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   can.taxes      All that "free" healthcare has a price      23,408 messages   

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   Message 23,109 of 23,408   
   Alan Baggett to All   
   Tax deadline gaffe costs Canada Revenue    
   24 May 16 19:03:17   
   
   From: AlanBaggett@volcanomail.com   
      
   Tax deadline gaffe cost Canada Revenue Agency estimated $1.5 million : CRA SOTW   
      
   Documents suggest the Canada Revenue Agency’s error was due to repeating an   
   old message, or possibly copying and pasting information from 2014, when a   
   five-day extension was granted due to a hacking incident.   
      
       
   By Vanessa Lu Business reporter   
      
      
   The taxman had to forgo as much as $1.5 million in interest when the Canada   
   Revenue Agency extended last year’s tax filing deadline after mistakenly   
   giving the wrong date.   
   Agency officials estimated that moving the income-tax returns deadline to May   
   5, from the usual April 30 midnight deadline, meant $1.43 million in lost   
   interest from Canadians who filed their taxes late over those five days,   
   according to documents    
   released under the Access to Information Act.   
      
      
   The information comes more than a year after the Star first requested details   
   about the error that likely resulted from repeating an old message, or   
   possibly copying and pasting information from 2014, when a five-day extension   
   was granted to taxpayers    
   due to a hacking incident.   
      
      
   The $1.43-million figure assumes all tax payments — totalling $2.09 billion   
   — were late by five days, based on a five-per-cent interest rate, but the   
   CRA said it has no way of knowing what the true financial impact was. By May   
   6, it had received 24.7    
   million individual tax returns, in line with projections.   
      
      
   The $1.43-million estimate was provided to show “a worst-case scenario,”   
   CRA spokesman David Walters said in an email.    
      
      
   “It is not possible to determine the exact cost as we do not know when   
   individuals would have filed and paid their taxes, if the extension had not   
   been granted,” Walters said.   
      
      
   Last April, the agency did not disclose cost implications, stating that   
   “given the extended period is short, and most taxpayers filed by April 30,   
   the costs resulting from the filing extension will be negligible.”   
      
      
   Immediately after the deadline was extended, the Star filed two separate   
   requests for information under the Access to Information Act. One asked for   
   the financial implications of lost revenue related to the extension, which was   
   released last week as part    
   of 38 pages of documents, while the other asked how the mistake was made and   
   discovered.    
      
      
   That request is still outstanding, though the released documents hint at how   
   the error was made.   
      
      
   Even though income taxes are due April 30 annually, the CRA has a   
   long-standing practice of giving Canadians who file electronic returns a   
   five-day grace period in case of transmission problems or technical   
   difficulties.   
      
      
   The grace period message is posted on the EFILE webpage annually and sent to   
   approximately 45,000 tax preparers indicating that if they have transmission   
   errors, late filing penalties will not be assessed as long as the tax return   
   is submitted within    
   five business days of April 30.   
      
      
   “The grace period message is considered to be routine in nature and is   
   posted on the EFILE webpage annually. It is sent to EFILERS using an email   
   distribution system,” reads a draft report dated May 4. “Typically, the   
   previous year’s message is    
   edited by an officer to reflect the current-year circumstances.”   
      
      
   In another draft report, dated June 2, the agency said: “This year’s   
   message was posted on the CRA website on Friday, April 24, 2015. It was   
   incorrect and provided an extension of filing deadline for all, similar to the   
   message that went out last    
   year where a filing extension was given due to heartbleed,” the document   
   reads.   
      
      
   “Heartbleed” refers to the Heartbleed Bug, a software flaw discovered in   
   2014 that could expose online passwords and sensitive personal information. In   
   April 2014, the CRA had to shut down its website to all electronic filing for   
   five days after    
   determining someone had hacked into the service and accessed social insurance   
   numbers. The filing deadline was extended to May 5, 2014.   
      
      
   In the documents, the agency said it will ensure this does not happen again.    
      
      
   “Additional reviews and more formal approvals will be introduced to ensure   
   quality and accuracy of public messaging in the future,” the CRA said.   
      
   Estimate of financial impact on CRA as assessed in April 2015:   
   - $5,612 average amount owing   
   - 372,634 taxpayers who owe money   
      
   -$2,091,552,227 owed in taxes    
      
   - Five-per-cent interest rate   
      
   - $40,000 in IT system costs. The data systems that process individual tax   
   returns have 175 applications.   
      
    - $389,000 to boost service at call centres, including adding toll-free lines   
   due to the extension. But the CRA said money resulted from “in-year   
   reallocation,” which means total call centre spending was unchanged. Initial   
   estimates suggest the    
   impact could be $600,000 to $1 million.   
      
      
   ----------------------------------------------------------    
   Miss a Tax Tale Miss a lot!    
   Visit the CRA SOTW Library at http://canada.revenue.agency.angelfire.com    
      
   ------------------------------------------------------------    
   Alan Baggett - http://www.taxcollectorsbible.com/ - Tax Collector's Bible   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   

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