Newsletters
Tax Alerts
Tax Briefing(s)





Press Releases
It is a sad fact that poverty is all around us and the severity of each case cannot be seen from something as simple as someone's clothes or the shoes that they wear. We cannot turn our backs from children who need our help the most, especially during this time of economic crisis. We need to reach out during these hard times, to underprivileged children within the GTA who desperately need your help. An article published by Campaign 2000 indicated that, one in every six children in Ontario, live in poverty. Read more on this article… Other Press Releases click

Audit & Accounting
With increasing frequency I hear the term 'passionate' used to describe certain behaviours, relationships or characteristics in the business world. Companies are described as 'passionate customers;' and employees and management are described as being 'passionate' about their work and roles. Read more on this article… For other articles on 'Audit & Accounting,' click

General

Effective January 1, 2009, every Canadian over the age of 17 is entitled to contribution up to $5,000 annually to a Tax-Free Savings Account (TFSA). Contributions to such accounts will not be deductible from income, but investment income in any form earned by contributed amounts will not be taxed, and amounts held within a TFSA may be withdrawn at any time, for any purpose, free of tax. Read more on this article… For other 'General' articles, click


Starting a New Business
First, think about who your target group is. Who specifically do you need to reach? Do you wish to focus on national, regional or local prospects? Read more on this article…For other articles on 'Starting a New Business,' click

Investment
Does it really pay to upgrade your technologies, to invest in talent and to coddle your clients? Read more on this article

New Quarterly Newsletters (February 2012)
Two quarterly newsletters have been added—one about personal issues, and one about corporate issues.

The tax benefits of working from home (February 2012)
A number of circumstances and developments have come together over the past few years to make working from a home office—once almost unheard of—a common fact of business life. First and foremost, of course, is the technology (particularly communications technology) which enables the home-based worker to have access to all of the information and services available to his or her in-office counterpart. Given the right technology, it’s nearly as easy for an employee working from home to send and receive e-mails through the employer’s communications network and access the people, information, and services needed to do his or her job in the same way as it would be if he or she was at the office.

How to handle an Instalment Reminder from the CRA (February 2012)
As if dealing with bills from the recent holiday season and trying to come up with the funds for an RRSP contribution weren’t enough, February is also the month in which millions of Canadian taxpayers receive an Instalment Reminder from the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA). For many of those taxpayers, who have received many such notices in the past, the reminder and the tax instalment process are familiar, although not necessarily welcome. For those who are receiving one for the first time, however, both the reminder itself and figuring out how to deal with it can be baffling.

RRSPs and TFSAs—making the annual choice (February 2012)
It’s that time of year again, when advertisements about the wisdom of contributing to your registered retirement savings plan (RRSP) fills the airwaves and Web sites. And, since the introduction of tax-free savings accounts (TFSAs) in 2009, February is now also the month in which Canadians wrestle with the question of whether to put any available funds into an RRSP before the contribution deadline of February 29, 2012, or whether to deposit those funds instead in a TFSA.

Debt reduction offers: too good to be true? (February 2012)
It’s almost impossible not to have heard that the amount of debt carried by Canadian households is at an all-time high—reaching, on average, just over 150% of household income. Carrying so much debt can be relatively painless when interest rates are at historic lows, but it’s clear that rates cannot and will not remain at such levels indefinitely.