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Hello @brandon_kijiji ,
You may have already got this straightened out since your post was some time ago. But with the newer CEWS 2.0 now out, I thought this post might help someone.
Since I posted last about the subject of CEWS, I've spent a lot of time studying it and working with our external accountant, EY, and have found out quite a bit more information. CRA has not made this easy, and as you know, have now made things even more complicated with CEWS 2.0. One of the biggest areas of confusion most people are having is how to calculate the baseline earnings.
The calculation of the baseline earnings is as follows:
Now, with CEWS 2.0, you have the option of using a different time period for the baseline remuneration, if it works out more favourably for the employee. In my situation, we started off 2020 much slower than we did 2019 so our employees (hourly workers) had a much higher income at the beginning of 2019 then in 2020. I used one of the alternative time periods as it worked out much better for our hourly employees. Salaried employees weren't affected so I continued to use Jan 1 - Mar 15, 2020 for them. Here are the new 'pre-crisis periods' that CRA is allowing:
Claim period Pre-crisis pay period options (number of days in period)
Periods 1 to 3 |
|
Period 4 |
|
Periods 5 and later |
|
For each claiming period, determine which pre-crisis period works best for each employee to ensure you get the maximum subsidy. Just keep very good records so you can prove your calculations in case of audit, which is almost a sure thing.
As far as my spreadsheet is concerned, although it is completely accurate, I am now pointing people to CRA's spreadsheet as it leaves nothing to guesswork. You can go through the entire claiming process from this website: https://www.canada.ca/en/revenue-agency/services/subsidy/emergency-wage-subsidy.html
There are both online and spreadsheet calculators where you choose specific claiming periods and it will make the calculations for you, after you have entered the comparable company revenues to determine whether your business qualifies. Just go through it step by step. I used the calculation spreadsheet because I can save it and keep it with my records.
You will not be able to (necessarily) use your actual pay periods to calculate the subsidy itself. The subsidy is based on exactly what the remuneration is from the first day to the last day of each claiming period. Our bi-weekly pay periods did not match the CRA's claiming periods so I had to pull reports of all payable hours worked on those exact days, by week. I used CRA's SS and added four or five columns to the right of it. In the first column, I put each person's equivalent hourly wage. In the next four columns, I entered how many hours each person had worked in Week 1, Week 2, Week 3 and Week 4. Then I used a formula to multiply each person's hourly wage by the weekly hours and it populated the spreadsheet instead of me having to do a manual calculation and enter the actual $ in the spreadsheet. Then the subsidy calculates on it's own. Note that if your bi-weekly periods match the claiming periods perfectly, you can use your payroll run information and use Tab 3 (Step 2b) to enter your employee info.
Tab 1 to determine whether drop in revenue qualifies you for subsidy:
Tab 2 - Subsidy Calculation
Tab 5 (Step 4)
Amount of Subsidy is calculated for you:
This is not the end, though. When you walk through the steps on that web page link, you will have to make adjustments to this amount if you have already claimed the 10% payroll remittance reduction or your employees were on work sharing, etc. Once you reach the end of all that, you will have the net wage subsidy amount you will get for that period. Whew! Trust the federal government to come up with such a convoluted plan! LOL
Best of luck to you!
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