Truro News

Doctors angry at opposition to planned tax changes urge Ottawa to forge ahead

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Doctors across Canada who support Finance Minister Bill Morneau’s proposed tax reforms say they want their voices to be heard above the din of criticism from colleagues and medical societies.

To make their point, they have been putting signatures on a letter they plan to send to Morneau this week.

“We were really fed up with the narrative that our colleagues were putting forth and that our medical associatio­ns were putting forth as the only opinion out there,” said Dr. Sarah Giles. “We’ll probably have friends never talk to us again. People are ridiculous­ly emotional about this.”

Among other things, Morneau wants to stop allowing physicians to incorporat­e, a tax-saving mechanism they say is essential given that they have no access to bene

ts other employees enjoy. Angry medical associatio­ns say doctors will leave Canada for the U.S., and female physicians will be disproport­ionately hurt.

e president of the Canadian Medical Associatio­n said in a recent statement that a delegation had told Morneau that doctors rely on the measures now in place for working capital needed for expanding their practices and, among other things, to deal with “unanticipa­ted costs, sick or parental leave, sta turnover, and other business requiremen­ts.”

Signatorie­s to the open letter, a copy of which was obtained by The Canadian Press, see it much di erently. ey argue that scrapping the current system will promote tax fairness and give the government more money to spend on health care.

“We need adequate tax revenues to fund social programs such as a ordable housing, pharmacare, social assistance, legal aid, and the health-care system itself,” the letter states. “These programs directly impact the health of our patients, and we believe it is important for us to contribute to their sustainabi­lity through an adequate tax base.”

Giles, who does stints working with remote Indigenous communitie­s and abroad with Doctors without Borders, said diverting dollars from doctors toward improved care would bene

t her money-strapped patients far more than it would harm physicians.

“ere’s a lot of catastroph­ising,” Rita McCracken, a family doctor in Vancouver, and other physicians want Finance Minister Bill Morneau to press ahead with proposed tax reforms many other doctors oppose.

she said of those upset at Morneau’s plans. “Why are they hanging their hats on this issue? It feels very self-serving.”

Canadian Medical Associatio­n data suggest a large majority of physicians are incorporat­ed. at means they can access various measures to reduce their taxes despite earning signi cantly more on average — upward of $225,000 annually before taxes — than other Canadians.

“These benefits are advantageo­us mostly to certain incorporat­ed doctors,” the letter states. “It also seems unfair that these bene

ts are not available to Canadians with similar incomes who cannot incorporat­e.”

e physicians do say in their letter the proposed changes should come with a transition plan for those a ected and as part of a “comprehens­ive review” of tax policy.

Rita McCracken, a family doctor in Vancouver who said she was bombarded with advice on incorporat­ing to save taxes even when she was in medical school, expressed disappoint­ment at what she considers reactionar­y physician organizati­ons who should be pushing for improvemen­ts to the health-care system. Any suggestion the proposed measures are “anti-feminist” is misguided, she said.

McCracken contacted colleagues

with the aim of expressing a fact-based alternativ­e view, leading to the letter to Morneau.

“It just seemed to us there was some motivation from very high earners who wanted to continue to be able to pay less tax,” McCracken said. “(But) people who make more money should pay more taxes.”

Lesley Barron, an incorporat­ed general surgeon in Georgetown, Ont., said she supports the proposals even though her family’s bottom line will take a hit. Morneau’s approach will help make the tax system more fair, she said.

“I don’t believe it makes sense for physicians to fund retirement, benefits and maternity leave through these tax loopholes,” Barron said.

Another letter signatory, Ritika Goel, a family doctor with an inner city practice in Toronto, said the din of criticism from many doctors makes it important an alternativ­e perspectiv­e be heard.

The current system isn’t the way to address issues Morneau critics are raising, she said.

Goel, who is currently on leave to look after her baby, says maternity bene ts are in fact available to doctors in Ontario.

“Beyond that, I’m in an income position that has allowed me to have savings to take maternity leave,” she said.

 ?? ANDRU MCCRACKEN VIA CP ??
ANDRU MCCRACKEN VIA CP

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