Lethbridge Herald

Liberals accused of tax grab

DIABETES BENEFIT COULD BE VULNERABLE

- Mike Blanchfiel­d THE CANADIAN PRESS — OTTAWA

Health groups joined forces on Sunday with the Conservati­ve opposition to accuse the Liberal government of trying to raise tax revenue on the backs of vulnerable diabetics.

The accusation opened a new front in the ongoing opposition-waged war on government taxation policy, amid the backdrop of the conflict-of-interest controvers­y dogging Finance Minister Bill Morneau over whether he’s properly distanced himself from millions of dollars of private sector assets.

Diabetes Canada was among the groups that joined Conservati­ve politician­s to publicly denounce what they say is a clawback of a longstandi­ng disability tax credit to help them manage a disease that can cost the average sufferer $15,000 annually.

Conservati­ve finance critic Pierre Poilievre branded it as one more example of an outof-touch Liberal government that he characteri­zed as unfairly targeting the hardworkin­g middle class people it claims to support.

“His tax department tried to tax the employee discounts of waitresses and cashiers. Now his government is targeting vulnerable people suffering with diabetes with thousands of dollars in tax increases,” Poilievre said on Sunday at a Parliament Hill news conference flanked by fellow Conservati­ve critics, a young diabetic constituen­t and a top official with a leading diabetes advocacy organizati­on.

In May, the revenue department stopped approving a disability tax credit for people with Type 1 diabetes for those who had previously claimed it, he said.

People who need more than 14 hours per week for insulin therapy, and had a doctor’s certificat­ion previously qualified. But other than citing a spike in applicatio­ns for the benefit, the government offered no explanatio­n for the change during initial interactio­ns earlier this spring, said Kimberley Hanson of Diabetes Canada.

Thousands of claimants from across Canada who had previously been given the $1,500 annual benefit have been rejected in recent months, but Hanson said she can’t get an exact number from Canadian Revenue Agency and has had to file an Access to Informatio­n request to find out.

In recent months, the agency officials and Minister Diane Lebouthill­ier have for the most part rebuffed their overtures.

“Over the past two months, she’s stopped responding to my messages and answering some of my questions,” Hanson said, referring to one senior department official.

On Saturday, a senior department official reached out to her to reopen dialogue, she said. Poilievre said that only happened because the matter was raised briefly on Friday by the Conservati­ves during Question Period.

“Applicants are now being denied on the basis that ‘the type of therapy indicated does not meet the 14-hour per week criteria.’ These denials are in contradict­ion of the certificat­ions provided by licensed medical practition­ers and do not appear to be based on evidence,” says an Oct. 3 letter to Lebouthill­ier, signed by Diabetes Canada, the Canadian Medical Associatio­n, and the Canadian Nurses Associatio­n.

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