CERB extended by 4 weeks
On August 20th, the Federal Government announced the extension of the Canada Emergency Response Benefit (CERB) by one month and the subsequent transition, on September 27th, to a simplified Employment Insurance (EI) Program for those who remain unable to work and are eligible.
Temporary revised EI benefit qualifications:
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120 hours of work required to qualify
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Minimum benefit rate of $400 per week
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At least 26 weeks of regular benefits
Canada Recovery Benefit
Effective September 27th, 2020 for 1 year, the Canada Recovery Benefit will provide $400 / week for up to 26 weeks for those who are not eligible for EI, like self-employed and gig economy workers.
Eligibility from canada.ca:
“The benefit would be available to residents in Canada who:
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are at least 15 years old and have a valid Social Insurance Number (SIN);
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have stopped working due to the COVID-19 pandemic and are available and looking for work; or are working and have had a reduction in their employment/self-employment income for reasons related to COVID-19;
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are not eligible for Employment Insurance;
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had employment and/or self-employment income of at least $5,000 in 2019 or in 2020; and,
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have not quit their job voluntarily.
Workers would apply after every two-week period for which they are seeking income support and attest that they continue to meet the requirements. In order to continue to be eligible for the benefit the claimant wound need to look for and accept work when it is reasonable to do so. The benefit is taxable.”
Canada Recovery Sickness Benefit
Effective September 27th, 2020 for 1 year, the new Canada Recovery Sickness Benefit will provide $500 / week for up to 2 weeks for workers who are unable to work because they are sick or must isolate due to COVID-19.
Eligibility from canada.ca:
“The benefit would be available to:
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Residents in Canada who are at least 15 years of age and have a valid Social Insurance Number (SIN);
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Workers employed or self-employed at the time of the application; and
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Workers who earned at least $5,000 in 2019 or in 2020.
Workers would not be required to have a medical certificate to qualify for the benefit. Workers could not claim the Canada Recovery Sickness Benefit and receive other paid sick leave for the same benefit period. Workers would need to have missed a minimum of 60% of their scheduled work in the week for which they claim the benefit.
Workers would apply after the one-week period in which they are seeking income support and attest that they meet the requirements. The benefit would taxable.”
Canada Recovery Caregiving Benefit
Effective September 27th, 2020 for 1 year, the new Canada Recovery Caregiver Benefit will provide $500 / week for up to 26 weeks per household to eligible Canadians.
The news release from canada.ca, states that:
“The closure of schools and other daycare and day program facilities to prevent the spread of COVID 19 has meant that many Canadians have been unable to work because they needed to provide care to children or support to other dependents who had to stay home. While it is anticipated that facilities will gradually re-open as the economy restarts, the Government of Canada recognizes that access may vary over time and across communities. The Government is committed to ensuring that parents and others with dependents do not need to choose between caring for them and paying the bills.”
Eligibility from canada.ca:
In order to be eligible for the Canada Recovery Caregiving Benefit, individuals would need to:
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reside in Canada;
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be at least 15 years of age on the first day of the period for which they apply for the benefit;
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have a valid Social Insurance Number;
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be employed or self-employed on the day immediately preceding the period for which the application is made;
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have earned at least $5,000 in 2019 or in 2020;
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have been unable to work for at least 60% of their normally scheduled work within a given week because of one of the following conditions:
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not be in receipt of paid leave from an employer in respect of the same week; and
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not be in receipt of the CERB, the EI Emergency Response Benefit (ERB), the Canada Recovery Benefit, the Canada Recovery Sickness Benefit, short-term disability benefits, workers’ compensation benefits, or any EI benefits or Quebec Parental Insurance Plan (QPIP) benefits in respect of the same week.
Workers would apply after the period in which they are seeking income support and attest that they meet the requirements. Two members residing in the same household could not be in receipt of the benefit for the same period. The benefit is taxable.
CERB transitions to NEW Recovery Benefits and EI
/in 2020, Blog, Coronavirus, Coronavirus - Associates, Coronavirus - Practice Owners, Coronavirus - Retired, Coronavirus - Retiring, Coronavirus - Students /by KTJ FinancialCERB extended by 4 weeks
On August 20th, the Federal Government announced the extension of the Canada Emergency Response Benefit (CERB) by one month and the subsequent transition, on September 27th, to a simplified Employment Insurance (EI) Program for those who remain unable to work and are eligible.
Temporary revised EI benefit qualifications:
120 hours of work required to qualify
Minimum benefit rate of $400 per week
At least 26 weeks of regular benefits
Canada Recovery Benefit
Effective September 27th, 2020 for 1 year, the Canada Recovery Benefit will provide $400 / week for up to 26 weeks for those who are not eligible for EI, like self-employed and gig economy workers.
Eligibility from canada.ca:
“The benefit would be available to residents in Canada who:
are at least 15 years old and have a valid Social Insurance Number (SIN);
have stopped working due to the COVID-19 pandemic and are available and looking for work; or are working and have had a reduction in their employment/self-employment income for reasons related to COVID-19;
are not eligible for Employment Insurance;
had employment and/or self-employment income of at least $5,000 in 2019 or in 2020; and,
have not quit their job voluntarily.
Workers would apply after every two-week period for which they are seeking income support and attest that they continue to meet the requirements. In order to continue to be eligible for the benefit the claimant wound need to look for and accept work when it is reasonable to do so. The benefit is taxable.”
Canada Recovery Sickness Benefit
Effective September 27th, 2020 for 1 year, the new Canada Recovery Sickness Benefit will provide $500 / week for up to 2 weeks for workers who are unable to work because they are sick or must isolate due to COVID-19.
Eligibility from canada.ca:
“The benefit would be available to:
Residents in Canada who are at least 15 years of age and have a valid Social Insurance Number (SIN);
Workers employed or self-employed at the time of the application; and
Workers who earned at least $5,000 in 2019 or in 2020.
Workers would not be required to have a medical certificate to qualify for the benefit. Workers could not claim the Canada Recovery Sickness Benefit and receive other paid sick leave for the same benefit period. Workers would need to have missed a minimum of 60% of their scheduled work in the week for which they claim the benefit.
Workers would apply after the one-week period in which they are seeking income support and attest that they meet the requirements. The benefit would taxable.”
Canada Recovery Caregiving Benefit
Effective September 27th, 2020 for 1 year, the new Canada Recovery Caregiver Benefit will provide $500 / week for up to 26 weeks per household to eligible Canadians.
The news release from canada.ca, states that:
“The closure of schools and other daycare and day program facilities to prevent the spread of COVID 19 has meant that many Canadians have been unable to work because they needed to provide care to children or support to other dependents who had to stay home. While it is anticipated that facilities will gradually re-open as the economy restarts, the Government of Canada recognizes that access may vary over time and across communities. The Government is committed to ensuring that parents and others with dependents do not need to choose between caring for them and paying the bills.”
Eligibility from canada.ca:
In order to be eligible for the Canada Recovery Caregiving Benefit, individuals would need to:
reside in Canada;
be at least 15 years of age on the first day of the period for which they apply for the benefit;
have a valid Social Insurance Number;
be employed or self-employed on the day immediately preceding the period for which the application is made;
have earned at least $5,000 in 2019 or in 2020;
have been unable to work for at least 60% of their normally scheduled work within a given week because of one of the following conditions:
they must take care of a child who is under 12 years of age on the first day of the period for which the benefit is claimed:
because their school or daycare is closed or operates under an alternative schedule for reasons related to the COVID-19 pandemic;
who cannot attend school or daycare under the advice of a medical professional due to being at high risk if they contract COVID-19; or
because the caregiver who usually provides care is not available for reasons related to the COVID-19 pandemic; or
they must provide care to a family member with a disability or a dependent:
because their day program or care facility is closed or operates under an alternative schedule for reasons related to COVID-19;
who cannot attend their day program or care facility under the advice of a medical professional due to being at high risk if they contract COVID-19; or
because the caregiver who usually provides care is not available for reasons related to the COVID-19 pandemic;
not be in receipt of paid leave from an employer in respect of the same week; and
not be in receipt of the CERB, the EI Emergency Response Benefit (ERB), the Canada Recovery Benefit, the Canada Recovery Sickness Benefit, short-term disability benefits, workers’ compensation benefits, or any EI benefits or Quebec Parental Insurance Plan (QPIP) benefits in respect of the same week.
Workers would apply after the period in which they are seeking income support and attest that they meet the requirements. Two members residing in the same household could not be in receipt of the benefit for the same period. The benefit is taxable.
Details of the EXPANDED Canada Emergency Wage Subsidy
/in 2020 Only, Blog, Coronavirus, Coronavirus - Practice Owners /by KTJ FinancialOn August 11th, the Government of Canada updated the calculator and Canada.ca with the changes to the Canada Emergency Wage Subsidy (CEWS).
If you’re a business owner who has suffered losses as a result of COVID-19 and did NOT qualify previously for CEWS, you may now qualify.
The changes expand the program to include more businesses for periods 5 to 9 (July 5 to November 21, 2020) and have been published on Canada.ca, here are some of the changes:
the subsidy rate varies, depending on how much your revenue dropped
if your revenue drop was less than 30% you can still qualify, and keep getting the subsidy as employees return to work and your revenue recovers
employers who were hardest hit over a period of three months get a higher amount
employees who were unpaid for 14 or more days can now be included in your calculation
use the current period’s revenue drop or the previous period’s, whichever works in your favour
for periods 5 and 6, if your revenue dropped at least 30%, your subsidy rate will be at least 75%
even if your revenue has not dropped for the claim period, you can still qualify if your average revenue over the previous three months dropped more than 50%
the maximum base subsidy rate is 60% in claim periods 5 and 6
the maximum base subsidy rate will begin to decline in claim period 7, gradually reducing to 20% in period 9
The Government of Canada has updated the CEWS calculator to reflect these changes and can be found here:
Canada Emergency Wage Subsidy expanded to include more businesses!
/in Blog, Business Owners, Coronavirus, Coronavirus - Practice Owners, corporate /by KTJ FinancialOn July 17th, Finance Minister Bill Morneau announced proposed changes to the Canada Emergency Wage Subsidy (CEWS) that will expand the number of businesses that qualify for the program.
The major changes he announced were:
“First, we’re proposing to extend this program through until December 19th.”
“Secondly, we know that it’s also critical that we have the businesses able to continue to hire people even as they get into the restart and we know that the requirements in businesses have a 30% reduction in revenue is not helpful in that regard.”
“businesses will get the wage subsidy if they’ve had any reduction in revenue so it’s going to go all the way down to businesses who even have a small amount of revenue reduction they’ll get the subsidy and it will be in proportion to the amount of the revenue reduction that they will get a subsidy.”
“Third, we’ve tailored the program so that it helps those organizations that are particularly hard hit. So for organizations with over a 50% reduction of revenue over the last few months they’ll actually get a top up, they’ll get up to 25% additional subsidy so that they can deal with this really challenging time for their businesses.”
“What that means for businesses, those that were already in the program that have that 30% revenue decline that will continue to be the case for July and August. For those businesses as I said that are particularly hard hit it will be even more. It will go up to 85% wage subsidy or $960 per person.”
“For those businesses less hard hit but still hit they will be able to get into the program. The program will continue but as we restart, the program will be tailored to help businesses appropriately in that restart.”
The new rules will be retroactive to July 5th but require parliamentary approval.
VIEW THE NEWS RELEASE FOR THE REVISED CEWS
Canada Emergency Wage Subsidy extended into December!
/in Blog, Business Owners, Coronavirus, Coronavirus - Practice Owners, corporate /by KTJ FinancialOn July 13th, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced the extension of the Canada Emergency Wage Subsidy (CEWS) until December. The Prime Minster stated:
More details will be released during the week.
CERB Extended | Business Owners who did not qualify previously – expanded CEBA starts June 19th
/in 2020 Only, Blog, Business Owners, Coronavirus, Coronavirus - Associates, Coronavirus - Practice Owners, Coronavirus - Students, corporate, individuals /by KTJ FinancialCERB Extended 2 more months
Great news for Canadians out of work and looking for work. The CERB will be extended another 8 weeks for a total of up to 24 weeks.
As the country begins to restart the economy, the Federal government will be making changes to the program to encourage Canadians receiving the benefit to get people back on the job. From Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s website:
“The Government of Canada introduced the CERB to immediately help workers affected by the COVID-19 pandemic, so they could continue to put food on the table and pay their bills during this challenging time. As we begin to restart the economy and get people back on the job, Canadians receiving the benefit should be actively seeking work opportunities or planning to return to work, provided they are able and it is reasonable to do so.
That is why the government will also make changes to the CERB attestation, which will encourage Canadians receiving the benefit to find employment and consult Job Bank, Canada’s national employment service that offers tools to help with job searches.”
More small businesses can apply for CEBA $40,000 no-interest loans
Applications for the expanded Canada Emergency Business Account (CEBA) will be accepted as of Friday, June 19th, 2020. Small businesses that are:
“… owner-operated small businesses that had been ineligible for the program due to their lack of payroll, sole proprietors receiving business income directly, as well as family-owned corporations remunerating in the form of dividends rather than payroll will become eligible this week.”
Apply online at the financial institution your business banks with:
TD: https://www.forms.td.com/app/ceba/#/ceba/ceba-form
Scotiabank: https://www.scotiabank.com/ca/en/personal/scotia-support/latest-updates/business-banking/small-business/supporting-our-customers-is-our-top-priority.html
BMO: https://www.bmo.com/small-business/financial-relief-loc/#/login?PID=MBLBC&language=en
CIBC: https://www.cibc.com/en/business/advice-centre/covid-19/canada-emergency-business-account/now-available.html
RBC:https://www.rbc.com/covid-19/business.html
National Bank: https://www.nbc.ca/forms/business/covid-emergency-account.html
HSBC: https://www.hsbc.ca/1/2//applications/business-apply
Canadian Western Bank: https://www.cwbank.com/en/news/2020/canada-emergency-business-account-now-available (via phone/email)
There are restrictions on the funds can be used. From their website https://ceba-cuec.ca/:
Small Businesses! Applications for Canada Emergency Commercial Rent Assistance starts May 25th
/in 2020 Only, Blog, Business Owners, Coronavirus, Coronavirus - Practice Owners, corporate /by KTJ FinancialLower rent by 75% for small businesses that have been affected by COVID-19
The Application portal for the Canada Emergency Commercial Rent Assistance (CECRA) opens at 8:00am EST on May 25th. The description from the CMHC website:
Application Dates
Due to expected high volumes of applications, the application dates will be as follows:
Monday – Property owners who are located in Atlantic Canada, BC, Alberta and Quebec, with up to 10 tenants who are eligible for the program
Tuesday – Property owners who are located in Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Ontario and the Territories, with up to 10 tenants who are eligible for the program
Wednesday – All other property owners in Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Ontario and the Territories
Thursday – All other property owners in Atlantic Canada, BC, Alberta and Quebec
Friday – All
Eligibility
From the CMHC website:
“To qualify for CECRA for small businesses, the commercial property owner must:
own commercial real property* which is occupied by one or more impacted small business tenants
enter (or have already entered) into a legally binding rent reduction agreement for the period of April, May and June 2020, reducing an impacted small business tenant’s rent by at least 75%
ensure the rent reduction agreement with each impacted tenant includes:
a moratorium on eviction for the period during which the property owner agrees to apply the loan proceeds, and
a declaration of rental revenue included in the attestation
The commercial property owner is not and is not controlled by an individual holding federal or provincial political office.
CECRA will not apply to any federal-, provincial-, or municipal-owned properties, where the government is the landlord of the small business tenant.
Exceptions
Where there is a long-term lease to a First Nation, or Indigenous organization or government, the First Nation or Indigenous organization or government is eligible for CECRA for small businesses as a property owner.
Where there are long-term commercial leases with third parties to operate the property (for example, airports), the third party is eligible as the property owner.
Also eligible are post-secondary institutions, hospitals, and pension funds, as well as crown corporations with limited appropriations designated as eligible under CECRA for small businesses.
NOTE: Small businesses that opened on or after March 1, 2020 are not eligible.
* We define commercial Real Property as a commercial property with small business tenants. Commercial properties with a residential component and multi-unit residential mixed-use properties would equally be eligible with respect to their small business tenants.
NOTE: Properties with or without a mortgage are eligible under CECRA for small businesses.
What is an impacted small business tenant?
Impacted small business tenants are businesses — including non-profit and charitable organizations — that:
pay no more than $50,000 in monthly gross rent per location (as defined by a valid and enforceable lease agreement)
generate no more than $20 million in gross annual revenues, calculated on a consolidated basis (at the ultimate parent level)
have experienced at least a 70% decline in pre-COVID-19 revenues **
NOTE: Eligible small business tenants who are in sub-tenancy arrangements are also eligible, if these lease structures meet program criteria.
** Small businesses can compare revenues in April, May and June of 2020 to that of the same period in 2019 to measure revenue losses. They can also use an average of their revenues earned in January and February of 2020.“
For Full Details and to apply:
Expanded eligibility for CEBA $40,000 interest-free loan
/in 2020 Only, Blog, Business Owners, Coronavirus, Coronavirus - Practice Owners /by KTJ FinancialEligibility
The Prime Minister outlined the expanded eligibility for the Canada Emergency Business Account and highlighted companies such as hair salon owners, independent gym owners with contracted trainers and local physio businesses will now be eligible.
The eligible amounts are being expanded to include businesses with 2019 total payroll between $20,000 – $1.5 million.
How do I apply?
Prior to applying, please make sure you have this information readily available:
Canada Revenue Agency Business Number (BN 15 digits)
2019 T4 Summary of Remuneration Paid (T4SUM)
Apply online at the financial institution your business banks with:
TD: https://www.forms.td.com/app/ceba/#/ceba/ceba-form
Scotiabank: https://www.scotiabank.com/ca/en/personal/scotia-support/latest-updates/business-banking/small-business/supporting-our-customers-is-our-top-priority.html
BMO: https://www.bmo.com/small-business/financial-relief-loc/#/login?PID=MBLBC&language=en
CIBC: https://www.cibc.com/en/business/advice-centre/covid-19/canada-emergency-business-account/now-available.html
RBC:https://www.rbc.com/covid-19/business.html
National Bank: https://www.nbc.ca/forms/business/covid-emergency-account.html
HSBC: https://www.hsbc.ca/1/2//applications/business-apply
Canadian Western Bank: https://www.cwbank.com/en/news/2020/canada-emergency-business-account-now-available (via phone/email)
There are restrictions on the funds can be used. From their website https://ceba-cuec.ca/:
Apply starting Friday for Canada Emergency Student Benefit! Help on the way for seniors.
/in 2020 Only, Blog, Coronavirus, Coronavirus - Retired, Coronavirus - Students, retirement /by KTJ FinancialStudents can apply for $1,250 through the Canada Emergency Student Benefit starting Friday
From canada.ca:
“The Canada Emergency Student Benefit (CESB) provides financial support to post-secondary students, and recent post-secondary and high school graduates who are unable to find work due to COVID-19.
This benefit is for students who do not qualify for the Canada Emergency Response Benefit (CERB) or Employment Insurance (EI).
From May to August 2020, the CESB provides a payment to eligible students of:
$1,250 for each 4-week period
$2,000 for each 4 -week period, if you have dependants or a disability”
Seniors to receive up to $500 one-time payment
The Government of Canada will be providing help to vulnerable seniors by providing a one-time tax-free payment of $300 for seniors eligible for Old Age Security (OAS). For seniors eligible for the Guaranteed Income Supplement (GIS), they will receive an additional $200.
Extended! Canada Emergency Wage Subsidy extended beyond June
/in 2020 Only, Blog, Business Owners, Coronavirus, Coronavirus - Practice Owners /by KTJ FinancialOn May 8th, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced that they will extend the Canada Emergency Wage Subsidy (CEWS) beyond June. This measure gives qualifying employers up to $847 per employee each week so they can keep people on the payroll.
Eligibility
To be eligible to receive the wage subsidy, the Government of Canada website states you must:
be an eligible employer. Eligible employers include:
individuals (including trusts)
taxable corporations
persons that are exempt from corporate tax (Part I of the Income Tax Act), other than public institutions:
non-profit organizations
agricultural organizations
boards of trade
chambers of commerce
non-profit corporations for scientific research and experimental development
labour organizations or societies
benevolent or fraternal benefit societies or orders
registered charities
partnerships consisting of eligible employers
Public institutions are not eligible for the subsidy. This includes municipalities and local governments, Crown corporations, public universities, colleges, schools and hospitals.
have experienced an eligible reduction in revenue.
have had a CRA payroll account on March 15, 2020
Online Calculator
The Canada Revenue Agency launched an online calculator to help businesses determine the amount they can expect from the wage subsidy program.
75% Commercial Rent Assistance Program
/in 2020 Only, Blog, Coronavirus, Coronavirus - Practice Owners /by KTJ FinancialOn April 24th, the Federal Government in partnership with the provinces and territories unveiled the Canada Emergency Commercial Rent Assistance which provides rent relief to businesses.
“I can announce that we’ve reached agreements with all provinces and territories to lower rent by 75% for small businesses that have been strongly affected by COVID-19 for April, May and June” – PM Justin Trudeau
From Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s website:
What if I have no revenue and can’t pay the remaining 25%?
For businesses who are unable to pay the remaining 25%, they should apply for the Canada Emergency Business Account (CEBA) through their bank which provides a $40,000 interest-free loan until Dec 31, 2022. $10,000 (25%) of the $40,000 loan is eligible for complete forgiveness if $30,000 is repaid on or before December 31, 2022.