Montreal Gazette

Pressure on to expand deployment tax break

Vance pushing for resolution on thorny issue

- LEE BERTHIAUME

• National Defence has been struggling to make good on one of the Trudeau government’s recent promises: giving tax breaks to military personnel and police officers deployed on certain overseas operations.

Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan announced the measure during a major speech at the Royal Military College in Kingston, Ont., in May as part of the Liberals’ new defence policy.

While Sajjan billed the move as an attempt to recognize the sacrifices that are often made by military personnel and their families, it also addressed what had been a prickly issue for the minister.

Some service members based in Kuwait had become increasing­ly vocal in the weeks leading up the announceme­nt about a policy change that threatened to strip their tax-exempt status.

Yet the devil has proven to be in the details, with officials now scratching their heads over what types of operations and deployment­s should and should not be eligible for tax relief.

The debate is particular­ly relevant for the navy’s sailors, many of whom on close reading of the defence policy would not be eligible for tax relief despite spending up to six months at sea.

Sources tell The Canadian Press that defence chief Gen. Jonathan Vance has told officials he wants the issue resolved by mid-August.

Alan Okros, an expert on the management of military personnel at the Canadian Forces College, said officials are now caught trying to make good on the Liberals’ promise without making matters worse.

“They’re trying to find a solution here that will achieve what the government intended,” Okros said.

“But they don’t want to start creating precedents that would generate lawsuits or people making claims of ‘Well, if that applied there, it applies here.”’

The tax measure would see the salaries of military personnel and police officers sent on certain operations exempted from federal income tax for the duration of their deployment­s.

The move, retroactiv­e to Jan. 1, 2017, exempts eligible salaries up to the pay level of lieutenant-colonel and is expected to cost the federal treasury about $85 million over the next five years.

Both Sajjan and the Liberals’ defence policy, which was released a few weeks after the minister’s speech at RMC, said the exemption would be given to members deployed on what are called “named operations.”

Named operations are usually the largest and most complex, such as Operation Impact, which is Canada’s mission against the Islamic State group, and Operation Unifier, the military’s training mission in Ukraine.

But many military personnel deployed overseas for extended periods are never attached to a named operation, or may only spend a portion of their time in such a situation.

That is particular­ly true of the navy, which has had two frigates sailing around the Asia-Pacific region since March, but whose sailors are not technicall­y on a named operation.

Officials are now backing off the explicit reference to named operations, though no decision has been made on what criteria will trigger tax relief for deployed personnel.

 ?? ANDREW VAUGHAN / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? The Liberal government promised to provide tax relief to military personnel and police officers deployed on certain overseas missions. But implementi­ng the policy fairly among those on missions could be tricky.
ANDREW VAUGHAN / THE CANADIAN PRESS The Liberal government promised to provide tax relief to military personnel and police officers deployed on certain overseas missions. But implementi­ng the policy fairly among those on missions could be tricky.

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