B.C.91裸聊视频檚 long experiment with charging Medical Services Plan fees to help pay for health care is far from over, with a mountain of overdue bills remaining after the final ones were sent out in December.
The B.C. finance ministry says that as of Dec. 31, individuals and businesses still owe $422 million in overdue MSP fees, accumulated over years of government struggles to track and enforce the payments. That91裸聊视频檚 more than three times the total revenue the province expects from the entire forest industry this year.
91裸聊视频淭his is similar to the amount in previous years, as it is the historical outstanding debt, not necessarily debt owed from the latest fiscal years,91裸聊视频 the ministry said in a statement to Black Press. 91裸聊视频淢SP premiums, billed to individuals and businesses, have always been difficult to administer across the province, which can lead to high arrears.91裸聊视频
Besides using private management contractors and collection agencies, the province calls on the Canada Revenue Agency to collect its MSP debts. The federal tax agency is currently sending out letters to B.C. residents and businesses warning them to pay the province or have the overdue amount deducted from tax credits or refunds they may be eligible for.
91裸聊视频淸Revenue Services of B.C.] has asked the Canada Revenue Agency to apply your tax refunds and certain tax credits against a debt you owe them,91裸聊视频 the form letter states. 91裸聊视频淭his is allowed under subsection 164(2) of the Income Tax Act.91裸聊视频
B.C.91裸聊视频檚 premium assistance program is still in effect, with available for people whose income is low enough for reduced rates to apply. The MSP bureaucracy has been criticized over the years for continuing to charge people the full rate after they lose their jobs, basing the charge on their income from the previous year.
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The B.C. finance ministry says the income tax collection policy has been in place since 1999. Five years after the NDP government of Glen Clark started using the tax system for collections, the B.C. Liberal government of Gordon Campbell contracted out the struggling MSP bureaucracy to a U.S. back-office company called Maximus Corp.
The 10-year contract with Maximus cost taxpayers $324 million, and started with fines and penalties to the company for failing to immediately fix the chronic problems of slow customer response from the B.C. government department it replaced. The contract required Maximus to answer phone calls in three minutes or less and process new applications within 22 days of receiving them, employing the same unionized staff who transferred from the province to Maximus in 2004.
The contract is currently held by Victoria-based , which started in 2004 as a subsidiary of U.S. billionaire H. Ross Perot91裸聊视频檚 company, Electronic Data Systems, to provide services to the B.C. government.
During the 2017 election campaign, both the B.C. Liberals and NDP promised to eliminate MSP, the last such fee in Canada, starting with an immediate 50 per cent reduction. The NDP minority government delivered on that promise in 2018, and introduced the Employer Health Tax on business and local government payrolls above $500,000 to make up the revenue, estimated at $1.9 billion for the current year.
About half of MSP has been paid by employers on behalf of their staff, and those employers are on the hook to pay both the reduced MSP and the new payroll tax for 2019. The remainder is paid directly by individuals, if they can be located and persuaded to pay.
tfletcher@blackpress.ca
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