Close X
Wednesday, November 20, 2024
ADVT 
National

Finance Canada Gives Accidental Sneak Peek At Coming Tax Measures

The Canadian Press , 11 Oct, 2014 12:04 AM
    OTTAWA - Finance Canada admits it accidentally disclosed details of imminent tax measures, sparking concerns that some individuals could have profited from advance knowledge of the changes.
     
    A draft news release detailing tax measures to be contained in an upcoming ways and means motion was mistakenly posted on the department's website for a few minutes late Thursday afternoon.
     
    That forced Finance Minister Joe Oliver to hastily table the motion on Friday, earlier than planned, in order to give all Canadians full access to the information.
     
    In a statement, Oliver called the incident "an administrative error" that was quickly rectified.
     
    "Action was taken to take (the release) down within 10 minutes. I take this situation very seriously and have instructed the department to review its procedures to ensure it does not happen again."
     
    NDP finance critic Nathan Cullen wrote Oliver on Friday about the leak of "potentially sensitive tax information."
     
    "The leak and availability of this information, prior to it being made public, gave those with this information an opportunity for personal financial gain," Cullen said in his letter.
     
    "This could obviously lead to insider trading and market distortions."
     
    However, Oliver played down the sensitivity of the measures in the ways and means motion, saying most are aimed at implementing tax changes announced in last February's federal budget.
     
    "There were no details of the fall economic update contained in the release," he stressed.
     
    "These matters were technical changes with the vast majority having already been consulted on."
     
    The motion does contain almost a dozen income and sales tax measures that were not included in the budget, including doubling the children's fitness tax credit to $1,000 — as announced by Prime Minister Stephen Harper on Thursday.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    RCMP: Child Luring Charges Laid Against Two Delta Men

    RCMP: Child Luring Charges Laid Against Two Delta Men
    SURREY, B.C. - Child luring charges have been laid against two men from Delta, B.C., and Mounties say they're looking for more possible victims.

    RCMP: Child Luring Charges Laid Against Two Delta Men

    Resistance is Futile: 14,617 UFO Sightings in Canada In Last 25 Years

    Resistance is Futile: 14,617 UFO Sightings in Canada In Last 25 Years
    A Winnipeg group called Ufology Research has compiled and analyzed reported sightings of unidentified flying objects across Canada over the last 25 years.

    Resistance is Futile: 14,617 UFO Sightings in Canada In Last 25 Years

    Canadian Killed In Iraq Fighting For ISIS! Is He Farah Mohamed Shirdon of Calgary

    Canadian Killed In Iraq Fighting For ISIS! Is He Farah Mohamed Shirdon of Calgary
    CALGARY - The federal government says it is aware of reports that a Canadian has been killed in Iraq.

    Canadian Killed In Iraq Fighting For ISIS! Is He Farah Mohamed Shirdon of Calgary

    Canadians Seeking Benefits Face Long Wait as Social Security Tribunal Struggle With Massive Backlog

    Canadians Seeking Benefits Face Long Wait as Social Security Tribunal Struggle With Massive Backlog
    OTTAWA - Ailing, disabled and unemployed Canadians seeking benefits face increasingly long waits to have their appeals heard, even as full-time positions on the government's woefully backlogged Social Security Tribunal remain unfilled.

    Canadians Seeking Benefits Face Long Wait as Social Security Tribunal Struggle With Massive Backlog

    Canadian Soldier Grilled By Defence At Quebec Sex-Assault Court Martial

    Canadian Soldier Grilled By Defence At Quebec Sex-Assault Court Martial
    QUEBEC - A Canadian soldier has been accused of using a female subordinate as an "open bar" for his sexual gratification.

    Canadian Soldier Grilled By Defence At Quebec Sex-Assault Court Martial

    Speed up land claims disputes in the courts, aboriginal leader tells legal group

    Speed up land claims disputes in the courts, aboriginal leader tells legal group
    ST. JOHN'S, N.L. - The leader of an organization representing Labrador Inuit is challenging the legal community to speed up the process in which aboriginal land claims wind through the courts so that generations aren't left waiting for answers.

    Speed up land claims disputes in the courts, aboriginal leader tells legal group