Close X
Saturday, November 16, 2024
ADVT 
National

Canada Revenue Agency Eyeing Special Web Page To Counter Negative Coverage

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 18 Jan, 2015 01:17 PM
  • Canada Revenue Agency Eyeing Special Web Page To Counter Negative Coverage
OTTAWA — The Canada Revenue Agency wants to set the record straight when journalists fail to include its upbeat take in their stories.
 
A new document shows the CRA is considering a special web page to post rebuttals to media coverage it doesn't like. The web page would also be a place where the agency could direct journalists to a canned response if it gets flooded with calls on a hot topic.
 
Officials pitched the idea to CRA commissioner Andrew Treusch in an August 2014 memo.
 
"The purpose of this briefing note is to follow up on a discussion with your office of actions that might be taken to get our positive messaging out in instances where media coverage does not reflect the content we have provided," it says.
 
The Canadian Press obtained a copy of the memo under the Access to Information Act.
 
The document weighed the pros and cons of the idea. One the one hand, the agency saw the advantage of putting out facts and data, "both in a broad sense and in instances where we are encountering difficulties in generating media pickup of this information and balanced coverage."
 
On the other hand, the CRA wants to avoid scooping journalists by posting responses to their questions on its website before their stories are published or broadcast.
 
"Constructive relationships with the media are important to the CRA's compliance communications goals, as the CRA relies on the media to convey information for taxpayers throughout the year, particularly during filing season," the memo says.
 
"We also want to avoid outcomes that incur significant costs for the agency — for example, as a result of the need for translation."
 
In the end, agency officials recommended going ahead with the plan.
 
"(Public affairs branch) proposes the creation of a new section in the newsroom on the CRA website where the agency could post relevant, approved material in instances where a journalist has written an article without reflecting the CRA's input or when the agency is responding to numerous media requests on a significant subject."
 
Officials told Treusch that if he approved of it, the new section of the website could be up and running by the end of September. The commissioner signed off on the idea on Aug. 8.
 
In the comments section, he told staff to brief the officials in the office of National Revenue Minister Kerry-Lynne Findlay and to ask them if they'd like a similar memo.
 
The new section had not appeared on the agency's website as of Sunday.
 
CRA spokeswoman Jennifer McCabe said the idea is "still under consideration."
 
"The CRA puts a lot of time into the development of comprehensive responses to individual media inquiries, and is always seeking new ways to provide timely, relevant and factual information to all media and to Canadians," she wrote in an email.

MORE National ARTICLES

Volunteers Compile Book Of Stories Of Canadian Troops Who Served In Afghanistan

Volunteers Compile Book Of Stories Of Canadian Troops Who Served In Afghanistan
EDMONTON — Volunteers hope a book of personal stories and images they've compiled from soldiers who served in Afghanistan will help Canadians remember a conflict that some fear is already fading from the public eye.

Volunteers Compile Book Of Stories Of Canadian Troops Who Served In Afghanistan

Republican Party Seeks Answer To Obama On Immigration

Republican Party Seeks Answer To Obama On Immigration
WASHINGTON - Sputtering with indignation, the Republican party promises there will be consequences for U.S. President Barack Obama's sweeping, unilateral move on immigration.

Republican Party Seeks Answer To Obama On Immigration

Mounties Open Fire On The Streets Of Surrey, After Two Cruisers Rammed

Mounties Open Fire On The Streets Of Surrey, After Two Cruisers Rammed
SURREY, B.C. — Police fired their weapons on the streets of Surrey, B.C., during a lunch-hour incident that saw two cruisers rammed by a fleeing car.

Mounties Open Fire On The Streets Of Surrey, After Two Cruisers Rammed

Kelowna Man Who Killed His Mother With A Hammer Found Not Criminally Responsible

Kelowna Man Who Killed His Mother With A Hammer Found Not Criminally Responsible
KELOWNA, B.C. — The Kelowna, B.C., man who admitted to using a hammer to kill his mother has been found not criminally responsible for the crime because of a mental disorder.

Kelowna Man Who Killed His Mother With A Hammer Found Not Criminally Responsible

Pipeline Protesters In Conservation Area Vow To Fight On As Survey Work Begins

Pipeline Protesters In Conservation Area Vow To Fight On As Survey Work Begins
BURNABY, B.C. — First Nations vowed to stand in unity with protesters as police kept up arrests Friday in a Metro Vancouver conservation area where crews resumed survey work for the proposed Trans Mountain pipeline expansion.

Pipeline Protesters In Conservation Area Vow To Fight On As Survey Work Begins

Mad Picker In Vancouver Cleans Out 40 Years Of Finds With Auction

Mad Picker In Vancouver Cleans Out 40 Years Of Finds With Auction
For more than 40 years, Vancouver antique dealer Wayne Learie has been buying things people no longer need or want. Now he's winnowing his inventory with an auction to make room for new acquisitions.

Mad Picker In Vancouver Cleans Out 40 Years Of Finds With Auction