CERB Abuse

Malibuk

Well-known member
Jan 9, 2017
1,132
274
83
Canadians who don't qualify for CERB are getting it anyway — and could face consequences
More than 7 million Canadians have applied for the Canada Emergency Response Benefit — but CBC News has learned that some of them shouldn't actually be getting the $2,000-per-month payment.
And those receiving the money who aren't entitled to it could be putting their own financial futures at risk.
One Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) employee said she deals regularly with people who aren't qualified to receive the benefit but are getting it anyway.
She said she spoke with a senior collecting a pension who applied for CERB on behalf of herself and her two disabled adult children.
"I noticed all three of them, living in the same household, are getting two $2,000 cheques," she told CBC News. (The second cheques are retroactive payments.)
"So, $12,000 all on the same day. None of them were eligible."

CBC News is not disclosing the CRA employee's identity because she said she fears punishment for speaking publicly about what she's seen.
'Laughing in my face'
To qualify for the CERB, an applicant must be a Canadian resident over 15 years of age who has been forced to stop working because of the pandemic. The applicant also must have earned a minimum of $5,000 over the last 12 months and must expect to make less than $1,000 a month while collecting the benefit.
In many cases, people who don't qualify for CERB are being encouraged or even pressured into applying by family and friends, said the source.
"When I quiz them about it, there's a variety of answers, from laughing in my face [to] trying to establish that there's some loophole," she said.
Few realize that they'll have to pay taxes on the additional income and could see clawbacks of other benefits, such as tax credits or the Guaranteed Income Supplement, the source said.
Some inmates at a jail in Trois-Rivières, Que., have been sent CERB cheques, according to Radio-Canada. Correctional Service officers intercepted the payments when they arrived at the prison.
The federal government said it is aware of that report and maintains such errors would be caught later by CRA.
Ontario credit counsellor John Cockburn said he's also seeing people applying for the emergency benefit who are not entitled to it.
"This is kind of just in its infancy right now," said Cockburn, who works for the Sudbury Community Service Centre.
The risk of clawbacks
He said he fears that as the pandemic crisis continues, and as food and utility bills pile up, more people will apply because they feel a growing sense of urgency.
"I haven't heard any stories of people getting CERB just for the sake of getting $2,000 to buy a new entertainment system," he said.
Cockburn said he also worries about people doing themselves financial harm in the long run by accepting CERB payments to which they are not entitled.
He points to one recent case on which he was consulted — a man on a disability benefit who applied for and received CERB even though Cockburn said he shouldn't have been eligible.
The man's social services case worker found out and convinced him to return the money. If he hadn't, the additional income could have affected his access to disability benefits and subsidized housing, Cockburn said.
'The vast majority of Canadians are honest'
The federal government estimates it will spend $35 billion on the Canada Emergency Response Benefit. No one seems to know how many people may be taking advantage of the system.
One of the federal ministers in charge of the file told CBC News she'd heard anecdotally that some people have applied who should not.
"But I kind of reject that. I really think that the vast majority of Canadians are honest," said Employment and Workplace Development Minister Carla Qualtrough.
Qualtrough did acknowledge the CERB benefit comes with an elevated risk of fraud.
The CERB application process involves answering just a handful of questions — and everyone who applies for the benefit will receive it, the federal government has said.
Claimants are asked to attest that they are telling the truth in their applications, but it will be up to the CRA to verify claims later and claw back funds as necessary.
'We took the risk'
The federal government says its programs experience an overall fraud rate of less than one per cent — but Qualtrough acknowledged that making this benefit easier to access increased the risk of fraud.
"If you make something attestation-based, you are increasing the risk of fraud," she said.
"We knew the risk was there, but it was calculated and we also knew we had to get the money to Canadians. So we took the risk and we're going to work really hard at the back end to minimize what that's going to mean for the government purse."
"There's just enormous political pressure for politicians to get money out the door," said Kevin Page, president of the Institute of Fiscal Studies and Democracy at the University of Ottawa and a former parliamentary budget officer.
Page said Canada has never seen anything like the scope and cost of the programs introduced in recent weeks to limit the pandemic's economic damage.
He said that, given the size of the CERB program and the other relief packages, even a fraud rate of one per cent could cost the federal government billions of dollars.
'There's so much at stake'
"These numbers on fraud, they are going to be large, and public servants know … there's so much at stake with respect to trust of these institutions like CRA or Service Canada. They have to go after and check these things," Page said.
Qualtrough said there are various measures in place to guard against abuse of the system. Federal staff are using social insurance numbers to check for over payments and cross-checking between programs to ensure people aren't being paid through more than one program.
"There's also just ways we can tell, based on people's T-4s when we do the taxes next year, that if you are getting income during a time for which you're also claiming you had no income, or you had less than $1,000 [in income], we can figure that all out," Qualtrough said.
National president of the Union of Taxation Employees Marc Brière said the CRA will follow up with people who don't qualify for the benefit but receive it anyway, even if they claimed it in error.
"There's a question of trust in this case … we want the money to be processed rapidly to go into people's hands and [the application] is simplified, to say the least," he said. "But that doesn't mean there are not people at work doing verification as we speak and it will continue as time goes by."
Qualtrough expressed sympathy for those low-income Canadians who could wind up making their own financial situations worse by claiming the CERB while unqualified.
"I absolutely share the concern for people who are in that dire a predicament that they [would] be prepared to take that kind of personal risk," she said.
She argued her government has taken steps to help those Canadians, such as boosting the GST credit and the Canada Child Benefit.
She said she continues to believe the design of the Canada Emergency Response Benefit program followed the best approach.
"I also just am very confident in the honesty of Canadians," she said.
 

Malibuk

Well-known member
Jan 9, 2017
1,132
274
83
The people who are already getting government money and those who didn`t claim over $5000 in income last year will be very easy to catch.
Those with employment income over $1000 per month for this period will also be fairly easy to catch, except the self-employed.

The rest probably won`t be worth pursuing.
It will be expensive to find them and hard to collect if there is nothing to withhold.
They should go after them anyways to punish them and deter future thefts.

Defrauding the government is stealing from taxpayers.
They should have to pay interest and penalties.
 

deezed

Corvette Cowboy
Dec 18, 2014
198
3
18
The people who are already getting government money and those who didn`t claim over $5000 in income last year will be very easy to catch.
Those with employment income over $1000 per month for this period will also be fairly easy to catch, except the self-employed.

The rest probably won`t be worth pursuing.
It will be expensive to find them and hard to collect if there is nothing to withhold.
They should go after them anyways to punish them and deter future thefts.

Defrauding the government is stealing from taxpayers.
They should have to pay interest and penalties.
I disagree the biggest fraud on the Tax payer is the current government -and no I will not be receiving any bread crumbs for my future vote
 

Malibuk

Well-known member
Jan 9, 2017
1,132
274
83
I disagree the biggest fraud on the Tax payer is the current government -and no I will not be receiving any bread crumbs for my future vote
Some people think there should have been no CERB and Jagmeet wanted it to be universal for every single Canadian and probably non-citizens too.

There would have been an uncontrollable economic collapse without these government life-lines.
Lack of time left them open for easy abuse.

This year`s deficit is likely going go from a projected $25 billion to over $300 billion.
This is future taxes, and fraud/theft makes it worse for taxpayers.
 

riskybusiness

Member
Nov 2, 2019
72
2
8
The people who are already getting government money and those who didn`t claim over $5000 in income last year will be very easy to catch.
Those with employment income over $1000 per month for this period will also be fairly easy to catch, except the self-employed.
Very easy to catch. Programmers/Software Engineers at CRA are probably writing the code to highlight scammers right now, if they haven't already written it.

To reduce the deficit we can start by cutting the foreign aid donations by 90% and donations to the royal family/freeloaders.
 

Kawailuvr

Active member
Mar 13, 2017
921
138
43
Funny immigrants have been scamming this government for so many years and now people are talking about scamming the government .
 

shack

Nitpicker Extraordinaire
Oct 2, 2001
51,152
9,872
113
Toronto
Funny immigrants have been scamming this government .
What about the immigrants who don't have such a good sense of humour? Have they been more honest?
 

Malibuk

Well-known member
Jan 9, 2017
1,132
274
83
Universal CERB

'Do not impose a stop pay': Federal workers ordered to ignore cheating in CERB and EI claims
Federal employees vetting the millions of applications for emergency and employment-insurance (EI) benefits during the pandemic have been told to ignore most potential cases of cheating, despite reports of widespread fraud.
If employees detect possible abuse they should still process the payment and should not refer the file to the department’s integrity branch, says a memo issued last month by Employment and Social Development Canada.
Meanwhile, a source familiar with the situation claimed 200,000 applications have already been “red-flagged” as possibly fraudulent because of dubious claims of past employment income and other factors.
But the memo seems to take that approach a step further, encouraging civil servants to turn a blind eye to abuse.
It’s one thing to push the payments out rapidly with few questions asked, another to brush aside actual evidence of abuse, said Aaron Wudrick, federal director of the Taxpayers Federation of Canada.
“Governments should be assuming that everyone is honest, but that doesn’t mean they should suspend any and all attempts to follow up potential cases of fraud,” said Wudrick.
“Effective immediately, while processing a claim, if an agent uncovers information that suggests potential abuse of the EI system by a client, an employer or a third party, they do not impose a stop pay and do not refer the file to integrity unless it is considered an urgent investigation,” the note says.
“This is a result of the integrity service branch suspending all non-critical investigations. In addition to suspension of Claimant Information Sessions (CIS), in-person interviews and on-site visits, they have suspended all Integrity Operations activities for compliance and enforcement of the EI program.”
The memo does outline exceptions, “urgent” matters that should be referred for investigation: applications on behalf of dead people, “dormant” social insurance numbers — those that were never used until the benefit claim was processed — and false records of employment.
But the source said even evidence of fraudulent employment records is being overlooked and CERB or EI paid out regardless.
The person, who is not authorized to talk about such internal matters and asked not to be identified, said the evidence of abuse includes numerous instances where applicants claimed suspiciously to have made $5,000 in the last month of 2019 – the minimum to be eligible for CERB.
International students whose visas allow them to work only 20 hours a week during classes are claiming to have put more hours in order to meet the criteria.
And applicants across Canada are applying for CERB or EI while at the same time being paid by employers under the table, said the source.
The person said they doubted the 200,000 red-flagged cases will ever be investigated, as each one would take days, an enormous drain on resources. It’s more likely fraudulent claims will simply be written off, the source said. Hossack did not confirm or deny the 200,000 figure in her statement.
The CBC quoted a Canada Revenue Agency employee as saying abuse is common, citing an elderly woman and her two disabled children who all applied for CERB, though none was eligible.
Even inmates at a prison in Trois-Rivières, Que. have received CERB cheques, according to a Radio-Canada .
 

tribunus

Terror Belli Decus Pacis
May 26, 2008
3,009
1,747
113
Good intentions but CERB is a joke. Anyone with a pulse can get it with the flimsy criteria. As for consequences.....Bullshit, too much time and effort for them to follow up on fraudulent applicants. Trudeau's gift to the masses for keeping him in office.
 

canada-man

Well-known member
Jun 16, 2007
31,937
2,884
113
Toronto, Ontario
canadianmale.wordpress.com
Or once again the consequence of stupid, selfish people ruining it for others. The word fraud also comes to mind.
the govt shut down the economy are you saying i should go hungry and homeless while not having any money for bills and food?
 
Ashley Madison
Toronto Escorts