Sent: Wednesday, December 07, 2005 8:45 AM To: taxman at centa.com Subject: Question on Record of Employment from US company I have worked in BC, for a company based in the USA for the past 5 years. They have their payroll set up through a company for their Canadian Employees and I have been receiving my T4 each Feb. as required. My problem has been that I have been laid off due to restructure, and they have not sent me my Record of Employment (4 weeks later) and they dont seem to know what it is and they think it doesnt apply to them. Do you have any suggestions? I believe they must provide me with it, and I am not sure how to get it. Thanks, R xxxxxxxxxx ---------------------------------------------------------- david ingram replies: Amazing. I find it almost impossible to believe that a Canadian Payroll Company who has paid you for 5 years and issued T4 slips would not automatically issue a Record of Employment when you were laid off. I wonder if you received a T4A in February of the last 4 years and were actually working as a self-employed contractor. If there was EI and CPP deducted from your cheques, you were an employee, should have received a Record of Employment and are entitled to Employment Insurance. If no EI and CPP were deducted, you were being paid as a self-employed contractor and are not entitled to EI. ----------- If there was EI deducted, put your application for EI in immediately "without" the Record of Employment. Tell the EI people that you tried to get it and the company did not know what it was. The EI people will do an audit and make sure the paperwork is correct. On the other hand, if you did not have EI deducted, you have no rights to EI and should have known it. ----------------------------- On another note, you may be in the position where you can claim to be an employee even though you worked as a contractor. Sometimes, the CRA will move in and determine someone who was a contractor to be an employee retroactively. I personally find this abhorrent because invariably the "contractor" wanted to be a contractor so that he or she would get better tax breaks and then cries foul when something goes wrong (like a lay-off). Be aware that if you have been claiming expenses as a self-employed person, trying to become an employee can backfire on you retroactively with your tax returns. Better to use your energies to find another job. David Ingram's US/Canada Services US / Canada / Mexico tax, Immigration and working Visa Specialists US / Canada Real Estate Specialists Home office at: 4466 Prospect Road North Vancouver, BC, CANADA, V7N 3L7 Cell (604) 657-8451 - (604) 980-0321 Fax (604) 980-0325 Calls welcomed from 10 AM to 10 PM 7 days a week (please do not fax or phone outside of those hours as this is a home office) email to taxman at centa.com www.centa.com www.david-ingram.com Disclaimer: This question has been answered without detailed information or consultation and is to be regarded only as general comment. Nothing in this message is or should be construed as advice in any particular circumstances. No contract exists between the reader and the author and any and all non-contractual duties are expressly denied. All readers should obtain formal advice from a competent and appropriately qualified legal practitioner or tax specialist in connection with personal or business affairs such as at www.centa.com. If you forward this message, this disclaimer must be included." Be ALERT, the world needs more "lerts" . -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://www.centa.com/CEN-TAPEDE/centapede/attachments/20051207/199573ce/attachment.htm