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Technology Stocks : Discuss Year 2000 Issues -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: flatsville who wrote (4560)3/12/1999 8:48:00 AM
From: flatsville  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 9818
 

Planning for Y2K disrupts income tax services
Author: year2000watcher <year2000watcher@hotmail.com>
Date: 1999/03/09
Forum: comp.software.year-2000

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tampabayonline.net

JERUSALEM (AP) - Israel's income tax collectors didn't wait for the Y2K bug
to shut down their computers at the end of the year - they inadvertently
disrupted service a year early. The glitch occured when they tried to
bug-proof the computers of the Israel Tax Authorities, and thousands of
grumbling taxpayers found themselves overpaying.

The mess at the tax office is an indication of the kinds of problems in store
for Israelis - and people worldwide - as the millennium draws near.

<bi>Israel prides itself in being high-tech, but experts said Tuesday the country
was not adequately prepared to tackle the Y2K problem - the confusion created
when computers programed to keep track of the year with only two digits don't
know how to read the year 2000.

Israel's Finance Ministry has been coordinating efforts to prepare the
nation's computers for 2000. However, overworked government clerks missed a
June 1998 deadline to update the most critical computer systems, such as
those in hospitals.

That led Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to appoint his chief of staff,
Moshe Leon, to supervise the effort. But critics still complain the work
isn't being done quickly enough.

''It's a scandal that Israel does not have a national body to deal with the
2000 bug,'' legislator Alex Lubotsky, chairman of parliament's Science
Committee, said, urging the Defense Ministry to take over and accelerate
preparations.

Worldwide, countries have been racing against the clock to weed out millennium
computer bugs, which could threaten airline safety, banking and even defense
systems. American officials have said most industrialized nations are making
progress but developing countries with scarce resources are further behind.

The trouble at Israel's tax office started Jan. 1, the beginning of Israel's
fiscal year, when computer programs are routinely changed.

Government computer experts decided this would be a good time to develop a
Y2K- proof program. But the new software was not ready on time - creating
chaos in tax offices, which no longer had programs for updating files or
generating the tax-deduction forms critical to determining workers' take-home
pay.

Without the tax-deduction forms, employers were required to deduct half of a
worker's pay for income tax.
(Did you get that? Half of their salary!!!)

Understandably, that led to an outcry from taxpayers and tax collectors had no
choice but to turn back the clock - literally.

''Instructions were given to clerks to issue handwritten permits,'' said Sarit
Giladi-Dor, spokeswoman for the Income Tax Authority.

For three months, copies of the scrawled forms have been piling up on the
desks of 35 tax offices around the country, waiting to be entered into the
computer. Tax advisers and accountants were often unable to even access their
clients' files, said Jerusalem tax adviser Yitzhak Becker.


Now the end of ''Bug 99'' is in sight, but it's just the start of work for the
clerks.

The Y2K-friendly program is being tried in four Israeli tax offices, and so
far it apparently works. It is to be installed nationwide next week.

(Yes, let's hope it does work...after two-and-one-half-months.)

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To: flatsville who wrote (4560)3/12/1999 2:21:00 PM
From: Howard Clark  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 9818
 
Flatsville:

As for my comment on keeping the situation quiet...Do you honestly think government and other large institutions are going to run screaming to the public and press that they have serious remediaiton problems?...How naieve!!!

In the Israeli case, it was obviously the other way around, the public went screaming to the government. That's what caused the tax agency to start using a manual work-around. Kind of makes your conspiracy theory seem a little silly doesn't it? How did "they" manage to "keep a lid on" a situation that was apparently common knowledge in Israel?

I think Y2K is a real problem that deserves real scrutiny (though I'm probably not as pessimistic as most of the people reading this). Focusing on the survivalist and conspiracy-theory aspects of the problem distracts from the real issues and does nothing to enhance the credibility of the alarmists.