moved that Bill C-215, an act to appoint a taxation ombudsman and to amend the Income Tax Act to establish certain rights of taxpayers, be read a second time and referred to a committee.
Mr. Speaker, it is a great pleasure today to finally have a private member's bill brought before the House. I regret it is not a votable bill but that is the way of this place.
This bill originally was part of a larger package of the general concept of tax reform. Another private member's bill which is also in the hopper talks about changing the accountability of government legislation and how we cost government programs coming before the House. Another portion of the bill was to deal with the capacity of individuals in this country to sustain tax increases, in other words, to put an upper limit on the amount of tax to be extracted from people.
I do not think I have to tell the House that Canada has one of the highest taxation administrations in the world. I think it is second only to France in the western world. This is causing a great strain on our economy. It is causing a significant reduction in disposable income and the ability of people to purchase and create a robust economy.
My background is in accounting. I am a chartered accountant and practised in the taxation area for 25 years. I advised clients and dealt with their tax matters with Revenue Canada. My father and many of his associates also worked for Revenue Canada and were tax auditors. I have an understanding of how the taxation system works and how the administration of Revenue Canada operates.
The Canadian Taxpayers Federation, which represents taxpayers throughout Canada, has said that it would be well served to have this kind of legislation outlining the basic rights of taxpayers. There is a wide base of support for this kind of legislation.
We were debating in the House today a Canadian human rights amendment which is to prevent discrimination against certain groups in our society. It is surprising that we have not taken the time to consider a significant minority group in this country, the taxpayers. There are over 13 million taxpayers in Canada. Surprisingly they have very few fundamental rights. In its guide, Revenue Canada has about 240 words on the rights that taxpayers have. They are mainly platitudes and there is not a lot about how one gets restitution if the system does not work.
The people at Revenue Canada are basically fair minded. As a general principle I have found them to be concerned about the issues of Canadian dignity and so forth. Having said that, the reality is our tax collection system has been pushed to where it is trying to extract the maximum amount of money it can within its constitutional parameters. From time to time people in the department cross the line. In their desire to extract money from people they infringe on the individual rights of people.
I call it Caesar. As a matter of fact those people watching out there are going to see the hand of Caesar in the House today. We can actually see the hand of Caesar represented in some hon. members who are going to speak against it. I respect the rights of my colleagues but it is surprising that a number of people will defend that Revenue Canada considers some of the concerns of private individuals.
The United States already has a taxpayers bill of rights. Senator Pryor brought forward legislation in 1988. It has now been amended a second time in the United States.
The United Kingdom has a taxpayers ombudsman as does New Zealand and many Scandinavian countries. You can see this is not a novel concept. In fact it has been accepted in most other tax jurisdictions except Canada. Do we need this kind of legislation? Do we need to protect taxpayers? I will give some examples of what I am talking about.
In my riding there is a woman named Cheryl Sassville who is a single mom. She was dinged for not paying tax on her child support payments, a common problem with many single mothers. She came to an arrangement with Revenue Canada that she would pay it off over a prescribed period of time. This lasted about two or three years. She went through one collection officer and everything was great. She went through another collection officer and that was fine. She was paying as agreed.
Then she got a collection officer who said that it was not fine. He was trying to make waves for himself in Revenue Canada. This sometimes happens. Her whole life was in balance and what Revenue Canada did was it seized her bank account and got $94. This woman had a heart attack over it and she lost two weeks of work. It cost her $700 and Revenue Canada never said it was sorry. It did not even give her the $94 back.
Another incident which occurred recently is the change to the Canada-U.S. tax treaty. What has happened there is we have taxed seniors in this country, people who are receiving social security payments on American income. That might seem novel and not a big problem, but there are 81,000 seniors in Canada who have been affected by that legislation. Many of these people are low income seniors.
There is the example of Elen Mowat, a woman who was earning $14,000 in total retirement income. About $10,000 is social security she gets from the United States. She was hit for 25 per cent in tax, $2,500 from somebody who is only making $14,000 a year. What did Revenue Canada tell her to do? It told her to go and lobby Washington. Her own government told her to go and lobby Washington.
A letter just came in today from a Mrs. Leona Jeremy of Middleton, Nova Scotia. Because our government does not take into account the fact that this tax occurred, her guaranteed income supplement is reduced.
These people are living below the poverty line. Do we need somebody to take care of this problem? Can these people afford tax lawyers and accountants to appeal their cases? No they cannot and that is why I am here today.
Another incident concerns medical exemptions. In 1991 Revenue Canada decided it wanted to change how it was going to calculate the medical exemptions. The only problem is it was not widely distributed in the population. People continued claiming under the old system. In 1994 it decided to get tough with these people.
Mr. Roberts in my riding had no idea that the legislation had changed. Revenue Canada turned around and simply reassessed him for $1,000 and told him to pay right now. Mr. Roberts earns less than $12,000 a year. He cannot afford to pay the money. There does not seem to be anyone who wants to listen to his problems.
The Financial Post has done lots of polls on people's attitudes toward the taxation system. Poll after poll has said that people want to be part of the process. They want to have something to say and they want protection from some of these problems.
These are some of the features of my legislation. I talk about legislated standards for audit completion. What do I mean by that? It means if an audit is started on a small or medium size business it has to be finished some day. I have seen it happen time and time again where an audit is started and goes on and on for years, sometimes two years. It ties up the whole business operation. People's lives are put in limbo while they are going through the audit process.
My legislation also says it is up to that taxpayer who has made a mistake that they can avoid the six month period. The reality is it is up to Revenue Canada to execute its mandate within a reasonable time frame and to give proper notice prior to seizures.
I have seen time and time again that small and medium sized businesses have had their bank accounts seized. It could be an error. They are not even given notice. The money is just taken out of their bank accounts and then Revenue Canada says it made a mistake. It can affect their credit ratings. I am suggesting that the legislative powers of Revenue Canada need to be used moderately.
Another aspect of my bill would give people an understanding of the Income Tax Act. We are constantly changing the taxation system somewhat randomly. My legislation says that no change in any one year should affect more than 1 per cent of the taxpayers and no cumulative changes should affect more than 3 per cent and that major tax changes which affect the lifestyle of people will only occur every 10 years.
If this legislation were in place, people would have a greater understanding of the taxation system. They would learn to understand it and possibly even learn to respect it.
The other thing is to prevent arbitrary cancellation of payment agreements. I was just talking about people over 60 being forced from their homes. How could anybody in the House argue against that? If people over 60 years of age for whatever reason, possibly the death of a spouse, trigger the tax liability, Revenue Canada can force them to sell their house. I am suggesting that the house be mortgaged and wait until the demise of the sole spouse, but do not force people from their homes. This is only reasonable in our society.
Finally, I come to the issue of an ombudsman, to which some other speakers will probably object because the hand of Caesar does not want to be questioned.
Revenue Canada has 38,500 employees which is equal to 60 per cent of the entire armed forces of the country, and a budget of over $2 billion. Within that framework 10 or 20 employees could be found to create an office of an ombudsman to protect 13 million people from the random and arbitrary nature which sometimes occurs at Revenue Canada. Some will say it is impossible, that it cannot be done. However, Revenue Canada is hiring all kinds of people to deal with the enforcement of the GST. Money can be found to do that but we cannot find money to protect the people of Canada.
The House and the committee just went through the whole process of looking at the concept of an ombudsman for our financial institutions. Why? We thought that people were being taken advantage of by their financial institutions, by banks. The banks have set up their own ombudsman. As a government we forced them to have a national ombudsman to protect the rights of people. Why is it that we are not prepared to protect the same rights of people within our own government structure yet we will force the banks in the private sector to carry on with that legislative agenda?
I talked earlier about the United Kingdom model. When we talked with the banks about the provision of an ombudsman, I had an opportunity to talk to the ombudsman from the United Kingdom. He told me the system worked very well.
Some of my colleagues would suggest if we have an ombudsman everyone will appeal their case and the whole system will fall apart. There could be a screening device and we could monitor for clearly spurious cases where people were simply trying to delay paying taxes.
The ombudsman system in the United Kingdom is a bit odd because it actually thinks that members of Parliament have some power. Complaints are put through members of Parliament who in turn make decisions as to whether or not there is a valid complaint. I am not suggesting that for us. I am just illustrating how other jurisdictions such as the United Kingdom and New Zealand have dealt with the problem.
What we are asking for is a very simple and efficient dispute settlement mechanism. Some of my colleagues will suggest that Revenue Canada can do it all by itself. I would like to suggest that it has not done it by itself. As a matter of fact, a recent Supreme Court of Canada decision recognized that Revenue Canada had changed its attitude in an audit situation. It was forcing people to pay money which they did not owe. The court actually made a decision to tell these people to sit down and talk calmly to each other. Imagine that. I think that clearly indicates a need. The Supreme Court of Canada is telling us there is a need for some form of ombudsman.
We have developed a litigation system in Canada. The way individuals solve their taxation problems is to get a lawyer. The people I just talked about cannot afford a lawyer. They cannot afford to go to Washington to protest. They cannot afford the $1,000 that Revenue Canada is randomly extracting from them. There is no place for them to go.
Some people would say they should go through the political system, that they should go through the minister. Revenue Canada does not want that kind of intervention. It does not want to be monitored. It wants to have a free rein and not to be held in check.
I feel we have to temper the hand of Caesar. It has happened in all civilizations. It is interesting to note a book on the history of taxation of the world. This book is about people who have dealt with this in earlier days. This is from the theodecian code of laws under Constantine. It states: "If any person shall complain in court that payment has been unduly exacted of him, or that he has sustained any arrogance, and if he should be able to prove this fact, a severe sentence shall be pronounced against such tax collector". We do not have that legislation today. The Romans addressed the problem and understood that people were to be treated with dignity and respect.
I am not suggesting that the system is out of order and that it runs rampant over the rights of people as a general course of action. However, I have witnessed situations where it has. My legislation would address that. It would give people the ability to go to an ombudsman to get restitution, such as Mrs. Sassville. That poor woman never got her $700 back. She is entitled to her $700. I remember that woman coming into my office in December. She said: "I cannot buy groceries for my kids. I cannot buy a Christmas turkey". I had to send her to the food bank. That woman's dignity was broken and she is owed an apology. That apology never came, even though I asked for one.
This legislation would add a certain degree of dignity and respect to the system. People would have more respect for the system in the way it dealt with them. Through that process they would understand and believe that the system was fair and they would be happier about paying their taxes.
This is only one part of a long process which I have in line. It is very hard to introduce major legislation to change the income tax system through private members' bills, but I will continue on that course.