Complaints Spike as Taxpayers’ Watchdog to Review CRA Handling of Locked Accounts

Complaints Spike as Taxpayers’ Watchdog to Review CRA Handling of Locked Accounts
The Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) headquarters Connaught Building is pictured in Ottawa in this file photo. The Canadian Press/Sean Kilpatrick
The Canadian Press
Updated:

OTTAWA—The federal taxpayers’ watchdog says complaints to his office spiked in the hours after he went public with concerns about how the Canada Revenue Agency locked users out of their online accounts.

The accounts were locked just over one week ago when the agency found evidence that an unspecified number of user IDs and passwords might have been stolen in a cyberattack.

It was later found that wasn’t the case, but not before notices went out to users of the CRA’s online services, who had their accounts locked as a preventive measure.

Taxpayer ombudsperson Francois Boileau says the issue has dominated the number of complaints his office has received, amounting to three-quarters of those filed in 24 hours this week.

Almost a third of people complaining about being locked out of their accounts were facing urgent and dire financial situations that Boileau says his office was trying to help quickly resolve.

Boileau says he believes the CRA didn’t initially provide adequate information to affected Canadians, causing widespread concern and confusion.

Worsening the problems was trouble users had reaching the CRA to unlock their accounts or get more information, which has driven complaints to Boileau’s office daily since the incident.

“It’s a typical case for me that sometimes the left hand may not know what the right hand is doing,” he says.

Boileau says the CRA should have had a clear communications plan ready to roll to avoid sowing confusions and concerns.

Citing people waiting on hold for extended periods, getting disconnected or rerouted to multiple call centre agents, or being directed to an external website, the watchdog says the agency’s communications fell short of what Canadians expect.

“They deserve to know what happened. They deserve to know, with clarity ... usefulness and timeliness. And that’s something that ought to be at the forefront of every communication with the public,” Boileau says.

“Last week, it felt like it was not done in that spirit.”

By Jordan Press