Trucker Access › Forums › Diesel News › Are you working for a Driver Inc. carrier? If so, you’re being set up
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March 24, 2024 at 1:27 am #17561EazyRiDer66Keymaster
Driver Inc. is an emotional issue in our industry – and for good reason. The non-compliant behavior based on tax evasion and manipulation of the Labour Code is destroying the competitive landscape of the trucking industry and distorting the supply chain in ways we have never seen.
Driver Inc. is not a ‘new’ entrepreneurial strategy to get a competitive edge in trucking. Without a shred of doubt, it’s a systemic scheme based on profiting from skirting legal obligations, including – but not limited to – corporate and personal tax evasion, labor misclassification, misrepresentation of fleet registrations, insurance irregularities, underreporting of vehicle use and fuel consumption and, in some cases, forced labor through various abuses of immigration programs.
Carriers who abide by the law and refuse to participate in Driver Inc. are what the trucking industry needs; it’s what this economy needs, and, frankly, what our society needs if we want to be able to adequately fund our medical and education systems, infrastructure and the social institutions we have come to expect as Canadians.
Compliant carriers form the backbone of the supply chain – they are the true entrepreneurs who survive despite having all the cards stacked against them. They should be applauded and supported for their commitment to trucking the right way and supporting Canada’s social fabric.
Instead of being dismissed as out-of-touch or not entrepreneurial, they should be celebrated and emulated for their sustained success as legal, responsible corporate citizens.
It’s an undisputable fact that Driver Inc. is illegal under every standard we have on the books. Let’s explore that without any of the red herrings that have been floated out there recently. Here are the facts:
This column will focus on the tax side of the scheme, but it’s important not to forget that the concept of a Personal Services Business (PSB) does not exist from a labor perspective. The Canada Labour Code only has two classifications: 1) employee; and 2) independent contractor. If you’re not a legitimate small business and do not own a truck or make equipment payments, you are an employee – end of story.
Think being incorporated changes things? It doesn’t and ESDC is clear in its ruling on this matter:
“Of note is that whether or not a worker is incorporated does not factor heavily in a determination of employer-employee status. As such, Personal Service Businesses would not have special status….in this case we find that an employer-employee relationship exists and that the Code applies.”
CRA
So how does Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) see things? Like ESDC, CRA recognizes employees and independent contractors, but also has another category called Personal Service Businesses (PSB). Like in the Labour Code, Driver Inc. drivers do not qualify as independent contractors for essentially the same reasons (does not pass the independence test). Therefore, if the worker insists on being an incorporated worker, they become a PSB.
So, what is a PSB? CRA describes PSBs as an entity that provides services to a business that a regular employee usually performs. The person is labelled as an ‘incorporated employee’ and not a contractor or self-employed individual. So, if you don’t want to be an employee and you don’t qualify as a true independent contractor what does this mean for your taxes now that your company has made you a PSB?
The combined federal and provincial tax rate applicable to PSBs in Ontario is 44.5%, which in nearly all cases will be higher than the effective tax rate payable by the driver on employment income.
In addition, you are also not eligible for many business deductions available to true independent contractors. Finally, it comes with many added business, legal and tax expenses a normal employee would not have, like special corporate tax filings.
Combine these facts with all the compensation benefits a PSB loses as a non-employee, and the truck driver who becomes a PSB will see their total compensation package shrink considerably when compared to a truck driver who files taxes and receives compensation as an employee.
What does that mean? It means there are zero – and I mean zero – tax and compensation reasons why you, as a truck driver, would want to be a PSB. Unless, that is, it’s your – or your company’s – plan that you will not pay your taxes, or to take deductions that are not legally available to PSBs. Don’t believe me? Fine. Read CRA’s memo on the matter.
T4A
Before 2011, it was mandatory for all businesses to issue a T4A to their contractors to show payments made. In 2011, an enforcement moratorium was put in place.
Since then, CRA has been trying to resolve some issues in the business community – mostly not pertaining to trucking – around the issuance of T4As. The Canadian Trucking Alliance’s position is to bring back the T4A system, or something similar, just for trucking. Those who would object to this likely do so for nefarious reasons.
Under a mandatory system with the enforcement moratorium lifted, under a CRA audit, if a carrier does not issue a T4A to a contractor, and CRA cannot track down the contractor, the carrier is on the hook for those contractor’s taxes.
The CRA will get what’s owed one way or the other. Why is this important to the Driver Inc. matter? Well, it means carriers can no longer wash their hands of tax obligations and if they start issuing T4As, you can be sure some of their drivers will walk to the next Driver Inc. carrier. I understand that is the legal conundrum of T4As and Driver Inc. But to that I say – well, welcome to the club of trying to operate and manage a legal business.
CRA and the corporate veil
Some say the T4A is the key to escaping corporate responsibility as the CRA will not pierce the corporate veil between two separate businesses.
This is an important point of law that CTA supports. However, CTA also supports the application of law when a criminal conspiracy exists to circumvent the law by arranging a corporate system explicitly designed to create labor misclassification and tax evasion (not tax avoidance).
This is an interesting scenario for some in the Driver Inc. community, if CRA decides there is enough evidence where the corporate veil protection no longer applies. Interestingly, if accountants or other similar professionals (within a company or not) are found to be aiding or organizing this activity, they can personally be held responsible.
Enforcement
When the CRA visits and they find problems, they are like guests who won’t leave. The penalties depend on a variety of factors (if you are not paying at all; or just improperly claiming deductions, and how long you have been doing this) but it’s safe to say this will hurt if you are caught. Whether it’s the company itself, a tax or legal professional who convinced you to do this, or you – as the driver – someone will eventually take the fall. And if people are telling you that this is OK – or that there’s some ‘grey area’ and you won’t get caught’ – well, chances are you’re looking at the ‘fall guy’ in the mirror.
While each situation may be different, these are the potential consequences according to CRA:
- Late filing/Failure to file penalties.
- Repeated failure to file penalties.
- False statements or omissions (gross negligence) penalties.
- Interest (interest on overdue amounts).
- Potential for additional gross negligence penalty as well on the interest.
- There is no limit to how far the CRA can go back when an error or omission is discovered that is attributable to carelessness or neglect. In the case of possible PSB corporations, the normal reassessment period is three years from the date of the initial notice of assessment.
Driver Inc. decoded
So, if a Driver Inc. company is trying to convince you to incorporate or become a PSB, this is what they’re really saying in plain language:
‘Welcome to my fleet. I want you to become a corporation known as a PSB, take on the legal responsibility of a corporation and pay more taxes than you would as an employee. Also, all the protections and compensation benefits afforded to you under the Canada Labour Code – overtime pay, vacation pay, paid sick days, Canada Pension, Unemployment Insurance, work protections, etc. – are also gone once you sign on to the PSB program. With that, welcome to the underground economy. If the feds don’t catch you, you’re golden; if they do, you’re on your own and good luck facing tens of thousands of dollars in fines and/or back pay and perhaps even jail time for gross violations.’
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