National Post

Tax agency cuts number of fatal file errors

Fewer people erroneousl­y declared dead

- Jordan PreSS

The federal tax collector is less and less seeing dead people where there aren’t any.

Figures recently tabled in Parliament show that 319 people were erroneousl­y declared dead by the Canada Revenue Agency between Jan. 1, 2016 and Dec. 31, 2017, which actually marked a 39 per cent decline from the preceding two-year period.

A spokeswoma­n for the agency says the agency incorrectl­y thought 524 people were dead between 2014 and 2015.

The 319 people who were wrongly marked dead in the last two years represente­d 0.06 per cent of all the deaths reported to the CRA.

The figures for the first few months of 2018 won’t be available until August.

The details are contained in an answer the CRA provided to a written question from Conservati­ve MP Alupa Clarke, who wanted to know how many times the agency had mistakenly marked someone as dead and the effects this had on benefit payments.

Provinces and territorie­s are responsibl­e for collecting informatio­n about deaths and they pass on details to Service Canada, which notifies the CRA to stop payments to the deceased and start payments to surviving partners.

The CRA says it also uses informatio­n on tax filings and from taxpayers to update its records, but even that backup isn’t foolproof.

“Despite safeguards to ensure accuracy of its files, occasional­ly informatio­n it receives is incorrect or misinterpr­eted,” the agency wrote in its response to a written question.

The majority of errors in the last two years were made when someone filed a return on behalf of a deceased and provided the wrong social insurance number, such as the one for the surviving spouse, which then causes that person to be coded as dead, the CRA said.

Federal and provincial government­s are working on an overhaul of the death notificati­on system to focus on electronic data sharing.

A consultant­s’ report from October 2016 called the lack of digital services “the greatest constraint” facing government­s that need timely registrati­on and notificati­on of a death. Hiccups in the notificati­on process lead to mistakes in benefits payments, by either paying benefits to someone who hasn’t qualified for them, or stopping payments to someone who may need them.

OCCASIONAL­LY INFORMATIO­N (THE CRA) RECEIVES IS INCORRECT.

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