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CRA's letter 'Conservative party advertising,' Edmonton mom says

No one likes getting mail from the Canada Revenue Agency. But for Edmonton mom Rosemary Ronald, this letter was meant to deliver good news. Or "proposed" good news. But what prompted it? The neutral government agency's mandate or Conservative party strategy?

'I just found it a little rich,' Rosemary Ronald says about the revenue agency's unprompted outreach

Taxpayer-funded ads?

9 years ago
Duration 2:25
James Fitz-Morris reports for The National on a curious letter the CRA sent one Edmonton mom

No one likes getting mail from the Canada Revenue Agency. Usually, anyway.

But whenEdmonton mom Rosemary Ronaldopened one letter two weeks ago, she discovered what was intended to be good news: a description of a"proposed" government family benefit soon available to her family, accompanying a request to confirm information they already had (based on past tax filings) about her child.

"I just found it a little rich for the CRA to be asking me to confirm that information when they have that information," she told CBC News. "They know if I have a child and his birthday."

The Harper government in the form of government departments, not the Conservative party has kicked offan advertising blitz, including expensive prime-time television ad buys during high-ratedNHL playoff games.

The focus of this media push is Tuesday's federal budget, including the family tax package announced by Prime Minister Stephen Harper last fall.

They want all Canadian families to know that new monthly payments areavailable not just for children under six but children under 18 as well. Human Resources Minister Pierre Poilievreheld news conferences last week encouraging families to "sign up" so they don't miss out on benefits to which they are now entitled.

But there's some fine print on the advertising: the word "proposed."

While Parliament has adopted a motion accepting the measures in principle which allows CRA to recognize them thelegislation to implement these payments was only introduced a few weeks ago. It's weeks away from passing through all stages of Parliament and being made official.

Othermeasures contained in Tuesday's budget haven't even received preliminaryParliamentary approval, and yet the government is already telling Canadians they can contribute the new maximum amount of $10,000 to their tax-free savings accounts immediately.

Taxpayers footing 'ad' bill

What's curious is that the government feels this push is necessary. After all, anyone claiming dependents on their tax filings in past year has already provided information, as Ronaldpoints out, about how many children they have and what their ages are.

If the benefits are truly universal, couldn't these payments be made automatically without any additional need to "sign up"?

Edmonton mom Rosemary Ronald received a letter recently from the Canada Revenue Agency asking her to confirm information she believes they already had about her child, for the purposes of promoting the Harper government's new family benefits. (CBCNews)

And if so, what promptedRonald's targeted letter from the CRA? The neutral government agency's mandate or Conservative party strategy?

She thinks she knows.

"In my opinion, it was Conservative party advertising but sent through CRA and,of course,paid for by us the taxpayers."

Not surprisingly, opposition parties don't appreciate this kind of government spending so close to a general election call.

"Conservatives stray towards the politics all the time campaigning all the time and use every tool at their disposal and, I think, sometimes breaking the rules," NDP finance critic Nathan Cullen told CBC.

"It gets to a point where enough is enough. You have to put up with those terrible ads during the hockey games,and now you are being sent propaganda through government agencies that really is just Conservative party material," Cullen said.

"The Harper government has crossed the line," Liberal critic Scott Brison agrees. "They are using Canadian tax dollars to pay for Conservative quasi-partisan advertising."

The government, however, says its duty is to inform Canadians about the benefits to which they are and may be entitled. And so the departmental spending on advertising the 2015 version of theEconomic Action Plan continues.

With files from James Fitz-Morris