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

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   Message 23,355 of 23,408   
   Alan Baggett to All   
   Nova Scotia woman frustrated by Canada R   
   02 Oct 18 16:57:57   
   
   From: AlanBaggett@volcanomail.com   
      
   Nova Scotia woman frustrated by Canada Revenue Agency until CBC gets involved    
   :CRA SOTW   
      
   'It boggles my brain. I live here. I pay taxes. Why can they not search their   
   records?'    
       
   Yvonne Colbert • CBC News • Posted: Oct 02, 2018 6:00 AM AT | Last   
   Updated: 10 hours ago   
       
   Trying to convince the federal government that she lives in Canada has been a   
   frustrating experience for a New Minas, N.S., woman.   
      
   She says all the Canada Revenue Agency had to do was apply some common sense   
   and check her tax returns.   
      
   "It boggles my brain," 76-year-old Patricia Moir told CBC. "I live here. I pay   
   taxes. Why can they not search their records?"   
      
   Moir was born in Canada and has lived here all her life with the exception of   
   a period of time from 1991-93 when she accompanied her husband to Abu Dhabi,   
   where he taught English. There was a short stay in Florida in 1994.   
      
   When they returned home, Moir's husband filed income tax returns, but she did   
   not because she had no income.   
      
   She started filing returns in 2007, when she received OAS and CPP and when   
   income splitting came into effect. She has filed a return every year since.   
      
   Despite that, CRA reassessed her Tax Free Savings Account (TSFA) in 2017 and   
   2018, telling her she owes more than $10,000 in taxes because she was not a   
   Canadian resident when she made the contributions.   
      
   TSFAs only came into being in 2009, 15 years after Moir returned to Canada,   
   meaning she could not have contributed to them while she was out of the   
   country.   
      
   The first reassessment came in August 2017, telling her she owed more than   
   $3,500. She called CRA to ask why and was told it was because she was a   
   non-resident of Canada.   
      
   She explained the situation, but was advised she needed to file a formal   
   dispute, which she did online at the time.   
      
   "They sent a confirmation and a case number and said that someone would   
   contact us when our case had been assigned," Moir said, adding more than a   
   year later she still has not been been contacted.   
      
   But in July of this year she did receive another reassessment of her TFSA,   
   this one informing her she owed another $7,000.   
      
   CRA "don't actually listen"   
   She called CRA but says she got nowhere.   
      
   "The people on the line don't seem to want to listen," Moir said. "They put   
   stuff into a computer but they don't actually listen to what a person is   
   saying."   
      
   Moir said she explained the situation and suggested CRA check her income tax   
   returns, passport and bank accounts as proof she lived here.   
      
   "Why should I have to prove that I live in the country when I pay income taxes   
   every year?" she asked.   
      
   She filed another formal dispute over the second reassessment and sent it by   
   Canada Post.   
      
   Moir said she was able to track the mail to CRA's office in Sudbury, Ont., but   
   CRA says it has no record of receiving it.   
      
   CRA responds quickly after CBC inquiry   
   Frustrated with her experience, Moir contacted CBC, which relayed her   
   situation to CRA.   
      
   Within two days, she was contacted by CRA and told it had reviewed her case,   
   determined she was in the country when the TFSA contributions were made and   
   that she would receive a letter of confirmation and reversal of her assessment.   
      
   "I was pleased to hear back from someone because at the back of everybody's   
   mind, if they think they owe money, it makes you irritable because you know   
   you haven't done anything wrong," she said, noting her husband always pays   
   bills on time.   
      
   Moir subsequently received another call from CRA a week later confirming the   
   first call. She has been given a name and contact number in the government   
   department in the event there are further issues.   
      
   Check that box   
   Moir said she was told the problem arose because she did not file a tax return   
   when she returned to Canada. That meant she didn't check a box on the return   
   stating that she was a Canadian resident.   
      
   Etienne Biram, a CRA spokesman, said CRA cannot discuss individual cases   
   because of confidentiality.   
      
   He said while a non-resident of Canada can hold a valid social insurance   
   number and be allowed to open a TFSA, any contributions made while a   
   non-resident will be subject to a one per cent tax for each month the   
   contribution stays in the account.   
      
   "In addition to the tax of one per cent per month on the contributions made   
   while a non-resident, an individual may also be subject to a separate tax of   
   one per cent per month if any of the same contributions create an excess   
   amount in the TFSA," Biram    
   said.   
      
   He said taxpayers may file a notice of objection within 90 days from the date   
   the CRA sends the notice of assessment, adding objections are resolved on a   
   case-by-case basis and the timelines for resolution depend on complexity.   
      
   Moir is grateful the matter has finally been straightened out but said CRA can   
   resolve these situations much easier by checking their own records.   
      
   "I know that they get a lot of calls but it only takes a few minutes to bring   
   up a person's CRA account and I just don't understand why they wouldn't do   
   that … why they would harass a person rather than fix the problem."   
      
   -----------------------------------------------------------    
   Miss a Tax Tale Miss a lot!    
   Pop the link below into your browser to view the entire CRA SOTW Library!    
   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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