Revenue Canada's call centres giving bad tax advice: report
Survey by Canada Revenue Agency finds its call-centre workers are too often issuing wrong answers

One of every four business callers who ask for tax help from the Canada Revenue Agency’s call centres gets bad information, an internal survey suggests.
The dismal finding is worse than previous estimates by the agency, and confirms repeated complaints by a small-business group that the call centres are routinely dispensing misleading — and perhaps legally dubious — answers.
The latest survey, specially ordered by the head of the tax organization, tested call-centre workers by asking seven routine questions, phoned in anonymously and randomly by 11 agency employees.
The overall accuracy rate was 75 per cent, though the agency later decided to exclude the answers to one of the questions because so few call-centre workers got it right.
By removing that so-called “outlier,” the agency managed to boost its accuracy rate to 83 per cent. Even that number was far below a previous agency claim that the call centres gave “fully correct” answers 92.5 per cent of the time, based on a large sample from 2013-14.
Findings a vindication for CFIB
The March 2014 internal report and related documents were obtained by CBC News under an access to information request.
The findings are a vindication for the Canadian Federation of Independent Business, which in 2010 and 2012 conducted its own testing and determined that call-centre employees were providing wrong or incomplete answers 19 per cent of the time. Their own survey in 2012 involved 145 calls using four standard questions.
Corinne Pohlmann, the federation’s senior vice-president, said her group gets a lot of complaints from members about the tax agency’s inadequate responses and wanted to test it directly.
She said the rate of wrong answers is “way too high,” noting that some businesses act on the bad advice and then face a gruelling audit.
They are penalized for trying to do the right thing