About this ebook
Author: Earl Sands, MBA, CGA, CPA, CAIRP, Licensed Insolvency Trustee
The Canadian Insolvency Guide is an excellent resource, for anyone suffering a debt crisis. It’s written by a Licensed Insolvency Trustee in clear straightforward English and gives a person, the knowledge they need to make an informed decision on how to get a fresh financial start.
The Canadian Insolvency Guide costs only $7.95 and can be downloaded from the Internet to your smart phone, tablet or desktop computer. You’re able to download a sample of the book, before you buy it.
The Canadian Insolvency Guide covers bankruptcy and consumer proposals:
•How to assess your personal financial situation;
•How to protect yourself before filing bankruptcy or a personal proposal;
•How to choose a Licensed Insolvency Trustee;
•About the two types of personal proposals you can file with a Licensed Insolvency Trustee and which one is better;
•Strategies involved in setting the amount to offer in the Proposal and how to negotiate if the creditors want more money in order to accept the Proposal;
•In depth explanations of the bankruptcy and proposal systems, so you will have no surprises if you choose one of these methods to get a fresh financial start;
•How to rebuild your credit rating in as little as two years, after completing a bankruptcy or a proposal.
Alternatives to bankruptcy and consumer proposals are also covered in the Canadian Insolvency Guide:
•We’ll show you the pitfalls so you don’t get ripped off by unscrupulous debt help companies.
•Twelve ways to get out of debt;
•How credit counsellors operate and the difference between independent and “non-profit” credit counsellors.
• How to decide If you should use a credit counsellor or a Licensed Insolvency Trustee to solve your debt problem;
•Information about credit counsellors they try to keep hidden.
•How debt consultants operate.
Earl Sands
Earl Sands, MBA, CGA, CPA, CIRP, LIT is a Licensed Insolvency Trustee. He founded his bankruptcy firm in 1990. When he sold his practice in late 2001, his firm had six offices and was handling the largest number of personal bankruptcies and proposals in British Columbia. His interest in bankruptcy goes back to 1981 when he wrote his MBA theses on bankruptcy prediction. He served on the Canadian Association of Insolvency and Restructuring Professionals (CAIRP) committee that developed the CAIPR website and contributed to the personal bankruptcy training course material that is studied by would-be trustees in bankruptcy. He also operates one of the best resources on the Internet in regards to bankruptcy in Canada; https://bankruptcycanada.com/.
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Canadian Insolvency Guide - Earl Sands
CANADIAN INSOLVENCY GUIDE
COPYRIGHT
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
INTRODUCTION
1. KNOWING YOUR CREDIT RATING
2. TAKING CONTROL OF YOUR DEBT
3. REBUILDING YOUR CREDIT RATING
4. BANKRUPTCY AND PROPOSALS: THE BIG PICTURE
5. A PERSONAL BANKRUPTCY STORY
6. WHAT IS PERSONAL BANKRUPTCY?
ANSWERS TO SOME COMMON QUESTIONS ASKED OF TRUSTEES
7. WHAT ASSETS WILL I BE ALLOWED TO KEEP?
8. PROTECTING YOURSELF BEFORE FILING BANKRUPTCY OR A PROPOSAL
9. WHAT IS A LICENSED INSOLVENCY TRUSTEE?
10. MEETING WITH YOUR LICENSED INSOLVENCY TRUSTEE (LIT)
11. ALL ABOUT DEBT CONSULTANTS AND CREDIT COUNSELLORS
12. WHAT ARE THE DUTIES OF A BANKRUPT?
13. MEETING OF CREDITORS
14. BANKRUPTCY COUNSELLING
15. A PERSONAL PROPOSAL STORY
16. PERSONAL PROPOSALS
APPENDIX: CODE OF ETHICS FOR LICENSED INSOLVENCY TRUSTEES
APPENDIX: INSOLVENCY DICTIONARY
APPENDIX: RESOURCES
Copyright
The Canadian Insolvency Guide
Published by Earl Sands
Copyright © 2017 Earl Sands
ISBN 9781370680665
All Rights Reserved. This publication is protected by copyright, and permission should be obtained from the publisher prior to any prohibited reproduction, storage in a retrieval system, or transmission in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying , recording, or likewise. Permission is granted for limited quotes for the purpose of reviews. For information regarding permission write please email me.
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About the Author
Earl Sands, MBA, CGA, CPA, CIRP, LIT is a Licensed Insolvency Trustee.
He founded his bankruptcy firm in 1990. When he sold his practice in late 2001, his firm had six offices and was handling the largest number of personal bankruptcies and proposals in British Columbia.
His interest in bankruptcy goes back to 1981 when he wrote his MBA theses on bankruptcy prediction.
He served on the Canadian Association of Insolvency and Restructuring Professionals (CAIRP) committee that developed the CAIPR website and contributed to the personal bankruptcy training course material that is studied by would-be trustees in bankruptcy.
He also operates one of the best resources on the Internet in regards to bankruptcy in Canada; https://bankruptcycanada.com/.
Introduction
It was the spring of 1990 and I had just opened my insolvency practice. It was decided that our firm would be a full service insolvency firm; providing services as receivers and managers for secured creditors such as banks and acting as trustees for small business and individuals going into bankruptcy or filing proposals.
There was only one problem! Although I was a full-fledged trustee, trained in all theoretical aspects of insolvency, I had never actually handled a personal bankruptcy or a personal proposal, because all my work had been in commercial insolvencies.
Thankfully, we had hired Doris Bianchi, who never ceased to amaze me with her capacity to know when and how every one of the myriad forms was to be made out and filed.
That was my start on a journey of learning and great job fulfillment. I discovered that my ignorance of practical experience in personal bankruptcy and personal proposals was actually an advantage. Every situation had to be thought out logically and in the process we came up with many innovative ways of helping debtors and creditors.
The most lasting and significant thing I learned was that people filing bankruptcy or a proposal were not trying to beat or scam the system and were not crooks. They were victims of too much debt mostly because of some unexpected tragic event in their lives. Perhaps it was a lost job, an illness, a divorce or a failed business.
Some people also succumbed to human foibles such as students taking on too much debt and then not being able to get a job paying enough to pay off the debt or people gambling or not paying their taxes.
Since I opened my practice in 1990 there have been tremendous changes in the insolvency field. Bankruptcies have more than doubled. More and more credit-counselling firms have opened up for business, fuelled by the debtors’ desires to do almost anything to avoid going bankrupt. Credit grantors, in an attempt to dissuade people from filing bankruptcy, have also joined in with financial support of non-profit
credit counselling companies.
It is no wonder that debtors are confused and often misinformed.
This book’s purpose is to help individuals decide the best way to get control of their debt. We make no moral judgements. We give the straight facts, in plain English, on all aspects of the insolvency industry so that individuals can make the best decision on how to get A Fresh Financial Start
.
1. Knowing your Credit Rating
Debt – The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly
Debt is not bad in of itself. In fact, consumer debt has been one of the great dynamic factors in the Canadian economy. Governments encourage consumers to consume because we need a high level of domestic consumption for both stability and growth.
Canadian household debt as a share of income dipped in the first quarter but remained near record highs, Statistics Canada said on Wednesday June 14, 2017, in a report likely to reinforce concerns that consumers are becoming overextended.
The ratio of debt to disposable income edged down to 166.9 per cent from an adjusted 167.2 per cent in the fourth quarter. That meant Canadians owed $1.67 for every dollar of disposable income.
The Bank of Canada – which warns borrowers that interest rates will one day move up from near record lows — last week said rising consumer debt levels and an unbalanced housing market had raised household vulnerabilities.
Good debt is the kind of debt that helps us lead a better, more rewarding, life sooner than if we had to first save all the money to purchase a particular commodity. Not many of us could afford to buy a house or a car if we could not borrow money to do so. Debt incurred to start a business or to pay for education is also considered to be good
debt.
Bad debt is debt incurred for short-term pleasure, such as a trip, expensive jewellery, or clothes. And ugly debt is debt you cannot pay off quickly. It continues to bear a high rate of interest -- in some cases, up to 21 percent.
Any debt can be an ugly debt if you let it take control of you. For example, a debt incurred for education can turn into an ugly debt if you do not complete your course of studies or you complete your course of studies but cannot earn enough money to service and then pay down the debt. Using your credit card to finance a major purchase such as furniture can also turn into an ugly debt very quickly if you cannot make the payments.
What is a credit rating?
We all know how important it is to have a good credit rating. It enables you to get a credit card, buy a car, buy a home, rent a home, and borrow funds to tide you over in an emergency. In some cases, it can even help you to get a job. But who determines your credit rating and how does it work?
Credit reporting agencies or credit bureaus collect information about consumers' financial affairs and sell that information to their business members, such as credit grantors, employers, and insurance companies. The credit bureaus charge annual fees, as well as a fee for each credit report requested by members.
Credit bureaus get their information from three major sources:
Consumers supply information, primarily from filling out application forms for credit. Credit grantors supply this information to the credit bureaus when they request a credit report on the person.
Public records provide information on such matters as bankruptcies, court judgements, foreclosures, and agreements registered with provincial authorities.
The major credit grantors and collection agencies send their credit files electronically to the credit bureau every month, resulting in files for each consumer that include the account number, outstanding balance, and a nine-point scale indicating whether a payment was made on time or late
In Canada, there are two major credit bureaus. Most national and international creditors, such as banks and department stores, are registered with both. So the chances are good that whatever shows up on the credit report from one bureau will also appear on the other. This makes it simple for you to check your history, as you only have to check one bureau's records.
Credit rating scales
There are a number of different credit rating scales in existence. We’ll look at the two most popular ones; the nine-point rating scale and the FICO Score.
Nine-point credit rating scale
The nine-point credit rating scale is used to indicate whether a payment was made on time or late.
0 Too new to rate; approved but credit has not been used.
1 Pays (or paid) within 30 days of billing; pays account as agreed.
2 Pays (or paid) in more than 30 days but not more than 60 days, or one payment past due.
3 Pays (or paid) in more than 60 days but not more than 90 days, or two payments past due.
4 Pays (or paid) in more than 90 days but not more than 120 days, or three or more payments past due.
5 Account is at least 120 days overdue, but is not yet rated 9.
6 (Code 6 does not exist.).
7 Making regular payments under a consolidation order or similar arrangement.
8 Repossession (indicate if it is a voluntary return of merchandise by the consumer).
9 Bad debt; placed for collection; skip.
FICO® score
The FICO Score was developed by Fair Isaac and Company, the pioneers in credit scoring. It is a snapshot of your credit rating at a particular point in time. Lenders