National Post

When taxman does your taxes

- JAMIE GOLOMBEK Tax expert Jamie. Golombek@ cibc. com Jamie Golombek, CPA, CA, CFP, CLU, TEP is the Managing Director, Tax & Estate Planning with CIBC Wealth Strategies Group in Toronto.

If you haven’t yet filed your 2015 tax return yet, you’re in good company. Statistics released by the Canada Revenue Agency earlier this week show that they’ve processed approximat­ely 15.5 million tax returns so far this season. Based on the 28.8 million returns it received last year, that means the CRA has processed just over half the number of returns it’s expected to receive this year.

So, if you’re one of the procrastin­ators who still hasn’t filed, the good news is that you’ve got an extra two days this year. That’s because the normal filing deadline of April 30 falls on a Saturday, automatica­lly extending the deadline to midnight on Monday, May 2. If you ( or your spouse or partner) were self- employed in 2015, you have until June 15 to file, but any balance owing is still due by May 2.

CRA statistics released show that about 65 per cent of returns processed to date will be receiving a refund for 2015, with the average refund being $1,645. Only 16 per cent of returns processed so far show a balance owing, with the remainder being nil returns.

If you’re a taxpayer who owes money, it’s important to file on time as the penalties and arrears interest can add up quickly.

If you’re a do- it- yourself tax filer who plans to tackle your own return this weekend, chances are you’ll turn to a software package to assist you with filing. ( Only 13 per cent of returns filed so far this tax season have been paper returns.) To make your job even easier, this season marked the introducti­on of CRA’s “Auto-fill my return.”

The new service, which launched on Feb. 15, allows Canadians to automatica­lly complete certain parts of their tax return when they file online using certified tax preparatio­n software that includes the service.

The auto-fill program draws from informatio­n the CRA already has on file related to T3, T 4 and T 5 slips, RRSPs, amounts owing under the Home Buyers’ and Lifelong Learning Plans, non- capital losses carried forward from prior years, capital gains and losses in other years, federal and provincial tuition, educa- tion and textbook carryover amounts, instalment payments and more.

The program can be used by anyone who is registered for the CRA’s online service, “My Account” ( www. cra. gc. ca/myaccount) and uses compatible certified t ax preparatio­n software. According to the CRA, the new auto- fill service “represents the first major step towards allowing Canadians to automatica­lly fill in their income tax and benefit returns.”

Of course, the next logical step would be to have the CRA do your return for you. That may soon become a reality south of the border if a new bill, introduced this week by Massachuse­tts Democratic Senator Elizabeth Warren, becomes law.

In introducin­g “The Tax Filing Simplifica­tion Act of 2016,” Warren, a former Harvard Law School professor, referred to a 1998 bill passed by the Republican Congress (and signed by president Bill Clinton) that required the Internal Revenue Service to implement a simple “returnfree” filing system, which would give taxpayers the option of receiving tax returns already filled out for them with the informatio­n the IRS already has on hand, by 2008. Nearly a decade later, however, the U. S. Treasury Department still hasn’t fulfilled its legal obligation, “surrender( ing) to pressure from the tax preparatio­n industry — giant, powerful companies that make a lot of money off of complicate­d tax forms.”

Contained within Senator Warren’s new bill is a rule that would prohibit the IRS from making agreements with the tax preparatio­n industry to restrict its ability to provide free, online tax preparatio­n or filing services.

Additional­ly, it would create a “return- free option for those with simple tax situations.”

Warren claims her bill already has the support of “dozens of the country’s top law professors and economists.” Even presidenti­alhopeful Hillar y Clinton voiced her support, saying: “This important piece of legislatio­n will help us build a better, fairer tax system.”

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