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Canadian Consumer Proposals, Division I Proposals. - Avoiding Bankruptcy.This PowerPoint Presentation outlines the steps involved in a Consumer Proposal.
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A proposal allows you to avoid bankruptcy, while paying off only a portion of your debts. |
Under the Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act, a trustee files a Proposal or an arrangement between you and your creditors to have you pay off only a portion of your debts, extend the time you have to pay off the debt, or provide some combination of both. To be acceptable, your creditors must be better off under a Proposal than if you go bankrupt.
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Consumer Proposals |
Division I Proposals |
Who proposal is available to |
Debtors owing only consumer debt amounting to less than $250,000, excluding a mortgage on the principal residence. |
Debtors who have personal or business debt. There is no dollar limit on the amount of debt. |
Stay of proceedings |
Proposal stays all legal actions undertaken or contemplated by unsecured creditors. |
Proposal stays all legal actions undertaken or contemplated by unsecured creditors. |
Term |
Cannot be for a term of more than five years. |
Can be for any term that makes economic sense. |
No. of counselling sessions required |
Two |
None |
Period for acceptance of proposal by creditors |
Deemed to be accepted after 45 days if creditors do not dissent or call for a creditors' meeting. |
Creditors vote at a creditors' meeting held in 21 days. |
Period for court approval of proposal (after acceptance by creditors) |
Deemed to be approved after 15 days following creditor acceptance if there is no request to take the proposal to court for approval. |
The trustee applies for court approval expeditiously, usually within three weeks. |
Creditors' meeting |
Held if requested within 45 days of the filing. |
Held approximately three weeks after the proposal is filed . |
How proposal is accepted or rejected |
It is either deemed to be accepted after 45 days (see above) or if creditors ask for a meeting, it is accepted by a simple majority of the dollars voted. |
At least 66.67 percent (2/3) in dollars and 50% plus one in number of eligible creditors who vote must approve. |
What happens if proposal is not accepted or approved? |
Debtor cannot make another consumer proposal. Note that the debtor is not automatically bankrupt if the consumer proposal is not accepted. Stay of proceedings is lifted. |
Debtor is immediately bankrupt effective on the date of the creditors meeting. |
Proposals must provide a better result to creditors than a bankruptcy. Otherwise, there is no reason for creditors to vote in favour of the Proposal. Note, however, that a "better" result can stem from a quicker distribution, lower costs of administration and a certain outcome of issues that may otherwise be contentious. Proposals are particularly useful in the following situations:
The 7 Steps in a Bankruptcy
PowerPoint Presentation
The 5 Steps in a Consumer Proposal
PowerPoint Presentation
Find a Bankruptcy Trustee in Your Area
Bankruptcy & Proposal Application Form
Take this to your 1st. meeting with the trustee
Income & Expense Statement
Send to trustee each month
Bankruptcy Exemptions
Assets you keep in a Bankruptcy
Consumer Proposals
Avoiding Bankruptcy
Bankruptcy FAQs
Credit Bureaus & Bankruptcy
After Bankruptcy Lenders: