ST. PAUL, Minn. — The Minnesota Department of Revenue is choosing paper over plastic when it comes to tax refunds.
The state tax agency confirmed Wednesday it is indefinitely postponing a conversion from paper refund checks to preloaded debit cards. An official cited concerns over data security and a decision to focus on promoting direct-deposit refunds instead.
Minnesota lawmakers last spring granted the department permission to move to debit-card refunds.
At a House hearing this week, Democratic state Rep. Mary Murphy of Hermantown brought up the high-profile theft of customer data from Target Corp., Neiman Marcus and other prominent retailers. That's when Deputy Commissioner Matt Massman told legislators that the transition to debit cards wouldn't be introduced this year.
"Context is obviously important," he said. "Even if we were comfortable with the security of the tool, it just wouldn't be an ideal time to roll out."
Massman told The Associated Press on Wednesday that the agency needs complete consumer confidence to get them to buy into a new system. He said officials will reevaluate the debit-card program later this year, but he said it was unlikely the change would happen in time for the 2015 tax season either.
"For us right now it's a definite pause," Massman said. "It's on hold."
The department is aggressively pushing to have refunds directly deposited in bank accounts, an option available since 1997. They stress that direct deposit gets refunds out twice as fast, cost the state less in printing and mailing and cuts down on the risk of lost or stolen payments. Last year, nearly three-quarters of income tax filers went that route.