Americans living in Canada risk facing massive tax penalties


 
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An Aug. 31 deadline looms for an untold number of Americans living in Canada — certainly many thousands, and possibly hundreds of thousands — who are at risk of massive penalties from the IRS, even if they have no U.S. income, owe no back taxes and haven’t lived in the States for years.
 
 

An Aug. 31 deadline looms for an untold number of Americans living in Canada — certainly many thousands, and possibly hundreds of thousands — who are at risk of massive penalties from the IRS, even if they have no U.S. income, owe no back taxes and haven’t lived in the States for years.

Photograph by: Win McNamee, Getty Images

An Aug. 31 deadline looms for an untold number of Americans living in Canada — certainly many thousands, and possibly hundreds of thousands — who are at risk of massive penalties from the IRS, even if they have no U.S. income, owe no back taxes and haven’t lived in the States for years.
Huge numbers of Americans don’t know the IRS requires all U.S. citizens living abroad to file annual tax returns. They must disclose their foreign bank accounts and other holdings even if they have no American tax liability. So says Warren Dueck, an accountant whose Richmond-based firm specialized in U.S.-Canada tax issues.
And, although the law has been on the books for years, the issue is being brought to a head by a new push to enforce this provision much more vigorously than in the past.
The Aug. 31 deadline is for an Offshore Voluntary Disclosure Initiative introduced last winter to encourage non-resident Americans to make the required disclosures. For those who meet the deadline, it provides for reduced — but still hefty — penalties, although it also holds out at least some hope that the penalties could be waived.
But Dueck, who says he and his colleagues are swamped with requests for help from new clients, thinks it may already be too late for many to meet the complex filing requirements in time.
The only alternative that will be left, he said, is a provision called “quiet disclosure.”
Although it amounts to little more than confessing and then begging for mercy, he recommends it for anyone who doesn’t get the proper paperwork filed in time for the deadline. It offers at least some hope of being better than the alternative.
The alternative may be grim. Among the penalties the law sets out for failure to disclose such things as bank accounts, or “trusts” like RESPs and TFSAs, Canadian corporations and partnerships, or Canadian mutual funds, are fines of $10,000 per offence per year. (That is, for non-wilful offences. The penalty is $100,000, or can go as high as 50 per cent of a major asset, if the IRS thinks there was deliberate attempt to cheat it of revenue.)
But even with ordinary accounts held by people who innocently failed to file, “Say you have four of them you haven’t disclosed for six years,” Dueck said. “That’s $10,000 times four times six — $240,000.”
And, “It doesn’t matter if the undisclosed account is a $5,000 TFSA or a $5-million investment, you still have maybe 10 pages of filing that needs to be done.”
The Offshore Voluntary Disclosure Initiative could reduce the penalties by as much as 90 per cent, but it comes with three conditions. To be eligible, American citizens must establish that they lived outside the U.S. from 2003 to 2010, that they made a good-faith effort to comply with tax laws in the country or countries where they’ve been residing, and that they had less than $10,000 of U.S.-source income. People who meet those criteria may be able to apply for an extension to get all the paperwork done, Dueck said, but it is not automatically granted.
It’s hard to get a count of how many Americans live in B.C. or in Canada, but the consensus is that the number is big. Published estimates range from 600,000-plus to a million or more nationwide, and the American consulate in Vancouver estimates 90,000 in this region alone.
Dueck said that, based on his considerable experience, he believes about half of these don’t know they have to file annual returns, and as many as half of those who do file don’t know they also have to disclose their bank accounts and holdings.
Even more chilling, he said, Canadian-born children of American citizens may not realize they may automatically get U.S. citizenship without ever making any effort to apply for or acknowledge it. So some may be at risk of penalties without even realizing they’re dual citizens.
Several Americans who have suddenly realized they are not in compliance declined to be interviewed for this story. But David Perrin, an American citizen who teaches chemistry at the University of B.C. and who has had professional help filing to the IRS every year since he arrived in Canada in 2000, said the filing can be complicated.
“And the more complicated your finances get, the more onerous the filing gets.”
The Canadian tax on most job-related income is higher in Canada than in the U.S., so there’s generally no money owing to the IRS on wages or salary. But certain investment income is treated differently in each country, and there are other cases — lottery winnings, or capital gains on the sales of a home — where the U.S. collects tax but Canada does not.
“The same thing can happen with end-of-life issues, or winding down investments for retirement, and that sort of thing,” he said.
In past, the IRS has had no reliable way to track down most American citizens living in Canada, but that seems likely to soon change.
The U.S. Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act, which comes into effect in 2013, will require non-U.S. financial institutions to tell the IRS about any clients who are American citizens.
Dueck said the IRS has the clout to pressure Canadian institutions that do business on both sides of the border into doing this. So the only way for Americans living in Canada to avoid being identified would be to have no dealings with any financial institution, or to commit perjury — an option he emphatically advises against — when their bank asks about their citizenship.
The IRS did not comply with The Sun’s request for an interview, and it did not send, as its spokesman promised, background information on the issue. But some fairly detailed information is available on the IRS website at http://tinyurl.com/ovdiinfo


 more:http://www.vancouversun.com/news/Americans+living+Canada+risk+facing+massive+penalties/5275424/story.html#ixzz1VWqBez72

Immigrants learning the business ropes



Source: The Daily Gleaner
When Rosalina Lamason couldn't find a reputable daycare for her three-year-old, she decided to open her own.
Click to Enlarge
James West/The Daily Gleaner
The fifth session of the Fredericton Chamber of Commerce's business immigrant mentorship program was held at city hall Thursday. Above, from left, are: Janet Moser, program co-ordinator; MLA Jody Carr; Tony Henderson, mentor; and immigrant and program participant Rosalina Lamason.
But as a new immigrant to Fredericton from the Philippines, she realized she first needed to learn more about how business works in Canada.
That's why she joined the Fredericton Chamber of Commerce business immigrant mentorship program.
"I want to learn how to do business in New Brunswick," she said in an interview Thursday.
"I hope to open a daycare, but not until I have a basic understanding of business here."
Ironically, Lamason's family in the Philippines operates a business, but she ended up getting her degree in chemistry and works as a research assistant at the University of New Brunswick.
"This is really something new to me," she said about running a business.
The mentorship program started in 2009, and since then, 53 people have passed through it.
Chamber first vice-president Janice Corey announced Thursday at a ceremony in the council chambers at Fredericton city hall that the fifth group of 10 pairs of mentors and mentees is about to begin.
She said the program is unique in Canada and allows new immigrant investors to learn about doing business here over a six-month period from people who have run successful companies.
Starting a business is challenging enough without also having to learn a new language and culture, said Corey.
Tony Henderson is one of the mentors for this group. The retired businessman said it's his way of giving back to the community.
He ran Safety Source for 23 years before selling the company to his son.
He said the number of regulations required for a new business such as a daycare can be daunting.
"The chamber is offering a really good program that assists immigrants in becoming successful," he said. "It's nice to be a part of it."
Henderson said he has travelled around the world and there's no doubt in his mind the best country is Canada.
New Brunswick Education and Early Childhood Development Minister Jody Carr said Thursday the business immigrant mentorship program has been a big success and the provincial government will continue to fund it to the tune of $80,000.
He said it shows immigrants are welcome in New Brunswick.
"When you're successful, we're all successful," said Carr.
Mayor Brad Woodside said immigration is the key to future success of Fredericton and New Brunswick because the province and the city aren't growing on their own.
He said growing up he never saw anyone from another country when he walked down the street. Now he said he sees people from all over the world in Fredericton.
"We're a richer community for it," said the mayor.
Janet Moser, business immigrant mentorship program co-ordinator, praised all the mentors for contributing six hours a month to work with new immigrant investors.
She said without the mentors, the program couldn't operate.
The group still has room for one or two more mentees, and the program is always looking for more mentors, said Moser.
The sixth group will begin late this fall, she said.

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