UMBC celebrates another year offering free tax prep services in partnership with the CASH Campaign of Maryland

Published: Feb 4, 2025

People stand in line behind podium reading "CASH Campaign"
Speakers at the CASH Campaign press conference, including university and government leaders. (Marlayna Demond '11/UMBC)

On January 31, the CASH Campaign of Maryland, a nonprofit working to promote the economic advancement of low-to-moderate income individuals and families in Baltimore and across Maryland, kicked off the 2025 tax season with a press conference at UMBC promoting free tax prep services in the Baltimore area, including services offered on the UMBC campus. 

Maryland Governor Wes Moore, Maryland Comptroller Brooke Lierman, U.S. Congressman Kweisi Mfume, and new U.S. Congressman Johnny Olszewski, Ph.D. ’17, public policy, spoke at the event, applauding the reach of the CASH Campaign and the UMBC student volunteers who make time to help their fellow Marylanders.

UMBC student Riaz Chaudry, a senior in financial economics, who has volunteered at the UMBC free tax prep site since his first year and now serves as the student president and site coordinator, also spoke about his experience. 

Man stand at podium. Sign in background reads "Get your taxes done free"
Financial economics senior Riaz Chaudry, who has volunteered at the UMBC free tax prep site for 4 years, spoke about his experiences. (Marlayna Demond ’11/UMBC)

Chaudry says that when he arrived on campus, he explored many student clubs and other ways to get involved. Volunteering to help prepare taxes for low-to-moderate income Marylanders was the activity that most inspired him, because he felt the immediate impact of giving back to the community.

“It’s rewarding knowing that I am making a difference in people’s lives,” he says. 

Tax prep comes to UMBC

UMBC’s role as a free tax prep site started close to a decade ago, when Trisha Wells, the assistant vice provost for administration and finance for the Division of Professional Studies, says she and a few other UMBC community members who had volunteered as tax preparers at other sites came together to apply to open a UMBC site. The CASH Campaign supported the group with the application process, while UMBC partners such as Residential Life, the Division of Information Technology, the Career Center, and the Shriver Center worked to get space, computers, and more volunteers. The partnership continues with the CASH Campaign, which trains UMBC’s volunteers every year to be ready to prepare tax returns.

In the first year, the UMBC site prepared 115 tax returns, and now averages around 400 per year. Hundreds of trained student volunteers have participated in the efforts, which have saved clients hundreds of thousands of dollars. 

People sit behind computers in a large room with windows. Banners read "UMBC" and "Creating Assets, Savings and Hope"
Volunteer tax preparers were on hand at the press event to help qualified Marylanders with their taxes. (Marlayna Demond ’11/UMBC)

This year, any individual or family in Maryland with a household income of $67,000 or less qualifies for the free tax prep services. Wells says a wide diversity of people have come to the UMBC site over the years, including retirees and people self-employed with jobs such as drivers and home health aides. The services not only save clients tax preparation fees—they often educate people about tax credits they didn’t know they qualified for.

Helping Marylanders save their earned money

The press conference was held on “National Earned Income Tax Credit Awareness Day,” to raise the visibility of a tax credit designed to help low-to-moderate income individuals and families save money on their taxes.

Chaudry says he remembers helping a client last year file a 2023 return, and also amend her 2022 and 2021 returns. Thanks to the earned income credit, Chaudry says the client received a refund, which she was planning to use on unpaid bills. “Delivering the news to her, I could see that she was immediately relieved,” he says. “This is one of the most rewarding feelings as a volunteer.”

Wells agrees that helping clients get better tax refunds is a great part of the job. She also loves how the effort brings together UMBC staff, community, and students, and how the student volunteers learn and grow throughout the tax season.

“Many of our students have graduated, but still come back to volunteer when they can. It is that rewarding!” she says.

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