Revenue Canada + Canada Post

If you’re a business in Canada with employees, every month you have to send Canada Revenue Agency “source deduction remittances” — monies for Canada Pension, Employment Insurance and Income Tax that are deducted from employees’ monthly pay-cheques combined with the matching employer contributions.

These payments are due on the 15th of the following month. And so on October 3, 2007 I sent in a cheque for the September 2007 remittances:

CRA cheque stub

Canada Post tells me that it should take 4 days to deliver a letter from Charlottetown to Ottawa; I had a window of 7 business days, so in theory everything was okay.

Today in the mail, however, I received a “Notice of Assessment” from Canada Revenue Agency:

The $141.21 penalty on that form was brand new (the $362.82 is an earlier penalty — these guys are the bane of my existence). I called the toll-free number, waited on hold for a few minutes, and then talked to a very pleasant gentleman who informed me that they hadn’t processed my payment until October 19th — 4 days after the deadline.

When I told him that I’d mailed the cheque on October 3rd, he said that didn’t matter — they don’t consider the payment “received” until they receive it. And they didn’t receive it until 12 business days after I sent it. So they applied a penalty.

He went on to suggest that I should consider not using the mail to send in my monthly cheque (something that would seem at odds with the fact that they include a return envelope with every statement they send) and instead pay either at my bank or online (something that, alas, my local Credit Union doesn’t yet support).

While I could appeal the penalty, he advised against doing so because remedies are only offered in extraordinary circumstances (I know this; I’ve appealed twice before, with one penalty waived and one kept in place; both took months to process).

I don’t begrudge payroll remittances, and I understand the need to get them paid on time. I even understand penalties — if they didn’t have them, nobody would ever pay on time, and their accounts payable would quickly run into the billions.

But it seems fundamentally broken when one branch of the federal government, Canada Revenue Agency, recommends against using the services of another branch, Canada Post. If the mail isn’t a reliable way of communicating, then Canada Revenue Agency shouldn’t include envelopes, and should clearly advise against using Canada Post and provide a greater variety of alternative payment methods.

In any case, I’m out $141.21 for doing nothing but assuming that federal systems should work as they say they do.

And, yes, I’ve written about this before.

Comments

oliver's picture
oliver on October 26, 2007 - 18:31 Permalink

For U.S. taxes, patents and other legal deadlines, generally they count your post date is when they received it. Also generally the government is a lot less gracious about time when it comes to money, which they tend to want in hand faster than you can spread your fingers.

Alan's picture
Alan on October 26, 2007 - 18:40 Permalink

How do they exclude themslves from “the postal rule”? I suppose this is not a matter of contract but regulatory scheme. Nonetheless, mention the postal rule recreationally if you need to.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M…

Jeremy Latham's picture
Jeremy Latham on October 26, 2007 - 19:12 Permalink

That’s absolutely ridiculous. What do they consider “receiving it”? Is it when a clerk opens the letter — as I assume there’s no record of when the letter was actually delivered.

So if it sat in someone’s inbox for a couple of days because they were sick, would that mean that your letter was late?

I also wonder what the cost of all those return-address envelopes is over the course of a year. Particularly if Canada Post is not the recommended delivery service.

DerekMac's picture
DerekMac on October 26, 2007 - 20:21 Permalink

Eliminate the problem, as it is clear that current method is fraught with problems:
Open an account at a bank that lets you pay online, and is near where you live or work (TD/CIBC). Use it solely for this. Write cheque to bank instead, and deposit it personally on way to coffee shop several days before xferring the money. To avoid cheque clearing problems, consider keeping extra money in account to cover an extra payment.

Interested reader's picture
Interested reader on October 29, 2007 - 16:27 Permalink

You can also drop it off on the date it is due at the CRA building in Charlottetown and they stamp it as received in front of you  — if you drop it in the mailbox out front after they close on the 15th — they will stamp it as received on the 15th when they open the box the next morning. I know this is not the real issue, but I have been there many times!! We have to submit on the 10th, 15th and 25th of every month and I have learned all the little tricks!!