plant lover, cookie monster, shoe fiend
19245 stories
·
21 followers

CRA’s simplified tax filing system falling short, experts say

1 Share
Read: 4 min

With another tax season in the books, some are raising concerns that the Canada Revenue Agency’s simplified tax filing system is too complicated to help the low-income individuals it is meant to serve. 

Since 2018, the CRA has operated a simplified tax filing system for eligible low-income Canadians, called SimpleFile by Phone. Those who help low-income individuals file taxes say the system is not helpful.

“Clients are not using it because they don’t find it simple,” said Jonathan Rothschild, who volunteers at several Ottawa tax clinics helping low-income individuals file their taxes. 

“And it requires information that they often don’t have themselves.”

Rothschild estimates he helps more than 200 people each year file their taxes. Most do not use SimpleFile, often because they do not understand the instructions or do not have the technology needed to complete the process, he says.

‘Innovation in tax filing’

Canadians must file tax returns to receive many financial benefits, such as the GST/HST credit or the Canada Child Benefit. 

Not everyone files tax returns. Some research estimates between 10 and 12 per cent of Canadians do not, although internal CRA research suggests this number is lower. 

Often, low-income individuals do not file tax returns because they do not pay taxes. As a result, they miss out on programs designed to help them. 

In response, the CRA developed SimpleFile by Phone. The service allows selected low-income individuals to file their tax return over the phone by answering a short list of questions. It takes about five to 10 minutes to complete, the agency’s website says.

“The [agency] is focused on innovation in tax filing and refining business processes to deliver services to taxpayers efficiently and effectively,” a CRA spokesperson told Canadian Affairs in an emailed statement.

The agency describes SimpleFile as an “easy” service to use. 

Rothschild says the people he helps at tax time would disagree. 

People who don’t speak English or French may struggle to read the six pages of SimpleFile instructions. People answer questions by punching in numbers on their phones.

Rothschild is concerned that no simplified system will be able to reach those in need. “They’re still going to need someone to help them prepare their return,” he said.

Many people Rothschild works with do not have phones. They may not have access to their social insurance number or know the exact way their name is listed on their tax file.

Many do not have fixed addresses, making it difficult for the CRA to mail them their tax returns for verification purposes.

Overly complex code

The CRA is working on expanding the SimpleFile program. Last summer, it conducted a pilot project that used phone, digital and paper options for tax filing. It invited more than 500,000 low-income Canadians who have never filed taxes or have gaps in their tax history to participate.

The agency said it “will chart a path forward beyond 2025 that respects the needs of non-filing, lower-income taxpayers, to make sure more individuals have access to the benefits and credits designed to support them,” the agency said in its email.

The federal government previously announced that it wants to go beyond simplifying tax filing, to automatically completing it for certain individuals. The newly elected Carney government will determine whether it will implement automatic tax filing after a new cabinet is sworn in, the CRA told Canadian Affairs in an email.

A June 2024 Parliamentary Budget Office report estimates that an automatic tax filing system would cost about $50 million a year to implement and administer. It says this system could result in Canadians who would not otherwise file taxes receiving at least $1.6 billion in benefits a year.

But sources say automatic tax filing would be hampered by Canada’s overly complex tax code.  

“It can be much simpler to file taxes. It doesn’t have to be that big, complicated thing,” said Alexandre Laurin, a director of research at the C.D. Howe Institute. In 2022, he published a report about automatic tax filing around the world and implications for Canada.

Right now, the CRA cannot file individuals’ returns in a way that benefits them most, Laurin says. The agency lacks information about all the provincial tax credits or benefits individuals may claim. 

Mentality change

Others say the Canada Revenue Agency should not expand SimpleFile or offer automatic tax filing to middle-income people.

“The Canada Revenue Agency does not have an incentive to get everyone’s tax bill down as low as possible,” said Jay Goldberg, Canadian affairs manager for the Consumer Choice Centre, a non-partisan advocacy group that promotes consumer choice. “They have an incentive to maximize revenue for the government.” 

Goldberg says the tax system needs to be simplified by eliminating or reducing some tax credits and benefits. But he thinks some credits should stay, such as the Disability Tax Credit

“I’m not necessarily saying having zero tax credits is the answer,” he said. “But having a very small number of tax credits that are important to a significant group of people because of a very important overriding policy objective, like ensuring Canadians with disabilities are able to keep more of their income because of the cost of having a disability.”

But for Canada to have a simpler tax system, politicians will need to change their mentality, Laurin says. 

Federal and provincial politicians have a “tendency to look at the tax system to take care of all sorts of social problems,” he said. Governments often try to relieve financial burdens by creating specific tax credits.

Laurin says there are other ways to redistribute wealth to individuals in need. For example, people who currently receive the Disability Tax Credit could get their benefits through Service Canada and not the Canada Revenue Agency, he said. 

“[The reason for] all these credits and deductions in the first place was to use the tax system to redistribute money,” said Laurin. If the government were to simplify its redistribution methods, automatic tax filing could be possible, he says. 

“But we’re very far from there.”

For his part, Goldberg says filing taxes helps people understand how much of their money goes to government programs. It can motivate them to hold governments accountable for spending decisions. 

“All of that comes through being involved in your taxes, and that’s something you don’t have if the Canada Revenue Agency were to automatically be doing it for everybody.” 

The post CRA’s simplified tax filing system falling short, experts say appeared first on CANADIAN AFFAIRS.

Read the whole story
sarcozona
3 hours ago
reply
Epiphyte City
Share this story
Delete

MCDuncanLab (@MCDuncanLab@mstdn.social)

1 Share
Read the whole story
sarcozona
3 hours ago
reply
Epiphyte City
Share this story
Delete

Worker safety agency NIOSH lays off most remaining staff - CBS News

1 Share
Read the whole story
sarcozona
10 hours ago
reply
Epiphyte City
Share this story
Delete

Search of McDonald’s backpack 'illegal' in UnitedHealthcare CEO murder case, defense says - Gothamist

1 Comment

Luigi Mangione’s lawyers allege that police illegally searched his backpack after locating him at a McDonald’s in Pennsylvania, and that none of the evidence inside should be allowed at trial, according to a motion filed Thursday evening.

If a judge agrees, it could pose a major hurdle for the Manhattan district attorney’s office, which is prosecuting one of several criminal cases against the 26-year-old, who is accused of killing United Healthcare CEO Brian Thompson in December.

“Law enforcement has methodically and purposefully trampled his constitutional rights,” the filing states, “in violation of the Fifth Amendment and illegally searching his property.”

Mangione pleaded not guilty to murder in federal court — where prosecutors are seeking the death penalty — and in New York state court, where he faces a first-degree murder charge and additional counts of second-degree murder.

The Manhattan DA’s office did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The Altoona Police Department, which first detained Mangione, also did not return a message seeking comment.

Filings like this one, which seek to suppress evidence or dismiss charges, are common in the early stages of criminal cases and often unsuccessful. But whether or not a judge rules in Mangione’s favor, the motion offers new details in a case that has captured national attention.

According to the filing and court records, police found Mangione at a McDonald’s in December after an employee reported he resembled a suspect wanted in New York. Altoona police allegedly found a black 3D-printed pistol, a silencer and several fake IDs in Mangione’s backpack.

The new court filing argues the search was unconstitutional because officers did not have a warrant and Mangione was already handcuffed and surrounded by police when they began opening his bag.

Mangione’s lawyer claims an officer first searched the bag without raising any alarm, but later said she was checking for a bomb — then placed the backpack in a patrol car without calling the bomb squad.

“Officers continued their warrantless search through Mr. Mangione's backpack at McDonald’s even after he was removed from the restaurant,” the motion says.

The filing also challenges the terrorism-related charges in the state case, arguing the grand jury never established that the charges against Mangione were any more than a single alleged murder.

His lawyer also contends that the dual state and federal prosecutions amount to double jeopardy and violate Mangione’s due process rights.

Read the whole story
sarcozona
16 hours ago
reply
God please let this man walk free because of police incompetence
Epiphyte City
Share this story
Delete

RFK Jr. Was My Drug Dealer - The Atlantic

2 Shares
Read the whole story
sarcozona
1 day ago
reply
Epiphyte City
acdha
1 day ago
reply
Washington, DC
Share this story
Delete

Israel is starving Gaza to death, and still the world does nothing | Middle East Eye

1 Comment

Israel is starving the entire population of Gaza - to the point of death, for a growing number of Palestinians

There is not a single place in the world where starvation is an inevitability: not after major environmental disasters, amid drought and crop failure, or during armed conflict and genocide. Starvation is an act of either intentional violence or indifferent neglect, both of which are made possible by our collective inaction. 

Nowhere is this more evident than in Gaza, where Israel’s occupation, blockade and now-total siege were designed to exert full control over the Palestinian population, deliberately depriving them of the most basic means to sustain life. 

Starvation is a strategy as old as warfare itself. It is deployed as a weapon of mass destruction to inflict maximal harm, and always with calculated disregard for those who suffer and die as a result.

So horrific is this particular form of violence that it is distinguished as a specific war crime in the Geneva Conventions and the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court. In addition, UN Resolution 2417 condemns both the “starvation of civilians as a method of warfare” and the practice of “depriving civilians of objects indispensable to their survival”.

New MEE newsletter: Jerusalem Dispatch

Sign up to get the latest insights and analysis on Israel-Palestine, alongside Turkey Unpacked and other MEE newsletters

Despite the multitude of legal protections, it has now been more than a year since the UN’s special rapporteur on the right to food, Michael Fakhri, observed that experts on starvation had never seen a civilian population subjected to hunger so quickly and so completely as in Gaza.

Throughout the early months of 2024, B’Tselem, representatives of Medical Aid for Palestinians, the EU’s foreign policy chief, and many others issued similar warnings that Israel was intentionally and systematically starving the Palestinian population in Gaza.

Persistent risk of famine

These warnings were informed by the first report of the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC), an initiative established in 2004 to improve evidence-informed projections and targeted responses in situations of food insecurity. 

The IPC’s December 2023 report warned of a growing risk of famine as a result of critical levels of food insecurity affecting the entire population of Gaza. More than two million people were enduring “crisis or worse” levels of food insecurity - the highest proportion in a single territory that the IPC had ever identified in nearly two decades of operations. 


Follow Middle East Eye's live coverage of the Israel-Palestine war


A piecemeal humanitarian performance ensued as the situation in Gaza continued to deteriorate. By February 2024, the Jordanian government began dropping food aid into besieged northern Gaza, after which the World Central Kitchen - an NGO that participated in the airdrops - declared it was “redefining the boundaries of humanitarian aid”.

Throughout last year, experts continued to describe an extremely grave situation in Gaza, repeatedly warning of either a high risk, or the imminent onset, of famine.

By October, the US government had called on the Israeli regime to increase the delivery of humanitarian aid to Gaza. Despite this apparent diplomatic pressure, in December, the Famine Early Warning Systems Network (an initiative comparable to the IPC but funded by the US government) warned that a “famine scenario” was unfolding in northern Gaza. Rather than forcing Israel to end its torturous policies of deprivation and military violence, US officials instead had the report retracted.

Starvation can't be reversed with food aid alone. Those who starve others must be held accountable for their crimes

The starvation of the people of Gaza did not begin in October 2023, nor when Israel repeatedly breached and then broke the ceasefire agreement on 18 March 2025. 

Throughout Israel’s protracted occupation and blockade of Gaza, babies born with low birth weight, along with stunting in children during the early years of life, have become commonplace. Anaemia and other micronutrient deficiencies are prevalent too. Each of these nutritional indicators is determined by Israel’s tight control over the availability and diversity of food permitted into Gaza.

When Israel intensified its blockade of Gaza in 2007, it implemented a concerted policy of systematic deprivation, ostensibly to turn Palestinians against the elected government. 

No attempts were made to disguise this approach; Dov Weissglas, an adviser to Ehud Olmert, then Israel’s prime minister, openly stated in 2006: “The idea is to put the Palestinians on a diet, but not to make them die of hunger.”

Following a three-year legal case, Israel’s defence ministry was forced to release an official policy document in 2012 that detailed how it calculated daily calorie requirements to reduce the supply of food into Gaza to a “humanitarian minimum”. Today, the Israeli regime has completely abandoned the illusion of respect for even the lowest of humanitarian standards. 

Reclaiming political obligations

Last month, more than 3,600 children in Gaza were admitted to health facilities with acute malnutrition, marking a sharp increase from February. Once admitted, many children do not receive the treatment they need, as nearly half of Gaza’s nutrition treatment sites are no longer functioning. 

Since 2 March, the Israeli regime has blocked the entry of all humanitarian aid into Gaza, including food and water. On 16 April, Israeli Defence Minister Israel Katz brazenly declared: “In the current reality, no one is going to allow any humanitarian aid into Gaza.” By 25 April, the World Food Programme declared it had run out of its remaining food supplies.

Israel’s military has simultaneously destroyed Gaza’s agricultural production capacity and decimated Palestinians’ livelihood reserves. Gaza’s fragile food basket, bakeries, fishing boats, food storage warehouses, and emergency kitchens have all been targeted. 

In Gaza dying of starvation is much worse than dying from bombs

Read More »

At least 82 percent of Gaza’s croplands have been damaged, 75 percent of its olive trees have been destroyed, and 95 percent of cattle have died. Amid Israel’s renewed attacks, even more land has been occupied and may be subject to annexation. At the same time, chemicals released by Israeli missiles, coupled with untreated sewage from destroyed sanitation systems, has polluted the soil and groundwater reserves.

As physicians who have worked in Gaza during Israel’s occupation, blockade, repeated military assaults, and now genocide, we hold complicit every state that continues to actively and passively support Israel. The Israeli regime has resolutely exposed the “logic of elimination” inherent to its settler-colonial ambitions. Only immediate and concerted action will protect the Palestinian people from this latest stage in Israel’s campaign of genocidal eradication.

Evidence of scorched-earth strategies, famine warnings, and declarations of plausible genocide were all designed to provoke action. Despite their grave implications, these terms have been repeatedly manipulated and misinterpreted for political gain. 

Rather than invoking concerted action, “risk of famine” warnings have been distorted to imply that the situation isn’t as dire as experts have claimed. Similarly, declarations of “plausible” genocide have been manipulated to obscure the immediate obligations of the international community with drawn-out judicial processes and the seemingly endless pursuit of ever-more irrefutable evidence. 

It is not too late to reclaim the political obligations attached to these terms. The imminent onset of famine demands collective action. Starvation can’t be reversed with food aid alone. Those who starve others must be held accountable for their crimes, and those who have been starved must be afforded justice.

It is not too late to protect Palestinians in Gaza from those who continue to orchestrate and celebrate Israel’s depraved policy of extermination by starvation. 

The views expressed in this article belong to the author and do not necessarily reflect the editorial policy of Middle East Eye.

Read the whole story
sarcozona
1 day ago
reply
There is nothing that could justify starving a million children to death
Epiphyte City
Share this story
Delete
Next Page of Stories