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I had it on my T4 a couple of years ago (TD money). It was shown as non-taxable benefits.
SupersonicMax said:I had it on my T4 a couple of years ago (TD money). It was shown as non-taxable benefits.
CountDC said:Not fully correct. You can submit a request to CRA to have your taxes paid directly to them by you. If they approve they will send you the details and the authority for us to stop deducting the taxes at source. Only seen it twice though so I imagine there are some strict hoops to jump through.
Messerschmitt said:Correct, if you have tax credits, you can submit a tax reduction at source form. Not sure if you are able to reduce tax at source without any credits tho.
I've read the older posts here and saw some trying to get "more" tax deducted so that they have a positive tax refund (rather than owing). Why? You are basically lending the government money tax free until tax time arrives. Why would you not withhold as much tax as you can get away with, invest it (put it in a HISA at least, lots of 2.5% promos), and pay the balance due at tax time. Weird.
Regarding claiming expenses, what about the mess kit? I understood that it's mandatory yet you have to pay with your own money (and it's retarded expensive too, 1-2 grand)
cdnjarhead said:http://www.forces.gc.ca/en/caf-community-pay/reg-force-class-c-officer-rates.page
After finishing training successfully for commissioned officer, you go from officer cadet to a second lieutenant.
What determines whether you are on pay rate A - E as second lieutenant? Are these differences in trades? Number of overseas assignments under your belt?
Also for example hypothetically on scale E, what has an officer done to make it to 10 pay increments?
I am not under the impression I will become a rich man nor am I interested in just the money, but I am just trying to understand what kind of raises and increases in salary a typical officer experiences during their time.
Thanks very much
cdnjarhead said:Apologies, I should have gone to the bottom of the page.
Got to "Medical Officers" and "Legal Officers" and was like yup that's not me.
Thanks for pointing out the information.
But actually the entries in yellow helped a lot I might not have understood what the acronyms meant.
Once you are in a pay rate, say C for Direct Entry Officer, you stay in that rate, correct?
It seems like starting non-commissioned and making officer from the ranks and getting scale E is a better gig, both pay-wise and career path-wise, considering openings for civilian hire into DEO are slim and C is the lowest rate.
MJP said:For General Service Officers (ie most of them) the payscale becomes the same at the Capt level. Only OCdt/2Lt/Lt have different payscales to account for the variety of paths people take to become officers.
cdnjarhead said:How many overseas assignments and years of good service are usually required for the promotion to the rank of Captain?
Thanks
Pusser said:Promotion to captain is automatic, based on time and qualification. In other words, as long as you pass all your courses, you should be a captain within four years of enrolment. If your courses are delayed for reasons beyond your control, your promotion to captain can be backdated. No overseas tours are required.
dapaterson said:And that is a fundamental problem. Capt should be competitive (perhaps less specialists such as doctors, dentists, lawyers and chaplains). The pay scales for Lt are more than adequate for junior personnel; there is no valid reason for officers to get $75K+ per year with only four years of experience.
cdnjarhead said:If making Captain is just a function of time, what kind of accomplishments take an officer to the rank of Major?
cdnjarhead said:mariomike thanks for that, that answers all my questions.
dapaterson said:And that is a fundamental problem. Capt should be competitive (perhaps less specialists such as doctors, dentists, lawyers and chaplains). The pay scales for Lt are more than adequate for junior personnel; there is no valid reason for officers to get $75K+ per year with only four years of experience.