January 20, 2006
Tax scare proves to
be "an error"
Iqaluit residents won't
get hit with ultra-high tax bills
JOHN
THOMPSON
Iqaluit residents won't
be billed thousands of extra dollars in taxes every year, as was feared last
week.
The Canada Revenue Agency
included Iqaluit on a list of "developed rental markets," which would
have meant anyone living in staff housing would have owed large, unexpected
amounts of tax on the value of their rent subsidies. That - if it were true
- would have sucked millions out of the pockets of Iqaluit wage-earners who
live in staff housing.
"Iqaluit should never
have been on that list of communities with developed rental markets," said
Colette Gentes-Hawn, a spokesperson for the CRA. "This is an error. It
just should never have been on the list."
"We're really sorry
to have caused people all kinds of concerns."
The federal government
still doesn't know how the mix-up happened, she said. "We're still looking
at that."
But other mistakes recently
made by the CRA are being blamed on a flood of last-minute changes issued by
the finance minister before the federal government toppled. The agency is spending
$3.9 million to mail correct tax information to Canadians, after out-of-date
material was sent earlier.
The CRA has no plans to
reclassify Iqaluit as a developed rental market, said Colette Gentes-Hawn.
However, one accountant
who visited Iqaluit for the CRA during the fall did suggest making such a change,
according to MP Nancy Karetak-Lindell, who has been in contact with the agency
since the issue became political dynamite.
"Someone remembered
someone, and I don't know who, had asked that question," she said.
Gentes-Hawn says if Iqaluit's
tax status did change, residents would be given ample warning first.
"Any changes like
this would have happened with discussions with the people of Iqaluit,"
she said. Notices have been mailed out to employers to clear up confusion.
NDP candidate Bill Riddell
surprised a standing-room audience with details of the tax scare during last
week's federal candidates debate in Iqaluit. At the time, he predicted that
the people of Iqaluit would lose $4 million in disposable income.
Businessmen later denounced
the change as a work of evil, while New Democrats exploited the opportunity
to slam incumbent Liberal MP Nancy Karetak-Lindell.
"It's just another
example of the arrogance the government's had over the last 10 years,"
said Iqaluit Centre MLA Hunter Tootoo, who supports the New Democrats, on CBC
Radio last week.
Angry Iqalummiut swamped
the constituency office of Karetak-Lindell with phone calls and emails.
"It's amazing, the
amount of hate mail we got," said Susan Scullion, Karetak-Lindell's executive
assistant.
Karetak-Lindell says she
took the abuse from opponents in stride. "When you're the incumbent, you
tend to expect all these things," she said. "You can put spin on any
issue. It's part of politics."
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