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Two quarterly newsletters have been added—one about personal issues, and one about corporate issues.

A number of circumstances and developments have come together over the past few years to make working from a home office—once almost unheard of—a common fact of business life. First and foremost, of course, is the technology (particularly communications technology) which enables the home-based worker to have access to all of the information and services available to his or her in-office counterpart. Given the right technology, it’s nearly as easy for an employee working from home to send and receive e-mails through the employer’s communications network and access the people, information, and services needed to do his or her job in the same way as it would be if he or she was at the office.

As if dealing with bills from the recent holiday season and trying to come up with the funds for an RRSP contribution weren’t enough, February is also the month in which millions of Canadian taxpayers receive an Instalment Reminder from the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA). For many of those taxpayers, who have received many such notices in the past, the reminder and the tax instalment process are familiar, although not necessarily welcome. For those who are receiving one for the first time, however, both the reminder itself and figuring out how to deal with it can be baffling.

It’s that time of year again, when advertisements about the wisdom of contributing to your registered retirement savings plan (RRSP) fills the airwaves and Web sites. And, since the introduction of tax-free savings accounts (TFSAs) in 2009, February is now also the month in which Canadians wrestle with the question of whether to put any available funds into an RRSP before the contribution deadline of February 29, 2012, or whether to deposit those funds instead in a TFSA.

It’s almost impossible not to have heard that the amount of debt carried by Canadian households is at an all-time high—reaching, on average, just over 150% of household income. Carrying so much debt can be relatively painless when interest rates are at historic lows, but it’s clear that rates cannot and will not remain at such levels indefinitely.

On June 6, Minister of Finance Jim Flaherty brought down the second incarnation of the federal government’s 2011-12 fiscal year Budget. The budget, which had originally been delivered on March 22, 2011, had not passed by Parliament before the government fell and a general election was called.

Each year, at the beginning of July, a number of tax changes, at both the federal and provincial levels, are implemented. In some cases, the changes are those announced in the current year federal or provincial budget to take effect as of July 1. In other cases, those budgets included changes to individual tax rates or credits which were retroactive to the beginning of the year, and adjustments are made to employee source deductions beginning in July to take account of those changes. Finally, in some cases, the “benefit year” for a federal or provincial program begins on July 1, and benefit amounts are changed as of that date. What follows is a listing of changes at the federal and provincial levels which will either take effect on July 1 or be reflected on employee paycheques for the first time as of that date.

Two quarterly newsletters have been added—one about individual issues and one about corporate issues.

As gas prices across Canada look to set new records, the cost of getting to work (or getting just about anywhere) is likely a topic of conversation in nearly every home and workplace in Canada. Consumers are looking for just about any way to reduce their cost of getting around.

It’s no secret that Canadians have, over the past decade or so, taken on an unprecedented level of personal and family debt. An extraordinarily low interest rate environment, the increased availability of credit through a variety of sources and credit vehicles and a generally more “relaxed” attitude toward debt have all combined to make personal debt—sometimes substantial personal debt—more the rule than the exception.


Homeowners looking for mortgage financing or re-financing may face more stringent requirements from their lending institutions following implementation of the latest federal government changes on April 18, 2011.

By now, most Canadian taxpayers (with the exception of the self-employed and their spouses, who have until June 15) will have filed their 2010 income tax returns. Once the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) has processed those millions of returns, over the next few weeks and months taxpayers across Canada will begin to receive Notices of Assessment for 2010. In most cases, the Notice of Assessment issued will simply confirm the information which the taxpayer provided on the return, perhaps with some minor arithmetical corrections. However, not infrequently, the Notice of Assessment will indicate that the CRA has disallowed or changed the amount of certain deductions or credits, or has included in income amounts not declared by the taxpayer on his or her return. When that happens, it’s time for the taxpayer to decide whether to dispute the CRA’s assessment of their tax situation.

By the time most Canadians sit down to gather together information slips and receipts to prepare their 2010 tax return, any opportunities to minimize tax payable for the year are, for the most part, gone. Most tax-planning or tax-saving strategies, in order to be effective for 2010, would have to have been put in place by the end of that calendar year. The major exception to that rule is, of course, registered retirement savings plan (RRSP) contributions, but even those had to have been made by March 1, 2011 in order to be claimed on the 2010 return.

Unlike contributing to an RRSP or a tax-free savings account (TFSA), the idea of splitting pension income as a tax-planning strategy doesn’t get a lot of attention in the media. That’s unfortunate for a couple of reasons. First, the splitting of pension income can provide significant tax savings to those able to utilize it—generally older taxpayers who in many cases are living on a fixed income and can really benefit from the tax savings received—especially in the current low interest rate environment. Second, unless you’re getting good tax-planning advice, it’s very easy to overlook pension income splitting as a way of reducing your tax burden. The only references to pension income splitting on the annual return are two entries, one on line 116 and the other on line 210 and, unless you are already aware of the significance of those entries, there’s really nothing to alert you to it. The Income Tax and Benefit Guide provides very little in the way of explanation and no indication at all of the benefits which may be obtained. In addition, the form which must be filed to effect a pension income splitting strategy isn’t part of the standard tax return package provided to taxpayers by the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA)—taxpayers must ask for it and obtain it separately.

If the constant flow of television commercials reminding taxpayers of the upcoming RRSP contribution deadline wasn't enough, the arrival of the 2010 tax return form and the issuance of tax information slips must leave taxpayers in no doubt that it's that time of year again. By the end of February or early March, taxpayers will usually have received all of the information needed to prepare their 2010 income tax returns. Issuers of T4s (for employment income) and T5s (for investment income, including interest and dividends) must send such information slips to employees, shareholders, and account holders by the end of February. Self-employed taxpayers, who must calculate their own business income for the year, will certainly be in a position to do so by the end of February. Finally, retirees who receive pension income, either from a former employee or from the Canada Pension Plan or Old Age Security program, will have received T4A information slips from the pension plan administrator or the government of Canada documenting that income for 2010.


The Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) has devoted significant resources over the past couple of decades to ensuring that Canadians can deal with the Agency on personal tax matters through its Web site, while still protecting taxpayer confidentiality. Most Canadians are by now aware that they can file their returns electronically, and in 2010 more than 13 million tax returns were filed that way. What many taxpayers likely aren't aware of is that it's possible to do nearly all your business (not just filing of returns) with the CRA online through their Web site at www.cra-arc.gc.ca, and that recent changes have been made to how that online access is obtained.


Canada's current minority government has now held office for just over five years, and speculation that a federal election will take place in 2011, perhaps as early as the spring, continues to increase. To win such elections, politicians need votes. And to run the election campaigns needed to garner those votes, they need an organization, volunteers… and money. The task of raising that money is made somewhat easier by the fact that Canadian taxpayers who donate money to political parties or candidates can claim a federal tax credit for those donations.


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