The following response to the Isaac Brock Society appeared in a comment.
I am with the CBA and we have been following your discussion. We certainly understand the concerns that you have with FATCA. However, you seem to be under the impression that Canadian banks are planning to willingly go along with the FATCA requirements and this is certainly not the case. In fact, the Canadian banking industry agrees with your concerns and we have been and will continue to fight to change the extraterritorial reach of FATCA and lessen the impact it will have on Canadian banks and their customers.
We have information on our stance on FATCA on our website:
http://cba.ca/en/research-and-advocacy/47-regulatory-enviornment/598-foreign-account-tax-compliance-act–
For more than two years, the CBA and the Canadian banks have raised our concerns with the IRS and the US Treasury Department and have also done so through our membership in the International Banking Federation. We have also had discussions in Washington with IRS and US Treasury officials and Canadian Embassy officials. In May, the CBA made a presentation in Washington at public hearings before Treasury and the IRS and our president spoke out against FATCA in speeches in Calgary and Vancouver this spring. Here are the links:
http://cba.ca/contents/files/presentations/pre_20120515_irsfatca_en.pdf
Last week we also submitted an opinion piece with our concerns about FATCA to the Washington Post and we are waiting to hear back about whether it will be printed.
In Ottawa, we have raised concerns with officials from the Department of Finance, the Minister of Finance and the US Embassy. Finance Minister Jim Flaherty has supported our position and expressed his own concerns publicly and we appreciate the support from the Minister and his officials. And we are not alone in fighting this legislation. Governments and banking groups from around the world share your concerns and ours. You can find more documents here:
If banks were required to identify US persons under FATCA, they would not be doing this willingly. However, they may have no choice as FATCA is currently written because the non-compliance would have a much larger impact on more of the financial institutions’ customers. The penalty for being unable to comply with these complex rules is very severe for both banks and their clients. The penalty includes a 30 per cent withholding tax on all U.S. source income flowing to the bank and its customers, and a 30 per cent withholding tax on the gross proceeds of the sale of U.S. securities by the bank and its customers, and withholding on some portion of so-called “foreign pass-thru” payments. According to Statistics Canada, as of 2010 Canadian direct investment in the United States totalled nearly $250 billion. As outlined on our website, banks would only provide information to US authorities with a customer’s consent (http://cba.ca/en/consumer-information/40-banking-basics/597-us-foreign-account-tax-compliance-act-fatca-information-for-clients).
There is nothing in the Canadian Bank Act or the Access to Basic Banking Services (ABBS) Regulations that prohibits a bank from closing an account. The ABBS regulations give reasons why a bank can refuse to open an account for someone, but they don’t give any restrictions on closing an account. You can find information here: http://laws-lois.justice.gc.ca/eng/regulations/SOR-2003-184/page-1.html
I hope this is helpful in explaining why Canadian banks would comply, however reluctantly, with FATCA if it became necessary and why Canada’s banking industry, with the support of the federal government, will continue to fight for changes to the FATCA legislation. As your concern seems to be the requirements under FATCA, you may wish to add your voice to the growing opposition to this legislation by raising these issues with the US Treasury, the IRS and the U.S. embassy in Ottawa.
Maura Drew-Lytle
Director, Media Relations and Communications
Canadian Bankers Association
The following comments were received:
Dear CBA
Are your member banks prepared to give up close to 1,000,000 bank customers and terminate their businesses?
@ Joe Smith
We are working hard to get changes to FATCA to lessen the impact on bank customers in Canada. While we are still hopeful that some changes may be made, the banks and other financial institutions also have to start preparing for its implementation even though they are reluctant to do so.
@Joe Smith, thanks for posting this. I just saw that I received the same email.
Does anybody have updates on Credit Unions planned approaches? This could be a tremendous windfall for the cooperative movement if they pick up 1,000,000+ accounts, mortgages, loans, RRSPS and RESPS as well as tax-free accounts..
@Joe Smith
While she is technically correct on the application of ABBS(re closing vs opening) effectively over a large portion of the population ABBS blocks closure. If someone was closed out legitimately one institutions they could simply go to another and demand to opened under ABBS effectively negating the point of the FATCA regs. The Washington Post part of the story is news to me and a good sign. The foreign pass through payment issue is in total violation of Canadian law under several court rulings.
@Maura: It seems you are cofirming our worst fears that there is nothing to prevent a bank from closing an account. This to me says Canadian banks may very well (even if reluctanlty) demand to know place of birth, request permission to provide information to IRS if that place of birth is in US and be prepared to close an account if that permission is not given.
Despite your protestations, this says a foreign law will take precedence over the rights of Canadian citizens and residents when push comes to shove.
Your comments are also in conflict with the following comments in a letter from a Vice-President of TD to DOT and IRS.
“If an FFI closed an account because such information was not provided, the purpose of ABBS rules would be frustrated and, in addition, the FFI would be subject to fines. Each violation of the ABBS requirements would subject the financial institution to a penalty of up to 200,000. Even if an FFI could close the account of an uncooperative account holder, an FFI could not refuse to reopen an account for such an individual if adequate identification under ABBS were again provided.”
Would you please clarify for us the following:
1. Is the information you provided correct or is the information in the letter from TD correct?
2, Under what legal authority would a bank be able to ask it’s customers where they were born or if they hold citizenship of a foreign country?
As I I told you in my e-mail, I have been in contact with a prominent Canadian lawyer. My bank can expect legal action of they ask me my place of birth or make a request to transmit private financial information to a foreign government.
You may be assured we are making our views known to government officials on both sides of the border.
In the meantime, your response is making my employee credit union look better and better.
*
@Joe Smith
The latest from the Credit Union movement is a letter from Central One to US Treasury.
http://bsmlegal.com/PDFs/Central1.pdf
Basically they call to exempted completely. They also indicate that a significant number of individual CU’s will refuse to comply and thus Central One will have major problems. Central One also seems to indicate that if a solution is not reached soon the Canadian Payments Association and the Bank of Canada will get involved.
@Maura Drew-Lytle;
Thank you for your comments. I appreciate your interest in our concerns. As individuals, we have been speaking with our banks and credit unions and comparing notes. Some have also corresponded with some of your members. We have also written to Minister Flaherty, and other political representatives, as well as the Privacy Commissioner. Some have contacted US politicians, and the ACLU.
I appreciate the presentations that the banks have made – and I have read the presentations where available on the net, as have several others here. Opposition to FATCA in any form or origin is welcome. But, I’d quibble a bit about the nature/form/motivation of some of the opposition, since some of the CBA member’s investment affiliates have advocated not against FATCA itself, and the impact on clients, but in opposition to the ‘compliance burden’, and costs, thus are advocates for a government-to-government reporting approach to take the onus, costs and heat off themselves. It would help to deflect negative attention away from financial institutions and investment firms if they could point to government as the source of the implementation instead. If the Canadian government does agree to do that, there would of course be a cost – which would be paid for by all Canadian taxpayers. And since we all pay taxes to Canada, whether we also hold US taxable status as well, everyone in Canada will share in implementing the costs – with zero benefit. Whereas, banks, insurance companies, etc. will continue to have unimpeded access to US markets, with less direct cost borne by their shareholders. This is where our interests diverge quite a bit – I don’t want FATCA at all, and have no interest in settling for a less expensive version.
For example I don’t have the full article below, but I think this illustrates my point;
“FATCA Partners” agreement would limit compliance burdens, Canadian trade group says Feb 14 2012
by Emmanuel Olaoye
“Ian Russell, president of the Investment Industry Association of Canada (IIAC), said the changes would be a “very positive step” for Canadian firms if Canada signed on as a FATCA partner.
“It would resolve the problems of conflicts in privacy laws. We are obliged to provide information to foreign….” http://www.complinet.com/global/news/news/article.html?ref=152318 The IIAC has a member list here: http://www.iiac.ca/welcome-to-iiac/about-us/iiac-members , and you will see that there are members who have relationships with major Canadian banks.
I think I’d be more inclined to appreciate the efforts that banks have made, without as much criticism if they had tried to alert their customers in ways that would help marshall popular and political resistance against FATCA – rather than only post information on a website they would have no reason to look at. I note that banks aren’t alone in that. Pension plans have not followed up on the suggestions by affected account holders to notify their members of the pending crisis either. I haven’t seen any full page newspaper and media ads to that effect – unless I missed them. There has been surprisingly little coverage of FATCA domestically or in the US.
Re your comments:
“However, they may have no choice as FATCA is currently written because the non-compliance would have a much larger impact on more of the financial institutions’ customers. The penalty for being unable to comply with these complex rules is very severe for both banks and their clients.”
From the CBA site, this is the broad group of mostly Canadian citizens who will be affected:
The CBA site says the affected would include:
- A citizen of the U.S. (including an individual born in the U.S. but resident in Canada or another country, who has not renounced U.S. citizenship);
- A lawfulresident of the U.S. (including a U.S. green card holder);
- A person residing in the U.S.
- You also may be considered a U.S. person if you spend a considerable amount of time in the U.S. on a yearly basis. For example, some Canadian “snowbirds” may be considered U.S. persons for U.S. tax purposes. If you are unsure, contact your tax advisor.
- U.S. corporations, estates and trusts are also considered U.S. persons.”
Many of those above will also be dual Canadian/US citizens by birth or naturalization. Some may hold US only citizenship – but be decades-long permanent residents.
The CBA no doubt is working from its own estimated statistics of how many accounts would be affected – that would just be good business planning. I’d be interested in knowing what numbers you’re using. I think that it is at least an estimated million or more US taxable ‘persons’ in Canada (not just citizens, but duals, snowbirds, greencard holders, etc. Correct me if I’m wrong?
All the persons in the categories above would suffer directly from Canadian bank and financial institution collaboration with the FATCA regime. Those deemed by the US to be ‘taxable persons’ living in Canada, all have families, and many have single-citizenship Canadian spouses or other relatives who may hold joint accounts with them. Even if not jointly held, one member of the household – say a breadwinner – who is refused banking, has their account closed, or suffers a 30% witholding, will affect an entire Canadian family. Add to that all the Canadian business accounts that could be affected. And mortgages, and savings, pension, life insurance – and other types of accounts – since the list of what FATCA includes is longer than any small exclusions. That’s a lot of angry customers and a lot of affected accounts and assets.
Some FATCA compliance sites have advised their clients on ways of keeping this low key – so as not to alienate account holders during the process of implementation. I’ve been wondering if that is why when I look at the list of presenters at FATCA hearings in the US, we hear so little from them here at home. One pension plan opined that there was no need to get members upset – in the hopes that they’d be exempted from complying with FATCA. Problem is that people can’t make their objections known in a democracy unless they’re told what is brewing before it is too late. I would have thought that Canadian citizens and residents could be partners with their financial institutions in approaching our government with our concerns if we’d been alerted when this was first proposed.
How will joint account holders, and beneficiaries fare in this – when only one of them is a US taxable person with a FATCA obligation? How will banks treat this situation? I’m assuming that even the single-citizenship Canadians will have to prove that they are not American?
Account holders will have a choice? Won’t we be considered ‘recalcitrant’ then? What is the result of being recalcitrant? “If you do not complete IRS Form W-9 or provide your consent to disclose information to the IRS, your financial institution maybe required to withhold a tax of 30% on any U.S. source payments1 that you receive and send this money to the IRS. Also, your financial institution may refuse to open an account or may be required to close existing accounts.”
You say that banks will be forced to do this because of the impact on all their other clients. Well, who will be paying for the expensive systems to implement FATCA? Only those deemed US persons? Or will it be shared amongst all the other account holders – except that they won’t know that they’re paying for it will they?
Interesting comment you made re; no prohibition on banks closing an account.
“There is nothing in the Canadian Bank Act or the Access to Basic Banking Services (ABBS) Regulations that prohibits a bank from closing an account. The ABBS regulations give reasons why a bank can refuse to open an account for someone, but they don’t give any restrictions on closing an account“
That may be true, I don’t know. Does that make it any more palatable for the account holder – that it’s not actually prohibited? If the reason for closing an account hinges on identifying birthplace, US citizenship (for duals, placing US above Canadian citizenship held simultaneously – often through birth on Canadian soil), or merely US connections (ex. marriage to a US person – on joint accounts and investments). Could that be discrimination? We are in Canada. Shouldn’t Canadian law supercede US laws in our sovereign country?
It may be that the US will win, and FATCA will be imposed on us if our federal government gives in. Savings and assets are of paramount importance to most people – and that means we’re hardly likely to forget this episode in history. Neither will our non-US friends and family when we share with them what happened – even if it becomes legal to do.
If a million or more of us and our joint account holders and beneficiaries end up under the bus as a minor but unavoidable bump in the road, do you think that we will forgive and forget? I don’t think so. Some might be thinking that if and when credit unions – (who operate for and by their members), are also forced to cooperate, that we’ll have no alternatives, and thus we’ll have no choice. This may very well be the case. Perhaps we’ll have no good alternative other than a house full of piggy banks, but we’ll certainly remember who co-operated first, and who started to collaborate before it even became in force here in Canada.
We are fully compliant with the laws in Canada – our accounts are transparent, and are registered and reported with our SIN#s, post-tax earnings, we pay tax on any interest – the CRA already knows everything we have.
Canada is not a tax haven.
The whole situation gets more depressing by the moment. I can’t imagine the IRS and/or Congress giving a hoot about the importance of Central 1′s ability to service the Canadian system, or whether the CBA wants to comply etc. They only care about what they want and since they can hold that 30% witholding threat over everybody’s heads, there seems to be nothing anyone can do. Unless all the governments were prepared to take the hit and tell them they wouldn’t comply. It is truly hard to fathom that one country can hold that much power over everyone else.
I wish my CLN would arrive. Among all the other negatives, I could not imagine being told I couldn’t have a bank account.
@Tim
perhaps I am missing something but I don’t see a section in the letter from Central One that indicates a significant number of individual CU’s will refuse to comply. Could you point this out to me? I would be thrilled, as all my $$ was moved to CU the minute I heard about FATCA.
No wonder TD, CIBC and the other Banksters of the CBA lobbied behind the scenes against the interests of their fellow Canadian citizens, residents, taxpayers and accountholders:
“……..Among the Canadian banks, TD has the most at stake in the U.S. market. It ranks among the top 10 retail banks in the United States, with 26,000 employees and a network of 1,300 branches along the East Coast, and it is the largest shareholder in U.S. online broker giant TD Ameritrade. ……….”
……….”Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce – whose longest-standing board member, Gordon Giffin, is a long-time ally of the Clintons who raised money for Hillary’s first presidential bid – hired the former secretary of state to make appearances following the publication of her memoir in 2014…..”
“……..In November, 2008, Mr. Clinton earned $525,000 for three speeches in Moncton, Montreal and London, Ont. The following May, he spent two days in Canada, earning another $525,000 for speeches. All of his appearances were at motivational events organized by The Power Within Inc., which produces training programs for the general public and corporations and is sponsored by TD Bank. ……………”
The Clinton connection
How Bill and Hillary raised and earned millions from Canada’s corporate elite
Karen Howlett, Jeffrey Jones AND Andrew Willis
The Globe and Mail Last updated: Friday, Nov. 04, 2016 9:18PM EDT
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/report-on-business/bill-hillary-clinton-giustra-corporate-canada/article32675340/
Special treatment for Canadian CBA Banksters while continuing to abuse the Charter and constitutional rights of law abiding taxpaying Canadian individual accountholders and their families:
Contrast the treatment of our brave plaintiffs and other ordinary Canadian accountholders with the “courtesy” treatment of the CBA and a Big Five Canadian Bankster by the Canadian government’s FINTRAC.
Individual law abiding Canadians with a US birthplace or dual status get NO notice from the CRA or their financial institution when their legal local assets and accounts are reported automatically to the US IRS – without cause or any indication of any wrongdoing, and even in complete compliance with CANADIAN laws, for the ‘crime’ of banking where we live and work and pay taxes, and yet the Canadian government extends “courtesy” notice to the CBA and one of the Big Five Banksters:
AND, FINTRAC gives the CBA and a major (as yet unamed Canadian bank) a “courtesy” heads up about pending major money laundering charges;
“…Canada’s financial intelligence agency gave the country’s bankers a “heads up” prior to reporting that it was hitting a Canadian bank with an unprecedented $1.1-million penalty last spring, reveal newly released documents obtained by National Observer and the Toronto Star.
The penalty is the first of its kind issued to a Canadian bank for violating Canada’s money laundering rules. The bank in question violated the law 1,225 times, but has not been named. Several corporate governance experts have criticized the agency, FINTRAC, for not being transparent about which bank had broken the rules.
But an internal email, released through access to information legislation, shows that the agency had shared some information in advance with industry.
In the email sent last March to Gérald Cosette, director of the Financial Transactions and Reports Analysis Centre of Canada, a media spokesman from the agency explained that he was giving the Canadian Bankers Association, a lobby group for Canadian banks, advance notice about its announcement of the penalty…”….
http://www.nationalobserver.com/2016/12/22/news/financial-intelligence-agency-gave-bankers-heads-about-money-laundering-disclosure
‘Canada refuses to name bank that broke money-laundering rules 1,225 times’
http://www.nationalobserver.com/2016/12/22/news/canada-refuses-name-bank-broke-money-laundering-rules-1225-times
“…..Canada’s money-laundering agency is refusing to name the bank hit with an unprecedented penalty for failing to report a suspicious transaction and committing hundreds of other violations in its dealings with a controversial client. Details of the failures — including one the agency described as “very serious” — were revealed in documents obtained by National Observer and the Toronto Star.
For nearly two years, the bank failed to report a series of unusual transactions in its client’s account, despite news reports at the time revealing he was under criminal investigation in the U.S. The transactions included dozens of large cash deposits and hundreds of international transfers worth more than $12 million, reveal the newly-released documents.
The records, released by the Financial Transactions and Reports Analysis Centre of Canada (FINTRAC) through access to information legislation, are heavily censored but provide new details about FINTRAC’s first-ever penalty on a bank — $1.15 million, disclosed last April.
Bank identity still a secret
The documents revealed that the bank broke the rules 1,225 times, but the institution’s identity remains undisclosed…….”
Contrast this courtesy treatment of CBA member and big Bankster with the way that the Canadian government is blithely subverting the Charter and constitutional rights of law abiding taxpaying Canadian individuals and families whose only ‘crime’ was being born in the US or of US parentage, or obtaining some kind of quasi-US status (ex. expired greencard).
The Sunny Libs and Bankster lobby are content to continue abusing our Canadian tax dollars and the resources of our Canadian Justice Dept. towards defending the persecution of Canadians with mere US ‘indicia’ (now a crime to possess in Canada) in order to satisfy a foreign country, but extends “courtesy” to major money laundering Banksters.
Banksters and actual fraudsters and money launderers are obviously treated differently than law abiding Canadian taxpaying individuals and families with ordinary legal local bank accounts.
In protest, close your BANK account and join a CREDIT UNION instead.
Given big bankster practices re bank fees in general, I wonder how we will ever know just how much of FATCA specific compliance related costs are being extracted from ALL accountholders in Canada?
http://www.cbc.ca/news/business/big-banks-osc-excess-fees-1.4180732
http://www.cbc.ca/news/business/fcac-bank-review-1.4025864