Vancouver Sun

Insolvenci­es climbing in Prince George

To avoid financial trouble, show restraint, be realistic and plan ahead

- MARK NIELSON Prince George Citizen

The number of people in serious financial trouble in Prince George is on the rise.

Insolvency trustee Leah Drewcock from the Office of the Superinten­dent of Bankruptcy says 96 consumer insolvenci­es were registered by city residents during the first three months of the year, a 23-per-cent jump from last year.

“Pretty significan­t,” said Drewcock, who is based in this city and works for MNP, one of Canada’s largest consumer insolvency firms.

She pinned the cause down to people getting lured by low interest rates into carrying debt for things such as trucks, ATVs and snowmobile­s, only to get caught in the resource downturn. Drewcock said those who worked in the oil and gas industry in northeast B.C. and Alberta were hit particular­ly hard.

“They’re suddenly without what was a very high income,” she said. “They first go through their emergency savings and then they may use credit to pay for household costs while they’re looking for work or maybe they’ve got work and haven’t found equivalent income.”

What can a person do to avoid the debt trap? Drewcock said it usually comes down to spending less, making more or selling something. And if that doesn’t work, “you may be forced to give something up.”

To avoid that situation, “communicat­e with creditors,” Drewcock advised. “Let them know what’s going on. Is there a way before you miss a payment to renegotiat­e your payment terms, your interest rate, the length of your loan, for example.”

Drewcock also suggests drawing up a budget, meeting it and revisiting it during life changes.

“Look at your income, your cost of living, your needs and your wants,” Drewcock said. “Nobody likes to do this and it’s probably the most important thing you can do.”

Putting away three to six months of required expenses into a savings account to act as a cushion is also a good idea, she said.

Drewcock steps in when it looks like the person can’t pay the debt and is unsuccessf­ul in negotiatin­g with creditors.

“Sometimes the individual is completely insolvent and bankruptcy is the right choice,” she said. “But I’d say 50 per cent of insolvenci­es now are consumer proposals, which are a negotiated settlement with a pool of creditors so everybody’s treated equally, everybody gets the same deal.”

Drewcock said she started to detected an upswing about a year ago when the volume of calls to her office began to rise.

“I have been seeing a slow increase, month by month by month, and these last two have been two of my busiest and I don’t see it slowing down anytime soon,” she said.

According to Equifax, the average consumer debt in B.C. was $23,177 during the first quarter of this year, down a slight 3.1 per cent from the same period last year.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada