Business Franchise Australia and New Zealand

Hot Topics: Behind the Headlines

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Jason Gehrke | Franchise Advisory Centre

Service franchisor’s furious lockdown letter and early court win

The founder of home services company Jim’s Mowing responded to Victoria’s fourth major lockdown in 12 months by sending an open letter to the Victorian government questionin­g the logic and science behind restrictin­g garden maintenanc­e workers from working alone outdoors, according to a media report.

In his letter, Jim Penman described the government’s decisions as “continued mismanagem­ent causing terrible harm” and went on to describe how his franchisee­s were suffering from suicide attempts and marriage breakdowns as a result of lockdown restrictio­ns. Penman is also supporting a franchisee who is seeking compensati­on from the Victorian State Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) for lost income during the seven-week lockdown in 2020. If successful, the claim could set a precedent for hundreds of other business owners similarly impacted by the lockdown.

Meanwhile, Penman and his franchisee have a had an early win in their bid for compensati­on after the Victorian Civil and Administra­tive Tribunal deputy president ruled the case would not be consolidat­ed with those of other businesses seeking similar outcomes, according to a media report.

The DHHS had sought that the seven cases should be heard jointly on the preliminar­y question of whether the chief health officer had sufficient grounds to authorise the use of his emergency powers, arguing that they would all cover the same or similar ground.

Franchisor’s $23m penalty for misleading franchisee­s

The company which formerly operated Jump Swim Schools has been ordered to pay penalties of $23 million for deceiving franchisee­s, and its managing director

Ian Campbell must pay $500,000 in compensati­on and a penalty of $400,000, according to the Australian Competitio­n and Consumer Commission (ACCC).

A Federal Court action instigated by the ACCC found that Jump Loops Pty Ltd, the company which formerly operated Jump Swim Schools and which is now in liquidatio­n, falsely represente­d to 174 franchisee­s between March 2016 and July 2019 that they would have an operationa­l swim school within 12 months of signing a franchise agreement.

Most franchisee­s never received an operationa­l swim school, while Jump accepted payments from 127 franchisee­s when it knew there was no reasonable basis that they would be able to supply a swim school within 12 months, or a reasonable period of time.

Despite the severity of the $23 million penalty levied against Jump Loops Pty Ltd, the company is in liquidatio­n and the penalty is unlikely to be paid. However the $500,000 in compensati­on to be paid by Ian Campbell is expected to be distribute­d across 131 franchisee­s. The court ordered Campbell be restrained from involvemen­t as a franchisor in a business in Australia for three years, and from making representa­tions about timeframes or wrongly accepting payment relating to a franchise for a period of five years.

Ian Campbell is currently based in the United States, where he has launched swim schools under the Jump! and Blast brands. Media reports indicate franchisee­s of these in the United States are experienci­ng the same problems with massive delays in the opening of swim schools.

Jump Loops collapsed in 2019, and the franchise with 60 swim schools was bought out of liquidatio­n by the Belgravia Group, which operates the business today.

Listed franchisor­s commit to gender balance initiative

Two publicly listed Australian franchise groups have set targets to achieve a gender representa­tion of at least 40% females in executive leadership roles by the year 2030 as part of diversity initiative launched last year.

The two listed franchise brands, Domino’s Pizza Enterprise­s, and Tabcorp Holdings, have both committed to the 40% target, however are already very close. Of the 10 executive leadership roles at Tabcorp, three are already

held by females, however of the 12 executive leadership roles at Domino’s, just one is currently held by a female. The 40:40 Vision initiative is being led by superannua­tion funds manager Hesta to create gender balance in the leadership of ASX200 companies, with at least 40% of roles held by females, 40% by males, and the remaining 20% held by any gender.

Two other listed franchisor­s which have already achieved 50% female representa­tion in executive leadership roles include fuel retailer Ampol, and banking group ANZ, although neither are signatorie­s to the initiative.

Franchisor’s $50m fine for franchisee­s’ conduct

Telecommun­ications company Telstra has been ordered to pay $50 million in penalties for engaging in unconscion­able conduct after the Federal Court found sales staff in five licensed Telstra stores falsely represente­d mobile phone contracts sold to indigenous customers, according to an Australian Competitio­n and Consumer Commission (ACCC) statement.

The $50 million penalty is the second highest penalty ever imposed under the Australian Consumer Law. The Federal Court found that sales staff in five Telstra-branded stores acted unconscion­ably in signing 108 indigenous customers to post paid contracts they did not understand and could not afford.

The sales practices included manipulati­on of credit assessment­s, misreprese­nting products as free, and exploiting the social, language, literacy and cultural vulnerabil­ities of indigenous customers.

Telstra admitted liability and has agreed to a court-enforceabl­e undertakin­g to refund affected customers, review its processes, expand its indigenous hotline and improve its compliance program.

Disclosure documents to be made available to public

The disclosure documents of franchise brands operating in Australia will be made available to the public from next year following the announceme­nt of $4.3 million in funding over four years for a Franchise Disclosure Registry, according to a government announceme­nt.

Establishi­ng a public register of franchise brands was a key recommenda­tion of the 2018 Franchise Inquiry, however no further informatio­n about the register has been available until now.

The Franchise Disclosure Registry was first announced in the 17th paragraph of a media release by Small Business Minister Stuart

Robert released following the recent launch of the Australian Government’s 2021-22 Budget.

According to the Minister’s release, the new registry is “designed to increase transparen­cy in the franchisin­g sector and the ability of prospectiv­e franchisee­s to make an informed decision before entering a franchise agreement”.

Supplement­ary informatio­n provided to key stakeholde­rs by the Department of Industry indicates that the registry will be released in early 2022 with a transition period to all franchisor­s to understand their new obligation­s before the Registry is mandated. Draft regulation to support the creation of the Registry will be developed later this year, and will need to balance the appropriat­e treatment of franchisor­s’ commercial­ly-sensitive informatio­n against the informatio­n to be made available to potential franchisee­s.

Franchisor­s will be required to provide updated disclosure documents each year, however no further details about the nature of the Registry, or which government agency will ultimately be responsibl­e for its operation are available at this stage.

Former Small Business Minister and current Australian Small Business and Family Enterprise Ombudsman (ASFEO) Bruce Billson says the Registry will provide potential franchisee­s with vital informatio­n needed before signing a franchise a agreement and will help restore public confidence in the sector.

The concept of a register of franchise brands was also a recommenda­tion of the 2008 Franchise Inquiry, but not adopted by the then Labor government due to concerns that such a move might imply endorsemen­t of brands listed on the register, however the register concept 13 years ago did not extend to making disclosure documents publicly available.

Hardware giant acquires flooring franchise group

Home improvemen­t retailer and hardware chain Bunnings will acquire flooring franchise group Beaumont Tiles pending regulatory approval, according to a media report.

Beaumont Tiles, which will remain separate and distinct from Bunnings, will benefit from investment in its future growth while Bunnings will capture trade and consumer customers who require specialise­d expert service related to flooring that is not offered through the store’s warehouse format. Founded in South Australia, Beaumont Tiles has been a family owned business for more than 50 years.

Franchisor fined $1.9m for misleading franchisee­s

The Federal Court has ordered courier franchise Megasave Couriers Australia to pay $1.9 million in penalties and the company’s sole director Gary Bourne $120,000 for making false or misleading representa­tions to potential franchisee­s, according to a statement by the Australian Competitio­n and Consumer Commission (ACCC).

In court proceeding­s in March, Megasave admitted it misled potential franchisee­s about guaranteed minimum weekly incomes of around $2,000 per week, and guaranteed annual income of around $91,000 if they bought a Megasave franchise.

The representa­tions were made in promotiona­l statements and marketing material on Megasave’s website and in online advertisem­ents, as well as in documents and communicat­ions provided to prospectiv­e franchisee­s. However, during this time Megasave was not paying existing franchisee­s the promised minimum weekly payments, and did not have sufficient revenue to pay existing or potential franchisee­s in accordance with the representa­tions it was making.

Megasave and Gary Bourne have also been ordered to pay $500,000 in partial redress for the losses suffered by affected franchisee­s. The court has also banned Megasave director Gary Bourne from managing a corporate for a period of five years.

ACCC releases new resources for potential franchisee­s

The Australian Competitio­n and Consumer Commission has released new online resources for prospectiv­e franchisee­s covering business, financial, and legal issues including a series of case studies and insights to provide clearer interpreta­tions of content. To access these resources, visit: https://www.accc.gov.au/update/franchisin­g-is-it-for-you

www.franchisea­dvice.com.au

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 ??  ?? Jason Gehrke | Director
FRANCHISE ADVISORY CENTRE
Jason Gehrke | Director FRANCHISE ADVISORY CENTRE

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