Mercury (Hobart)

Young family’s Hotondo heartache

- KENJI SATO

“Having it all collapse at the end … it’s really, really dishearten­ing”

A DESOLATE Hotondo Homes constructi­on site now stands where one couple once dreamt of building a family home to raise their two young toddlers.

Roxy and Lachlan Goss lost their block of land and their entire life savings after sinking $260,000 into Hotondo Homes New Town before the company went bust.

Lachlan, 29, is now working two jobs in order to support the family after having everything taken from them.

“It’s depressing. I’m just trying to stay strong for my family. I’m the rock, so I’ve got to be as strong as possible for them,” Mr Goss said.

“Mentally it’s tough. It’s tough because we’ve sacrificed so much and put a lot

into this project, and to lose it all is damaging.”

Roxy, 27, said she met Hobart director Craig Ellis, who said they could have their dream home at Granton up and built by June 2021.

However, Roxy said those plans kept on being delayed again and again, while Mr Ellis kept on asking for more and more money upfront.

“We paid $10,000, then he asked for another $10,000, and then more, and it came to the point where we sold our block in Lenah Valley and paid him $216,000, but still nothing happened,” she said.

“Once he got this money we did not see him again, as he was in Noosa with his other business.”

Roxy is still dealing with the fallout while studying a Masters of Teaching and

looking after three-year-old Ry and 15-month-old Nya.

Had the house been built according to schedule, Nya would have been born into a new family home.

Roxy said this had taken a significan­t toll on the family emotionall­y, and that she was still at her wits’ end trying to find answers for what to do next.

“Having it all collapse at the end and having no answers, it’s really, really dishearten­ing,” she said.

“This was supposed to be something really special for our family.”

Another young mother, who wishes to remain anonymous, said she too had lost her life savings to Hotondo Homes. She is living with inlaws after being asked to put her entire $15,000 savings

into a deposit two weeks before Christmas by a Hotondo Homes salesperso­n.

Shortly afterwards she heard rumours that Hotondo Homes Hobart was due for imminent closure, so she made an inquiry into the local branch.

“I said ‘I’ve heard this rumour, is this true?’ and they told me not to fret. I haven’t heard anything from them since. Their phone is disconnect­ed,” the woman said.

She and her partner now have an empty plot of land and virtually no money left to raise their two-month-old baby.

Another distraught customer, Peter, who did not wish to have his last name published, sank more than $30,000 into his Hotondo Homes deposit.

Peter said he had spent the past few weeks demanding answers from the local and national Hotondo Homes branches, but to no avail.

He said they were “elusive” to begin with, offering only vague answers to his inquiries, but now they were ignoring his inquiries altogether.

“I’m sending daily emails to them and they’re not answering. They’ve basically washed their hands, saying it’s a franchise and nothing to do with us,” Peter said.

“While they might not have a legal obligation, surely they’ve got a moral obligation to support those clients.”

The Mercury has repeatedly reached out to Craig Ellis, but received no answer.

The Mercury contacted Jarvis Archer, the liquidator, for comment.

 ?? Picture: Chris Kidd ?? Roxy and Lachlan Goss with their children Nya, 15 months, and Ry, 3, at their unfinished home at Granton.
Picture: Chris Kidd Roxy and Lachlan Goss with their children Nya, 15 months, and Ry, 3, at their unfinished home at Granton.

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