Thursday, February 12, 2026
ADVT 
National

Low-Income Seniors To Receive Extra Money For Wrongfully Denied Benefits

Darpan News Desk, 06 May, 2016 10:57 AM
  • Low-Income Seniors To Receive Extra Money For Wrongfully Denied Benefits
OTTAWA — The federal government says it has paid out about $258 million to low-income seniors who were wrongly denied the guaranteed income supplement.
 
And it may pay out more: the government says it will cover cost-of-living increases so the payments keep track with inflation, and cover the value of any lost tax credits or benefits that arose because of a mistake eight years ago.
 
Exactly how much more the government will owe isn't clear.
 
In May 2015, the government began reviewing about 141,000 cases where benefits were not renewed between 2008 and 2013 because of late tax returns, excess earnings, changes in marital status or recipients leaving Canada for more than six months.
 
The guaranteed income supplement, or GIS, is a monthly non-taxable benefit provided to low-income seniors in Canada.
 
 
Starting in 2007, the government began using tax and income information from the Canada Revenue Agency to automatically determine whether an individual was eligible for the benefit top-up.
 
In July 2015, then-social development minister Pierre Poilievre was notified that 10,000 seniors had received retroactive payments, just as the previous government was negotiating new income supplement agreements with the provinces and territories.
 
On Thursday, Employment and Social Development Canada said about 86,500 of the 141,000 cases reviewed should have received the benefit. The department says it is waiting to see if a further 9,000 could be eligible for back payments.
 
Each retroactive payment is worth an average of $1,950.

MORE National ARTICLES

Quebec's English Schools Fight Proposed Bill To Axe School Board Elections

Quebec's English Schools Fight Proposed Bill To Axe School Board Elections
Bill 86 would eliminate provincewide school board elections and replace each board's council of commissioners with a council made up of parents, school staff and community members.

Quebec's English Schools Fight Proposed Bill To Axe School Board Elections

Defence To Call 1st Witness At Trial Of Couple Charged In Son's Meningitis Death

Defence To Call 1st Witness At Trial Of Couple Charged In Son's Meningitis Death
LETHBRIDGE, Alta. — The defence is to call its first witness today at the trial of a former Alberta couple charged in the death of their toddler son from bacterial meningitis.

Defence To Call 1st Witness At Trial Of Couple Charged In Son's Meningitis Death

Prince William, Kate Visit Gandhi Smriti, India Gate

Prince William, Kate Visit Gandhi Smriti, India Gate
The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge, Prince William and Kate Middleton, on Monday visited Gandhi Smriti here and paid tributes at the 'Martyr's Column' -- the spot where Mahatma Gandhi fell to an assassin's bullets in 1948.

Prince William, Kate Visit Gandhi Smriti, India Gate

Revenue Agency Targets $2.6 Billion In Missing Taxes Over Five Years

Revenue Agency Targets $2.6 Billion In Missing Taxes Over Five Years
The agency is detailing how it will use a $444-million government commitment over five years to help improve detection, auditing and prosecution of tax cheaters.

Revenue Agency Targets $2.6 Billion In Missing Taxes Over Five Years

Alberta NDP Scraps Plan For Tax Credits To Woo Employers To Create Jobs

Alberta NDP Scraps Plan For Tax Credits To Woo Employers To Create Jobs
EDMONTON — Alberta's NDP government has scrapped a plan to help create 27,000 jobs by rewarding businesses that hire new employees.

Alberta NDP Scraps Plan For Tax Credits To Woo Employers To Create Jobs

Manitoba NDP Leader Launching More Accusations Against Tory Opponent

NDP Leader Greg Selinger is calling his Progressive Conservative opponent "homophobic" and a threat to social programs as the Manitoba election campaign enters its final eight days.

Manitoba NDP Leader Launching More Accusations Against Tory Opponent