In 2021, the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) introduced a new pilot grant program that provides financial support to some CVITP host organizations. When it was introduced, we had a lot to say about it here.
The pilot program has completed the first of its three years. As is unfortunately typical of the CRA in its reporting on the CVITP, there is a dearth of information on the first year of this pilot. However, there is one important piece of information cited in the CRA’s Departmental Plan for the 2022-23 fiscal year: “In the first year alone, the CRA sent just under one million dollars to qualifying organizations across Canada to support their efforts to ensure that vulnerable people have the ability to file tax returns and access the benefits and credits designed to support them.”
Remember: the budget for this three-year pilot grant program is $10 million; this amounts to an average of $3.3 million being available each year to support host organizations. Disbursing less than $1 million in the first of the three years raises serious question about the ability of the pilot grant program to meet its stated objectives: defraying organizations’ costs of hosting CVITP clinics and encouraging more organizations to host CVITP clinics.
In the following article, we show that it has budgeted too much for this pilot or, on the basis of the current budget, it is simply too stingy with the current payments to meet its goals. We predict that the pilot program will complete its three years well under budget. There are two design elements we stated when the pilot program was first launched which are likely to contribute to this outcome: administrative arrangements that are burdensome, deterring some host organizations from applying for the grant, combined with grant amount limits that are too low to serve as an incentive for host organizations.
We note that the indicators the CRA has said it will use to determine the success of the pilot are likely to yield misleading conclusions. This is because the implementation of the pilot program coincides with the period immediately following COVID, when the numbers for the CVITP had plummeted and thus could be expected to rebound anyways.
We also believe that the indicators the CRA is using are the wrong ones as none of them gets at the real purpose of the CVITP. As noted in one of our articles assessing the pilot program when it was first launched, at its core the CVITP is about the income levels of the clients it serves. Therefore, the pilot program should aim to increase the number of returns filed by a host organization for clients whose incomes fall at or below the poverty line, not simply the number of returns filed nor, for that matter, host organizations and volunteers enlisted in the CVITP. Until the CRA draws a closer link between its CVITP and the objectives contained in the federal government’s Poverty Reduction Strategy, it will continue to miss the mark with opportunities like its pilot grant program.