Tips Lead CRA to Recover $26 Million in Payments, Penalties Under Pandemic Relief Program: Federal Records

Tips Lead CRA to Recover $26 Million in Payments, Penalties Under Pandemic Relief Program: Federal Records
A sign outside the Canada Revenue Agency is seen in Ottawa on May 10, 2021. (The Canadian Press/Adrian Wyld)
Isaac Teo
2/14/2023
Updated:
2/15/2023
0:00

Tips from informants have led to the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) recovering over $26 million in penalties and incorrect payments under the Canada Emergency Wage Subsidy (CEWS), the government’s costliest pandemic relief program,

“Between April 2020 and last November 25 the Agency processed 1,986 leads from the public,” cabinet wrote in an Inquiry of Ministry tabled in the House of Commons by Conservative MP Adam Chambers on Dec. 8, 2022, as first reported by Blacklock’s Reporter.

“All leads provided to the Agency are reviewed for potential non-compliance and action is taken if warranted.”

The inquiry had asked for the number of complaints the CRA received concerning “recipients misusing the subsidy,” and of the complaints, how many the agency investigated and eventually issued fines for.

Of the 1,986 leads gathered, 495 resulted in audits. About a third of the audits (132) identified $14.5 million in false payments while “$11.6 million in penalties have been applied”—totalling $26.1 million. The remaining audits are still ongoing, according to the Inquiry.

The CEWS program ran from March 15, 2020, to Oct. 23, 2021. Payments amounted to nearly $100.6 billion. Official records from the federal government as of November 2022 said that 460,120 incorporated businesses applied and were approved for the wage rebates.

‘Ineligible Claims’

Fewer than one percent (3,450) of the applications were rejected, though subsequent investigations showed subsidies were paid to insolvent companies, tax delinquents, and subsidiaries of foreign corporations like the Bank of China, according to Blacklock’s.
Other Chinese state-owned companies and non-profit organizations with close ties to the Chinese Communist Party that also received the wage subsidy included the Canadian arm of PetroChina, China Mobile, and the Canada China Business Council.
The CRA previously told The Epoch Times that those firms met the eligibility criteria required of an employer for the benefit, adding that “the wage subsidy can only be claimed for employee remuneration by eligible organizations that have experienced a drop in revenue.”
Testifying before the Commons public accounts committee on Jan. 26, CRA Commissioner Bob Hamilton said that the agency has yet to get a grasp of the amount paid out to “ineligible claims.”

“It’s too early in the compliance cycle of this program to provide concrete numbers on total ineligible claims with a degree of certainty,” he said.

Auditor General Karen Hogan, who also testified at the meeting, estimated that $15.5 billion was paid out to those who might not have been eligible to receive CEWS.

“We concluded that all of those payments should be investigated further,” she said.

When asked by Chambers during the hearing if he agreed with Hogan’s estimate, Hamilton disagreed.

“No, we think that is an overestimate,” he replied.