Close X
Tuesday, February 25, 2025
ADVT 
National

Self-employed CERB recipients may get cash back

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 27 May, 2021 03:41 PM
  • Self-employed CERB recipients may get cash back

The Canada Revenue Agency says thousands of self-employed workers who received emergency benefits last year won't have to repay any of it, as long as they meet certain conditions.

For anyone whose net self-employment income was under $5,000, those conditions include having filed their 2019 and 2020 tax returns and having $5,000 or more in gross self-employment income in the 12 months before their application for benefits.

They also must meet all other criteria the government laid out for the Canada Emergency Response Benefit when it paid out $500 weekly last year for workers whose incomes crashed during the first half of the pandemic.

The agency estimates that about 30,000 people won't have to refund their CERB payments, representing about $240 million in benefits, or about $8,000 on average.

Included in that government estimate is about $52 million the agency expects to refund to about 6,500 who repaid some of the benefit after being warned they were potentially ineligible late last year.

Applications to receive a refund are now open, and the agency says payments should begin in mid-June.

The government provided CERB payments last year with few validation checks to speed up payments during lockdowns last spring when three million jobs were lost.

The plan was always to circle back to see which recipients weren't eligible for benefits and order them to pay money back.

CERB criteria required recipients to have earned at least $5,000 in the 12 months before applying, which the CRA interpreted as gross income for traditional employees, but net income for self-employed.

The CRA sent out more than 441,000 letters to CERB recipients late last year asking them to verify they met eligibility rules for the payments, but didn't set an official deadline for repayment, nor a requirement to do so, following a public uproar.

It's possible that some people will hit the earnings requirements when they file their tax returns because the 12-month period could straddle 2019 and 2020.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Canada 'oddly absent' from waiver debate: critics

Canada 'oddly absent' from waiver debate: critics
The idea is to make vaccine formulas and expertise more widely available so more countries could develop their own supply. Canada expressed support for the U.S. decision, but has so far refused to say whether it would also support the waiver and take part in the talks.

Canada 'oddly absent' from waiver debate: critics

Feds face pressure to ease mat leave access

Feds face pressure to ease mat leave access
The Opposition Conservatives are asking the Liberals to allow expecting mothers to qualify for their full employment insurance parental leave, even if they currently receiving federal unemployment aid.    

Feds face pressure to ease mat leave access

Toronto Police need public's help in finding missing man Pritpal

Toronto Police need public's help in finding missing man Pritpal
He is described as 5'3, 230 lbs., with grey hair (worn under turban), a grey beard, brown eyes, a curved scar on his right cheek, a scar on his nose and right eyebrow, and has a tattoo on his left hand.

Toronto Police need public's help in finding missing man Pritpal

No relief in skyrocketing housing prices for Metro Vancouver for a few years: CMHC

No relief in skyrocketing housing prices for Metro Vancouver for a few years: CMHC
The Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation projects by late 2023 the pace of rising home prices will slow down from 2020 highs. While the pace of prices won't rise as quickly, prices themselves will still stay high. 

No relief in skyrocketing housing prices for Metro Vancouver for a few years: CMHC

Surging COVID cases spur vaccination expansion

Surging COVID cases spur vaccination expansion
Ontario reported 3,424 new cases Thursday and 26 more deaths linked to the virus. While that's an increase from the 2,941 cases reported Wednesday, Ontario's seven-day average dropped to 3,369 — down from a record-high 4,348 on April 19.

Surging COVID cases spur vaccination expansion

Cougar believed to be behind B.C. attack killed

Cougar believed to be behind B.C. attack killed
The service's predator attack team located two healthy, juvenile male cougars near where the attack took place on a property west of Agassiz, about 110 kilometres east of Vancouver.

Cougar believed to be behind B.C. attack killed