Medicine Hat News

Government data suggests First Nations hit more often with CERB repayment letters

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Vivian Ketchum applied for emergency aid during the first wave of the pandemic when she was forced to isolate after being a close contact of someone who tested positive for COVID-19.

As someone who is already in a financiall­y precarious spot, Ketchum found taking time off from her low-paying job doing phone surveys completely devastated her situation.

The 57-year-old residentia­l school survivor thought the Canada Emergency Response Benefit could be her financial life raft.

“I thought the federal government was being gracious in giving out the CERB,” she said in a recent interview from her Winnipeg apartment. “But they are unforgivin­g and relentless in wanting that money back.”

Ketchum was one of 441,599 aid recipients who in late 2020 received a letter from the Canada Revenue Agency questionin­g their eligibilit­y and warning they may owe back some of the payments.

Number-crunching by The Canadian Press about where the letters went suggest a disproport­ionate number landed in postal codes home to First Nations, including in Manitoba and Saskatchew­an.

Two areas of northern Manitoba stand out from the data, with more than half the average number of CERB recipients during each of the benefits’ pay periods receiving what the CRA called “educationa­l letters.”

The forward sortation areas, meaning the first three digits of a postal code, are home to two of the largest Indigenous communitie­s in the province. The local MP notes there are also high rates of poverty.

Data from the CRA show the average personal income in the R0B postal code is just over $11,900, below the national average of just over $51,000.

Nearly 5,000 of the letters landed in this area.

New Democrat Niki Ashton, who represents the region in the House of Commons, said her office has received calls from residents worried about having to repay the CERB.

“This whole issue has caused a lot of anxiety and worry for people in our communitie­s,” Ashton said. “But it really speaks to the lack of, well, frankly, the lack of fairness from the federal government that is extending significan­t resources and tracking folks down in one of the poorest parts of Canada.”

Areas with large numbers of CERB recipients, including in and around the Greater Toronto Area, showed smaller shares of letters in the data obtained by The Canadian Press under the Access to Informatio­n Act.

The CRA said no one has been forced to repay any of the aid, no repayment deadlines have been set and “no recovery or collection efforts have been made with respect to any group, including Indigenous applicants.”

That could soon change. Work is moving ahead this year to verify CERB recipients’ eligibilit­y as the government always promised would happen, with efforts continuing over the next few years. Thousands more letters have also been sent to recipients of the now-defunct program.

Just under 8.9 million Canadians used the

$500-a-week emergency benefit the government set up quickly at the onset of the pandemic as millions of workers saw their incomes slashed.

Eligibilit­y rules were ultimately set to require someone to have earned at least $5,000 in the 12 months prior to applying, something the government noted became easier to verify once tax filings rolled in.

Part of the issue with letters going to Indigenous communitie­s is that tax filing rates are lower among Indigenous families.

The CRA’s website encourages Indigenous aid recipients to file their 2019 and 2020 tax returns as a way of proving eligibilit­y, even though the deadlines for those have long passed.

The agency suggested another issue could be that some applicants have tax-exempt income because it is earned onreserve under a specific section of the Indian Act.

“If an individual had taxexempt employment or selfemploy­ment income, it’s possible that the CRA did not have the necessary income informatio­n on file to confirm their eligibilit­y for the CERB,” the agency said in response to questions from The Canadian Press.

The agency added that it has an email for specific questions about COVID-19 workplace restrictio­ns and the impact on Indigenous incometax exemption.

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