Medicine Hat News

Promote Indigenous access to disability tax credit, advisory committee recommends

- MAAN ALHMIDI

An advisory committee is calling on the Canada Revenue Agency to promote access to the disability tax credit in Indigenous communitie­s.

The CRA’s disability advisory committee, which includes profession­als and advocates, said in its second annual report Friday the revenue agency should fund organizati­ons with ties to Indigenous Peoples to help individual­s and communitie­s understand and apply for the disability tax credit and other benefits.

Committee vicechair Sherri Torjman said the revenue agency should explore ways to collect data on disability tax-credit applicatio­ns submitted by Indigenous applicants.

Accessing the disability tax credit can be a gateway that allows people to apply for other CRA benefits, Torjman said in an interview.

“Many people just aren’t aware of the credit at all, or if they are, they don’t think it applies to them,” she said.

“The CRA has to work in partnershi­p with Indigenous communitie­s. It can’t take action on its own in order to address issues related to the range of Indigenous concerns.”

Those in rural or remote areas often don’t have health providers who can fill out the disability credit applicatio­n form, she noted. “In some cases, people have to pay money to these health providers to fill in the forms, and it’s also a question of language and how things are described.”

Torjman recommende­d the government expand the tax-deduction list of workrelate­d equipment disabled people often purchase to be able to do their jobs, to keep pace with technologi­cal improvemen­ts.

“We know that people with disabiliti­es face higher-than-average rates of unemployme­nt, and one of the challenges arises from the high cost of work-related equipment that they often was purchased on their own,” she said.

In addition, an advisory body should be establishe­d to address any emerging issues regarding how registered disability savings plans interact with the disability tax credit, Torjman said.

National Revenue Minister Diane Lebouthill­ier said she’s committed to improving the services available to people living with disabiliti­es to better meet their needs and expectatio­ns.

“We will continue to collaborat­e within the government in order to prioritize these important issues and considerat­ions related to disability in Canada,” she said in a statement following the report’s release.

The revenue agency said the committee and the CRA have made significan­t progress on the 42 recommenda­tions in the first annual report, released in May 2019.

It said 90 per cent of the recommenda­tions are either fulfilled or being addressed.

 ??  ?? Diane Lebouthill­ier
Diane Lebouthill­ier

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