2013/03/15/study-iraq-war-cost-190k-lives-22-trillion.html
Remember, it was only going to last 6 weeks and  cost $50 billion and most of that would be paid by Oil revenue....
@B Smizzle @kramr  Actually,  B HO is the king of squandering......
spending and deficits SKYROCKETED Â with the B HO admin compared to W's spending.Â
And for the record, YES W Â did spend like a drunken liberal....... Â However, Â B HO Â just doubled down on the stupidity.Â
BTW, Â Bush has been out of office more than a term..... time to let it go
"The film has no value?", the IRS "...has no value". Â Thats a $100 refund for 600 taxpayers. Â Now its a loss.
@RandyHÂ Another lottery I mean raffle
Proof paying taxes is a bad idea.
@TreeWizard Of course it is a bad idea, unless you believe (at least in my case) the government owns 25% of your labor!