The Jerusalem Post

150 businesses ordered to return corona grants or face fines

- • By HAGAY HACOHEN

The Tax Authority has contacted roughly 150 business owners and requested they pay back COVID- 19 relief grants they had gotten after the authority concluded they had no right to obtain such sums in the first place, the N12 news site reported on Tuesday.

An examinatio­n by the authority suggested some business owners failed to meet the requiremen­ts to obtain the aid, while others actually made more money under COVID- 19 than during 2019.

To receive aid, businesses had to demonstrat­e they suffered a loss when measured in comparison with 2019. Businesses with a business volume of below NIS 20 million, for example, were asked to prove they suffered a 25% decline in business in March and April when compared to the same months last year.

The authority now claims that due to misreporti­ng or mistakes in its own process, it had offered underserve­d funds – and now would like them back. Hundreds of business owners will be contacted in the upcoming week with this demand, KAN reported.

Business owners were given 90 days to return allegedly undeserved aid; a special section within the authority website was created to do so without fines. “Better to pay NIS 200,000 now than a much bigger sum in half a year,” a source in the authority claimed.

Since the grants given were based on reported losses, the sums business owners were asked to return differ, ranging from thousands of shekels to hundreds of thousands of shekels.

The report came on the heels of the recent State Comptrolle­r’s Report which slammed the authority for allegedly giving out underserve­d grants and failing to process applicatio­ns thoroughly.

“Businesses are bleeding to death,” Revital Ben Ari, vice president of the Tax Advisers Board, said. “This is passing out a death sentence on businesses.”

“Have they lost their minds?” asked Roee Cohen, head of the Self- Employed Union. “The country is still under lockdown, tens of thousands of businesses are closed, the self- employed are out of work, business owners see their whole lives collapse without any hope or horizon to look forward to – and the Tax Authority wants to get money back and adds the threat of fines?”

Those who opened their business this year, before COVID- 19 struck, had no way to obtain grants, as they could not point to previous earnings. Many business owners complained that in some sectors, such as restaurant­s and bars, the rent cost alone is higher than the grants received. The number of small businesses across the country is roughly 80,000, a fifth of all businesses in Israel.

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