I’ve been in touch and advising a constituent in Hadleigh South regarding his debtor relationship with Babergh & Ipswich District Councils. Today we have a four person meeting in Corks Lane with the Recovery Officers to see if we can move the issues forward.
Basically my “client” had two rental properties in Hadleigh & Ipswich which were repossessed by the building societies. This is acknowledged but it has proved very difficult to get the right paper work from the building societies, who are dragging their feet for reasons one cannot imagine. For my “client” any outstanding taxes up to the re-possession are the responsibility of the Official Receiver (for bankruptcy). After the repossession the responsibility for the taxes lies with the Building Societies.Meanwhile the Councils have my “client” as the person responsible for the taxes due to a lack of the proper papers in the proper places. My client insists that he has provided all papers necessary but has unfortunately not brought his files. Nevertheless it is accepted that responsibility for the taxes has moved from him to the other entities and the officers provide my “client” with a definitive list of what is acceptable and from my client’s view what is available.Overall, from my point of view a successful forty minutes. The officers fully understand the position and can do their own checking. The client has a definite promise that if his papers are in order then he can be exited from the discussions. In the meantime all recovery operations (court appearances, bailiffs etc., are suspended). The client regards the day as successful because we can both see light at the end of the tunnel and he can be free of concerns in this area.
Money Matters
Hidden Millions Wednesday 20th July 2011
We have a Members’ Briefing at Babergh to be apprised of ways forward with regard to the integration and the budget issues. We are invited to ask questions and my question on the budget was as follows (btw it is long preamble followed by a short question):
Ten years ago our predecessors faced with a ignificant deficit in the pension fund decided to commence paying down that deficit by £1miilion a year.
This decision was very high minded and made in happier times of higher interest rates, a pensions fund friendly tax regime and a central government that believed in otherwise benign financial policies.
Since April 2000 we have paid down £10 million and as at the 31st March this year the deficit stood at £12,557,000.
More interesting is the way the deficit has fluctuated.
Had this been a closed end situation we would have expected the deficit to reduce on an annual basis by £1million a year. But is hasn’t. Over the past five years the deficit has ranged from a high of £31,469,000 to a low £6,242,000. The biggest change being in 2010 when the asset appreciation was £11 million. So our annual contributions can be and are dwarfed by the proper and skilful employment of the pension fund assets.
So where am I going with all this? After ten years we should review our pensions deficit funding policy.
We should look at the optionality of that £1million a year and if we can stop it we should.
We should then immediately transfer £500,000 of that money to our revenue reserves so that if we need to pull this money back because the deficit goes substantially against us then we can use it – and in the meantime we keep it in the sock under our bed ready for a rainy day – of
which more are promised.
The remaining £500,000 we should use to plug our current operating deficit – which means preserving services and the jobs associated with our front line. Already we are seeing services and standards disappearing before our eyes – cash payments downstairs for example – the removal of abandoned cars for instance and so on. We have a distinct opportunity to review our options and focus upon the current needs of our residents.
So my question and I hope our question is this: As the officers and Councillors on the SFP have said that nothing should be regarded as too sacred to touch, can we look at the pensions deficit pay down plan and if we can put that money to better use?
…I think the simple answer is “Yes”.
Well, it was not as easy as I expected but I did get my “yes”.
One Councillor thought I was advocating cutting pensions for the lower paid employees. – so it let me go back to him after the meeting and everyone else who might not have been hearing me properly along the following lines:
“Your comments at today’s meeting indicate that I had not expressed myself properly or else that I was mumbling (both possibly true).
It has never been (and hopefully will never be) part of my proposals to reduce the pensions or other income of the lower paid employees. My family had the smell of the workhouse in its nostrils and whilst society has progressed over the years, the safety nets are not always in the right place”.
The only other written comment I received was that I must have big feet if I thought I could salt away £500,000 in my sock!
Bailiff Problems (4) Monday 16th May 2011
A very early start and on the road by seven. I arrive at my debtor’s house as she is getting the children ready for school.
I am booted and suited and settle down to wait for the bailiff. Whilst waiting I read through my notes on the bailiff’s powers. After a while the father arrives and we discuss desired outcomes and how we might get there. After some time the bailiff arrives. We meet him at the gate, introduce ourselves and explain how the day should end, so that we are all satisfied. After very good natured discussion we let him into the house and he conducts an assessment of the prospects for recovery through the seizure and sale of goods.
He concludes that there is no prospect of recovering the debt through seizure and sale and will report to Babergh accordingly. There will be no charges for the debtor. We discuss ways forward for the other debts owed and his advice and conclusions agree with our own.
The debtor’s next steps are to talk to the Benefits Officer at Babergh and to the Citizens’ Advice Bureau as to personal bankruptcy.
Overall a satisfactory morning and the outcomes achieved recognise the need to give moral and practical support to the more vulnerable members of our community.
Bailiff Problems (2) Saturday May 14th 2011
I visit the debtor family. It is a tale of woe for the past couple of years. He is a docker at Felixstowe and has seen a steady reduction in his take home pay as continuous overtime, incentives and bonuses have been cut. Their oldest son has begun to attend the sixth form college and so they have lost his related child allowance. The debt history includes having a house repossessed and sold at auction for a fraction of what it might have been worth had it been spruced up and properly marketed.
But, we are not able to re-write the past – unless you are Alistair Campbell.
The husband is not present as he finds it difficult to cope with the stress. The mother is holding it together but only just.
Additionally they have just received a summons for non payment of the current year’s Council Tax. I stay for an hour asking questions and taking notes. I promise to e-mail the Council and try and get the procedures unrolled until we can get in front of the Council’s Benefits Officer and find out whether they are getting all the benefits and discounts to which they are entitled.
I also promise to come back on Monday morning properly suited up* to deal with the bailiff. My friend agrees to accompany me.
My recommendation is that the daughter makes an appointment with the Citizens Advice Bureau to see how they can be relieved of their debt and my prognosis is that they go bankrupt. They have no credit standing at the moment so it makes no difference to them. As we discuss this and that I learn about other outstanding debts and it gets quite horrifying how families could find themselves liable for the equivalent of a
year’s income with no prospect of ever seeing daylight.
* My role model here is Kid Shelleen (Lee Marvin) n Cat Ballou (check out http://www.tigersweat.com/movies/ballou/). S understands the need for uniforms and when necessary transforms himself and ons his gun fighter outfit to do battle on behalf of Catherine Ballou