Bill C-28
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RECOMMENDATION |
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Her Excellency the Governor General recommends to the House of
Commons the appropriation of public revenue under the circumstances,
in the manner and for the purposes set out in a measure entitled ``An Act
to implement certain provisions of the budget tabled in Parliament on
February 18, 2003''.
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SUMMARY |
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Part 1 authorizes the Minister of Finance to pay $1.5 billion into a
trust, to be provided to provinces for the purposes of acquiring
diagnostic and medical equipment and training specialized staff in
order to improve access to publicly funded diagnostic and treatment
services. The funds will be distributed to the provinces on a per capita
basis.
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Part 2 amends the Federal-Provincial Fiscal Arrangements Act to
implement a $16 billion Health Reform transfer and a $2.5 billion
Canada Health and Social Transfer (CHST) supplement, and to create
two new transfer mechanisms. The Health Reform transfer will be
distributed to the provinces on a per capita basis over a five-year period
beginning on April 1, 2003. The Minister is authorized to pay a $2.5
billion CHST supplement into a trust from which these funds will be
distributed to the provinces on an equal per capita basis. The new
Canada Health Transfer and Canada Social Transfer will replace the
CHST on April 1, 2004, and funding levels are set out through to
2007-08. In addition, Part 2 removes the maximum amount payable to
provinces under the Equalization program, effective in fiscal year
2002-03.
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Part 3 amends the Canada Student Financial Assistance Act to add
protected persons within the meaning of the Immigration and Refugee
Protection Act to the list of students eligible for a student loan, and to
ensure that appropriate compensation continues to be paid to provinces
and territories not participating in the Canada Student Loans Program.
It also amends the Canada Student Financial Assistance Act and the
Canada Student Loans Act to provide for a limitation period of six years
for the collection of student loans.
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Part 4 amends the Employment Insurance Act and the Employment
Insurance (Fishing) Regulations to introduce a new type of special
benefits. It amends the Act in order to: provide six weeks of new
compassionate benefits for families to share; establish the medical
proof required to receive such benefits; establish the period during
which such benefits may be paid; provide for one waiting period per
family when such benefits are shared; provide for the authority to make
new regulations consequential to the introduction of compassionate
care benefits; set the annual premium rate for 2004; and make other
minor consequential amendments to the Employment Insurance Act
and the Employment Insurance (Fishing) Regulations. It also makes
related amendments to the Canada Labour Code.
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Part 5 amends the Budget Implementation Act, 1997, the Budget
Implementation Act, 1998, and the Canada Foundation for Sustainable
Development Technology Act to permit repayment of public moneys
provided to, respectively, the Canada Foundation for Innovation, the
Canada Millennium Scholarship Foundation and the Canada
Foundation for Sustainable Development Technology to the Receiver
General for credit to the Consolidated Revenue Fund on the winding up
or dissolution of those foundations. Secondly, this Part provides for the
making of grants to certain organizations. Thirdly, this Part amends the
Farm Credit Canada Act to remove the temporal restriction on
investments and to increase its capital. Finally, this Part repeals the Debt
Servicing and Reduction Account Act and provides that it does not apply
to the 2002-2003 or any later fiscal year.
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Part 6 amends the Air Travellers Security Charge Act to reduce the
air travellers security charge for domestic air travel from $12 to $7 for
one-way travel and from $24 to $14 for round-trip travel, applicable to
air travel purchased on or after March 1, 2003.
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Part 7 amends the Customs Tariff, Excise Act, 2001 and Excise Tax
Act to implement tobacco tax increases proposed on June 17, 2002. The
proposed amendments include increases in the taxes and duties on
cigarettes, tobacco sticks and other manufactured tobacco, cigars,
exported tobacco products, and tobacco products delivered to duty-free
shops, sold as ships' stores or imported by Canadian residents returning
to Canada.
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Part 8 amends the Excise Tax Act to implement measures relating to
the fuel excise taxes imposed under Part III of that Act and the goods and
services tax or harmonized sales tax (GST/HST) imposed under Part IX
of that Act. With respect to excise taxes, Part 8 removes the
4-cent-per-litre federal excise tax on diesel fuel from bio-diesel fuel,
from the bio-diesel portion of blended diesel fuel, and from the
biomass-produced ethanol or methanol portion of blended diesel fuel,
effective February 19, 2003. As well, it clarifies that no rebate of the
excise tax on fuel is payable in respect of fuel taken out of the country
in the fuel tank of a vehicle being driven across the border, applicable
to rebate claims received by the Canada Customs and Revenue Agency
on or after February 18, 2003. With respect to the GST/HST, it ensures
that the supply of school transportation services by school authorities
continues to be treated as an exempt activity and that the supply of
municipal services by a private contractor to a municipality or
government continues to be treated as taxable, in both cases effective
from the date of first enactment of the respective provisions on
December 17, 1990.
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Part 9 enacts the First Nations Goods and Services Tax Act, which
provides for the imposition by eligible first nations of a first nations
goods and services tax (FNGST) on first nation lands. The FNGST
would be payable by both aboriginals and non-aboriginals and would
be identical to the 7-per-cent goods and services tax (GST) or the federal
component of the harmonized sales tax (HST) that is imposed under
Part IX of the Excise Tax Act. A first nation may enact a law that imposes
an FNGST either under the authority granted by the First Nations
Goods and Services Tax Act or under a power to enact a law that has
been recognized or granted under another Act of Parliament or under an
agreement that has been given effect by another Act of Parliament.
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A key feature of the enactment is that it provides for the seamless
operation of the GST/HST and an FNGST imposed by a first nation.
Also, the enactment provides for the authority to enter into an
administration agreement between the Government of Canada and the
authorized body of a first nation respecting the collection and
administration of the 7-per-cent first nations goods and services tax
imposed under the law of a first nation and for the estimation and
sharing of tax revenues between the Government of Canada and the first
nation.
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Part 10 enacts amendments to the Income Tax Act that
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- increase the annual National Child Benefit
Supplement through successive increases of $150 per child in July
2003, $185 in July 2005 and $185 in July 2006 (indexed after year of
introduction);
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- introduce, effective July 2003, a $1600 Child
Disability Benefit as a supplement to the Canada Child Tax Benefit
(with payments starting March 2004);
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- increase, from $7,634 to $13,814 (indexed after
2003), the level of income used to determine the financial dependence
of a child or grandchild for the purposes of the rollovers of RRSP and
RRIF proceeds on the death of an annuitant;
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- clarify the eligibility criteria for the Disability Tax
Credit;
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- expand the list of expenses eligible for the Medical
Expense Tax Credit to include certain expenses for real-time captioning
and note-taking services, and voice recognition software, and the
incremental cost to individuals with celiac disease of acquiring
gluten-free food products;
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- increase the limits for tax-assisted retirement saving;
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- expand the capital gains rollover for eligible
small-business shares by eliminating the original investment limit and
the reinvestment limit and allowing an eligible reinvestment to be made
in the year of disposition of the original investment shares or within 120
days after the year;
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- provide relieving measures concerning the
deductibility of automobile expenses and the recognition of taxable
benefits relating to automobiles;
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- increase, to $300,000 from $200,000, in increments of
$25,000 commencing in 2003, the annual amount of active business
income of a small business corporation that is eligible for the special 12
per cent federal corporate income tax rate;
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- eliminate the federal capital tax on large corporations
over a period of 5 years and increase the threshold at which it begins to
apply from $10,000,000 to $50,000,000 in 2004;
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- extend the Mineral Exploration Tax Credit to the
end of 2004;
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- improve the application of the tax shelter rules to
arrangements representing the deductibility of tax credits; and
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- increase the amount of the Film or Video Production
Services Tax Credit to 16 per cent from 11 per cent.
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Part 10 also amends the Children's Special Allowances Act as a
consequence to add, with respect to special allowances payable for
months that are after June 2003, a benefit parallel to the new $1600
Child Disability Benefit Supplement to the Canada Child Tax Benefit.
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Part 11 amends the Excise Act, 2001, the non-GST/HST parts of the
Excise Tax Act and the Income Tax Act to harmonize various accounting,
interest, penalty and related administrative and enforcement
provisions, generally applicable after June 2003.
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