Présentations
(Disponible
en anglais seulement)
Statement
to the Department of Finance Consultation Regarding Eligibiltiy
for the Disability Tax Credit (DTC), January 15, 2003
Publish date: January 15, 2003
Author(s): Andrew Jackson
Statement by
the Canadian Labour Congress to the
Department of Finance Consultation
on Eligibility for the Disability Tax Credit (DTC)
le 27
novembre 2003
"The Government
of Canada is committed to improving the quality of life for persons
with disabilities through its own programs and services, and to
working with all partners to make a real difference in the opportunities
for people with disabilities to participate fully in society."
Advancing the Inclusion
of Persons with Disabilities.
Government of Canada Policy Paper. December 2002.
"Four times during
the past decade, the symbolic importance, visibility and economic
value of the tax system for persons with disabilities have collided
with the policy and administrative approach of the Department of
Finance and the Canada Customs and Revenue Agency. ...Each time
Finance and the CCRA tried to restrict eligibility for the DTC.
Each time, Parliamentarians responded to the outcry of Canadians
...and emphasized the need for the tax system to deal in a humane
and compassionate manner with Canadians with disabilities by improving
the policies and administration of the income tax system generally,
and the Disability Tax Credit in particular."
Tax Fairness for Persons
with Disabilities. December 2002
Report of the House of Commons Committee on Human Resources Development
and the Status of Persons with Disabilities.
Introduction
In this short submission,
the Canadian Labour Congress endorses and expresses its full support
for the recommendations regarding eligibility for the Disability
Tax Credit which were put forward in the March 2002 report of the
House of Commons Standing Committee "Getting it Right for Canadians:
The Disability Tax Credit." These recommendations were unanimously
endorsed by the full House of Commons in a vote on a motion by the
New Democratic Party on November 20, 2002. They are an important
interim step to the much wider and more comprehensive policy agenda
required to promote full citizenship for persons with disabilities.
This brief puts the DTC
in a wider policy context, but speaks narrowly to the issue of eligibility
which is the subject of the current Department of Finance consultation.
Disability and
Workers
Recent evidence (for
2001, from the Participation and Activity Limitation Survey) shows
that 1 in 10 working-age Canadians have a disability, with disability
rates being somewhat higher for women than for men, and much higher
among some marginalized groups, notably Aboriginal Canadians.
More than 1 in 6 older
workers (persons aged 45 to 64) have a disability, partly because
of health risks due to age alone, and partly due to accumulated
lifetime exposure to unhealthy working conditions. Many older workers
have suffered physical injuries, or experience chronic pain arising
from work. Rising levels of workplace stress and increased workloads
are a major factor in high levels of chronic disease and mental
illness among older workers.
One in three adults with
a disability — 1.4 million adults in 2001 — reported
experiencing severe or very severe activity limitations in 2001.
This is three times the number of persons qualifying for the Disability
Tax Credit. This fact alone suggests that eligibility criteria for
the DTC are highly restrictive.
Roughly half of all persons
with disabilities experience continuing, long-term disability, while
many more Canadians experience temporary disability, often as the
result of workplace injuries or workplace conditions.
The evidence shows, not
surprisingly, that working-age persons with long-term and severe
disabilities are much less likely to be employed or to hold down
full-time, full-year employment than other Canadians. Clearly, some
disabilities preclude regular paid employment. However, 40% of all
adults with disabilities are employed all year (compared to 62%
of persons without disabilities), and employment rates are even
higher among persons with disabilities with higher levels of education.
While serious disability is a major barrier to employment in stable
jobs at decent wages, lack of accommodation in the workplace and
discrimination also account for much lower than average levels of
employment of persons with disabilities in decent jobs.
Persons with serious
and long-term disabilities are at extremely high risk of poverty
because of low earnings and inadequate income support programs.
Fully two-thirds of adults with long-term disabilities live in poverty
(and it should be borne in mind that some such persons have working
spouses whose incomes protect them from poverty). High poverty rates
reflect the gross inadequacy of social assistance incomes in all
provinces, inadequate private insurance coverage, and the weaknesses
of Canada's major income support programs for workers with disabilities
(Workers Compensation and CPP/QPP disability benefits).
The Labour Movement
and Disability Issues
The Canadian Labour Congress
(CLC) is the major national voice for more than 2.5 million unionized
workers. We have had a long-standing interest in disability issues,
not least because many of our members and their families have some
experience with disability over the course of their working lives
or in retirement. The goal of full citizenship and full recognition
of the human rights of persons with disabilities is central to our
vision of a democratic, inclusive and equal society.
While working-age persons
with disabilities are greatly under-represented in the workforce,
the unionization rate for the minority of workers with disabilities
who work on a full-time, full-year basis is about the same as for
the workforce as a whole. Increasingly, workers with disabilities
are actively involved in the labour movement.
Member unions of the
CLC have sought to advance the interests of workers with disabilities
through collective bargaining. Most unionized workers enjoy some
protection against loss of income through long-term disability plans.
Accommodation of the special needs of workers with disabilities,
including measures to facilitate the return of injured workers to
the job, has been a long-standing focus of concern in bargaining.
The labour movement has also been a strong supporter of employment
equity programs for persons with disabilities.
The CLC and our member
unions have also been major advocates of progressive reforms to
income security programs of particular concern to persons with disabilities
— Workers Compensation programs for workers injured on the
job, disability benefits under the Canada/Quebec Pension Plan, provincial
social assistance programs, and Employment Insurance.
Not least, the CLC has
been and remains a major advocate of the development of not-for-profit,
community-based supports and services for persons with disabilities,
which are essential to full inclusion in society and, where appropriate,
in the workplace.
Recently, the CLC has
established a national working group on workers with disabilities,
and has ensured that workers with disabilities have direct representation
on the CLC Executive Council.
It is important to underline
that the labour movement's vision of full inclusion of persons with
disabilities will only be accomplished through renewed efforts on
our own part in bargaining, and through major changes to many government
policies and programs.
While this consultation
is narrowly focussed on eligibility for the Disability Tax Credit,
it has to be underlined that this is not the only needed policy
instrument to secure inclusion and social justice.
The Disability
Tax Credit
It is important to be clear about the purposes of the Disability
Tax Credit as a context for defining eligibility.
One key purpose of the
DTC, as highlighted and recognized by the Department of Finance,
is to establish ‘horizontal equity' between taxpayers by recognizing
that persons with disabilities face significantly higher living
and employment costs than do persons without disabilities. As such,
the same dollar income in the hands of a person with a disability
translates into a lower real ability to buy goods and services.
From this perspective,
the DTC is (at a maximum value of just under $1,000) far too low,
and should be raised to reflect the actual costs of supports and
services.
We endorse the criticisms
of disability organizations and Parliamentarians that eligibility
of the DTC are far too restrictive, and support the key recommendations
of the Standing Committee on Human Resources Development and the
Status of Persons with Disabilities (March 2002 and December 2002)
as important interim measures.
As a long-term principle,
we believe that all costs associated with a person's disability
should be treated as a collective cost to society. It is the responsibility
of society as a whole to ensure the full participation of persons
with disabilities through the provision of supports and services,
accommodation of specific needs in the workplace and in the community,
and through the offsetting of out-of-pocket costs incurred by individuals.
This means that all out-of-pocket costs should be recognized for
tax purposes. Making the Disability Tax Credit refundable would
ensure that payment is made to persons with very low taxable incomes,
who fail to benefit from the current credit.
A second, more potential
than actual, role for the DTC is to provide an income supplement
for persons with disabilities. The case for a significant enhancement
of the DTC, and making the credit refundable (i.e. available to
persons with disabilities with very low or no taxable income) has
been strongly advanced by disability groups and social policy advocates
such as the Canadian Council on Social Development and the Caledon
Institute for Social Policy. The House of Commons Sub-Committee
on Persons with Disabilities has recognized the potential importance
of the DTC as a basic building block for income security for persons
with disabilities.
The current approach
of the Department of Finance ignores this dimension of the issue,
and is at odds with the broad thrust of federal government social
policy.
The case for an income
supplement for persons with disabilities is twofold. First, as noted,
many persons with disabilities live in deep and continuing poverty
because of the gross inadequacy of provincial social assistance
benefits and very restrictive eligibility criteria for the CPP disability
benefit (which effectively requires that applicants be almost completely
unable to work).
Second, many persons
with disabilities fail to qualify for CPP or social assistance disability
benefits because they can and do participate in paid work, but are
able to obtain only very precarious and low paid employment. Such
persons are excluded from income support programs, but are also
excluded from decent jobs because of serious disability, workplace
barriers, discrimination, as well as general barriers to decent
employment. What such workers with disabilities need to achieve
some measure of income security is a supplement to inadequate wages.
It is perverse that recent
key government social policy documents such as the joint federal-provincial-territorial
report In Unison stress the desirability of inclusion of persons
with disabilities in the workplace when government income support
programs effectively exclude persons with disabilities once they
enter the workforce. To be sure, inclusion in the workforce demands
investment in community and workplace supports and services. But
it remains and will long remain the case that many workers with
disabilities are much more likely to find only low wage and insecure
jobs on account of their disability.
In short, income supplementation
has a role to play in fostering inclusion, along with major investments
in workplace and community supports and services. This should be
explicitly recognized by the Department of Finance as a policy objective
of the DTC.
Eligibility for
the Disability Tax Credit
The eligibility criteria
for the DTC are far too restrictive, and interpreted far too restrictively,
to accomplish either of the two above purposes.
The fact that the eligibility
criteria for the DTC are excessively and, indeed, harshly restrictive
has been accepted by the Federal Court of Appeal and by all parties
in the House of Commons. Outrageously, the Department of Finance
introduced amendments to nullify a less restrictive definition in
the wake of the Federal Court decision to recognize the costs of
dealing with a serious food allergy. While the amendments have been
temporarily withdrawn, it speaks volumes regarding the attitude
of the Department that the amendments were proposed in direct contradiction
to the thrust of recommendations from the Committee.
The Department has narrowly
and obsessively concentrated on reducing the costs of a small and
inadequate program and ignored human rights and broadly supported
social and employment policy goals. In 2000, the Department of Finance
and the Canada Customs and Revenue Agency (which is responsible
for the administration of the credit) required 106,000 existing
DTC beneficiaries to re-apply for benefits (one-third of whom were
denied continuation until the process was suspended) despite the
fact that full and complete applications by medical practitioners
and other professionals were on file. As noted by the Committee,
this is part and parcel of a long-term trend. In their words, there
has been "an unacceptable lack of action" on recommendations
from Parliamentarians dating back to at least 1993, and the Department
of Finance and the Canadian Customs and Revenue Agency have continuously
tried to restrict eligibility for the credit rather than "deal
in a humane and compassionate manner with the real life circumstances
of Canadians with disabilities." The Department of Finance,
in particular, has imposed administrative criteria which are significantly
more restrictive than those required by the language of the Income
Tax Act.
The policy intent embodied
in legislation is that the credit should be available only to persons
with "severe and prolonged mental or physical disability, the
effects of which markedly restrict the ability to perform a basic
activity of daily living." The focus on "severe and prolonged"
disability ignores the fact that persons with less severe and temporary
but recurrent disabilities can face much higher living costs than
other Canadians. This focus also ignores the fact that severe disability
may not necessarily be prolonged, but can be recurrent. This is
the case, for example, with multiple sclerosis and many forms of
mental illness.
The stress on "severe
and prolonged disability" — unless generously interpreted
— serves to exclude many persons with disabilities. As recommended
by the Committee, the definition of "prolonged" should
include persons who have long-term but episodically serious conditions.
It is abundantly clear
that administrative criteria for review of DTC applications, set
by the Department of Finance, are much more stringent than is required
by the Act. To take several examples:
A person is not considered
to be hard of hearing or to have a speech impairment if they can
hear (or speak to) a person that they are familiar with in a quiet
room — hardly the norm for people who work or are engaged
in the community.
A person is not considered
to be unable to walk unless they are unable to walk more than 90%
("all or substantially all") of the time, so a person
who can walk limited distances with difficulty is rendered ineligible.
Similarly, a person with
a mental illness is not considered to have an eligible claim unless
they cannot "perceive, think or remember" more than 90%
of the time.
Difficulty in breathing
is not considered a disability.
There is no allowance
for multiple conditions which cumulatively result in a serious disability,
even if each individual condition is ineligible.
As noted by the Committee,
the heavy focus on extremely severe, long-term disabilities places
medical practitioners and other professionals who must certify eligibility
in an impossible position. They know that individuals face major
and costly difficulties in daily living, even if they fall outside
the narrow administrative guidelines.
Recommendations
As interim measures,
the CLC is pleased to endorse the key points regarding eligibility
for the DTC, as presented in the report "Getting it Right for
Canadians: The Disability Tax Credit" (March 2002) which were
endorsed unanimously by the House of Commons. These recommendations
would require only limited amendments and changes to guidelines
to address the issues briefly identified above.
The CLC is supportive
of the basic direction for change suggested by the Federal Court
of Appeal that is to make eligible all persons who must spend an
inordinate amount of time engaged in the basic activities of daily
living.
In addition, we strongly
support the call by the House of Commons Committee for a comprehensive
review of the Disability Tax Credit, to be undertaken with the full
participation of organizations representing persons with disabilities.
The CLC supports expansion
of funding for the Disability Tax Credit so as to widen eligibility
and allow for proper recognition of the costs of disability.
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