Journal Pioneer

‘They’re coming after the poor people’

Dozens of servers with Murphy Group being audited by CRA over tips

- BY DAVE STEWART

A 25-year-old Stratford woman struggling to pay off her student debt has been hit with a $15,000 tax bill by the Canada Revenue Agency over her tips. Anita Casey is one of dozens of servers with the Murphy Hospitalit­y Group who received letters three weeks ago saying they were being audited over their tips, retroactiv­e two years.

“It’s pretty crazy that they’re coming after the poor young population who are in school and just trying to support themselves,’’ Casey said.

Casey completed a four-year bachelor degree in Halifax before she started working at the Gahan House in Charlottet­own full-time through 2015 and 2016 and halfway through 2017. She’s now in the one-year bachelor of education program at UPEI.

“I was working full-time and I actually claimed a good portion of my tips, but I still got dinged pretty hard. I lived in Halifax so I had my rent, my car, my phone, I had my student loans on top of that from four years, so it was quite a bit.”

She realizes servers are supposed to claim their tips, but argues tips should be considered a “gift” for good service.

“If a profession­al is given a bottle of liquor at Christmast­ime and it costs $200 they’re not getting taxed on that liquor, so why are we getting taxed on gifts that we’re given for good service?” Ben Murphy, chief operating officer with the Murphy Hospitalit­y Group, isn’t impressed at all that his employees have been targeted.

“It’s been a rule for X amount of years or whatever, but to go retroactiv­e and start enforcing it two years ago?” Murphy said.

“A lot of these people are paying their way through school or paying off their student loans.” Murphy said many of his servers have been hit with bills into the thousands of dollars. “I know a few of them are in law school now . . . and have hundreds of thousands of dollars of debt and now the CRA want to come after them? I think that’s a little bit much. I think it’s totally unfair to go after these hard-working people who are essentiall­y grinding it out at the start of their careers.” Murphy said his servers are the only employees in Charlottet­own that were hit with an audit, but he knows of at least two companies in Halifax that have experience­d the same thing over the past couple of years.

At least 50 Murphy’s employees have taken their concerns to Charlottet­own MP Sean Casey, but Casey said he is powerless to do anything about it. “The Canada Revenue Agency is independen­t of government and operates at arm’s length of government. Elected officials cannot direct them who to audit and who not to audit,” Casey said. “It would be tantamount to interferin­g in a criminal investigat­ion, (like) calling up the RCMP and saying, ‘Leave this guy alone.’”

Casey said he has great empathy for the employees. He says conversati­ons he’s had with a number of workers have been difficult.

“People are extremely upset. You’d like to be able to cast a wand and fix it for them. It’s a very difficult conversati­on to have . . . part of the reason why they’ve been difficult is, quite frankly, people don’t believe me when I tell them that (Prime Minister) Justin Trudeau cannot stop this audit.”

Casey suggests people cooperate with the CRA.

“CRA does have a discretion to reduce or waive penalties or interest, so a fulsome presentati­on of your financial situation (is necessary).”

Casey said he has raised the issue with Trudeau and the minister of National Revenue, but was told the federal government can’t do anything.

Anita Casey said she will be sending a letter to the Charlottet­own MP as well. “How do you expect us to pay it back when it’s hard enough to get a job in P.E.I. that’s good paying?” she asked. “What do you do?”

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