I thought USPS change of address forms were only effective for 30 days. Am I incorrect about that? If so, a change of address submitted in May would have expired by the end of the year.
Someone earning "reportable" income off the books probably didn't have any income, social security or or medicaid taxes withheld from it. A W2, 1099 or equivalent probably wouldn't lower their tax liability and would only serve to expose the employer to (deserved) investigation for tax evasion.
I'm thinking it's not very prudent to throw away the most recent pay stub from an employer until you have that W-2 in your hand. Even then, I thinking the last pay stub should be retained if there is other information (like pension/401K deductions or insurance premiums) that isn't duplicated on the W2. While I'm aware many people would have storage problems retaining every pay stub, you could verify the running totals are consistent with the prior pay stub before shredding the old one (probably has information you shouldn't be putting into the trash intact)
Someone earning "reportable" income off the books probably didn't have any income, social security or or medicaid taxes withheld from it. A W2, 1099 or equivalent probably wouldn't lower their tax liability and would only serve to expose the employer to (deserved) investigation for tax evasion.
I'm thinking it's not very prudent to throw away the most recent pay stub from an employer until you have that W-2 in your hand. Even then, I thinking the last pay stub should be retained if there is other information (like pension/401K deductions or insurance premiums) that isn't duplicated on the W2. While I'm aware many people would have storage problems retaining every pay stub, you could verify the running totals are consistent with the prior pay stub before shredding the old one (probably has information you shouldn't be putting into the trash intact)