GLASGOW, SCOTLAND, April 30, 2013 (Press-News.org) The proposed changes, which are to be brought before Scottish Parliament later this year, are part of the drive to reform bankruptcy laws partially due to creditor complaints about how little money is being received by them compared to the insolvency practitioners that administer the trust deeds and sequestrations.
Normally, under the terms of a Trust Deed the client makes a monthly payment to an insolvency practitioner, who deducts their fees and then distributes any funds remaining to creditors as part of the Trust Deed agreement. These fees are agreed at the start of the trust deed process and are based on an hourly rate. The insolvency practitioner must work to the agreed number of hours in order to claim in full. However, if additional work needs to be done beyond what was originally agreed there is scope for the fees to increase. Once the agreed period of the trust deed has elapsed and the debtor has made all the required payments the rest of the debt is formally written off. In many instances this has been up to 70% of the debt.
The new proposals will change all of this. Insolvency Practitioner's will be expected to agree a single initial fee for setting up a trust deed, with their ongoing administration fees covered by a percentage of funds recovered on behalf of the creditors. Any additional work that incurs extra fees will have to be approved by creditors or by the Accountant in Bankruptcy. This will ensure creditors will receive the maximum possible amount of the money they are owed.
However the changes to the fee structure are not the only ones that could insolvency practitioners losing out.
Couples will be able to have joint Protected Trust Deeds, which is in contrast to the current rules which force each individual to have their own, despite their finances being part of a joint pot. This will result in the reduction of the fees charged overall by up to half and allow a couple to manage their financial affairs on an equitable joint basis.
In addition, social security payments will be prevented from being part of the allowable sources of income for a protected trust deed. This is currently the case with bankruptcy awards and the same rule will now apply to protected trust deeds.
A spokesperson for Trust Deeds Company, Scottishtrustdeed.co.uk said: "The changes that the Accountant in Bankruptcy is proposing will ensure that creditors get more money than they would do under the current regulations, however it could be at the expense of the insolvency practitioners that are administering the debtors' case.
"While the new rules will make creditors very happy because they will get a much larger dividend than before, there may very well come a time when it is at the expense of the insolvency practitioners, who will end up out of pocket as a result."
Scottish Trust Deed provide help and advice on the Scottish Trust Deed debt solution. With a Trust Deed you can write off up to 90% of your debt and be completely debt free in 36 months. Our experienced advisors are only a phone call away to help you with your debt problems.
Website: www.scottishtrustdeed.co.uk
Fees to Drop for Insolvency Options, Says Debt Solutions Company www.scottishtrustdeed.co.uk
Protected Trust Deeds are to undergo an overhaul aimed at reducing the fees charged by insolvency practitioners, says Debt Solutions Company Scottish Trust Deeds.
2013-04-30
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Times Fiber Expands Cable Portfolio with PowerOptX Hybrid Cables for Fast, Simple Connectivity of Remote Radio Heads
2013-04-30
Times Fiber Communications, a business unit of Amphenol, today announced PowerOptX hybrid cables that combine optical and power connectivity in a single cable. Available in standard and custom configurations with high performance to support 4G wireless protocols, PowerOptX cables are significantly lighter than designs using corrugated metal shielding, allowing easier installation and less tower loading.
PowerOptX cables enable cell tower operators to lower costs while ensuring the performance needed for next-generation wireless. While standard configurations offer three ...
Researchers develop new metric to measure destructive potential of hurricanes
2013-04-29
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — Researchers at Florida State University have developed a new metric to measure seasonal Atlantic tropical cyclone activity that focuses on the size of storms in addition to the duration and intensity, a measure that may prove important when considering a hurricane's potential for death and destruction.
Just ask the survivors of Hurricane Sandy.
The 2012 hurricane was only a Category 2 storm on the often referenced Saffir-Simpson scale when it became the largest hurricane on record, killing 285 people in its path in seven different countries and becoming ...
Dark field imaging of rattle-type silica nanorattles coated gold nanoparticles in vitro and in vivo
2013-04-29
In recent years, metal nanoparticles have showed great application prospect in the field of biological imaging, cancer diagnosis and treatment due to its unique optical scattering and optical absorption properties. In many metal materials, gold nanoparticles have caused concerns in the field because of its simple preparation, easy to modify advantages. However, the poor stability in physiological fluids environment and the potential toxicity of gold nanoparticles always restricts its application in the biological field.
TANG Fangqiong and her group from Laboratory of ...
Treatment by naturopathic doctors shows reduction in cardiovascular risk factors
2013-04-29
Counselling and treatment with naturopathic care as well as enhanced usual care reduced the prevalence of metabolic syndrome, a risk factor for heart disease, by 17% over a year for participants in a randomized controlled trial published in CMAJ.
Researchers enrolled 246 members of the Canadian Union of Postal Workers at 3 study sites (Toronto, Vancouver and Edmonton) for a year-long clinical trial to determine whether naturopathic lifestyle counselling helped to reduce the risk of cardiovascular disease. Of the total sample, 207 people completed the study. The control ...
Leadership emerges spontaneously during games
2013-04-29
Video game and augmented-reality game players can spontaneously build virtual teams and leadership structures without special tools or guidance, according to researchers.
Players in a game that mixed real and online worlds organized and operated in teams that resembled a military organization with only rudimentary online tools available and almost no military background, said Tamara Peyton, doctoral student in information sciences and technology, Penn State.
"The fact that they formed teams and interacted as well as they did may mean that game designers should resist ...
Growing new arteries, bypassing blocked ones
2013-04-29
New Haven, Conn. – Scientific collaborators from Yale School of Medicine and University College London (UCL) have uncovered the molecular pathway by which new arteries may form after heart attacks, strokes and other acute illnesses bypassing arteries that are blocked. Their study appears in the April 29 issue of Developmental Cell.
Arteries form in utero and during development, but can also form in adults when organs become deprived of oxygen — for example, after a heart attack. The organs release a molecular signal called VEGF. Working with mice, the Yale-UCL team ...
Fertilizers provide mixed benefits to soil in 50-year Kansas study
2013-04-29
Fertilizing with inorganic nitrogen and phosphorus definitely improves crop yields, but does it also improve the soil?
The latest study to tackle this question has yielded mixed results. While 50 years of inorganic fertilization did increase soil organic carbon stocks in a long-term experiment in western Kansas, the practice seemingly failed to enhance soil aggregate stability—a key indicator of soil structural quality that helps dictate how water moves through soil and soil's resistance to erosion.
The results of the research, which was carried out in continuous corn ...
Rear seat design -- a priority for children's safety in cars
2013-04-29
2013 — A research report released today from The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP) provides specific recommendations for optimizing the rear seat of passenger vehicles to better protect its most common occupants — children and adolescents. By bringing technologies already protecting front seat passengers to the rear seat and modifying the geometry of the rear seat to better fit this age group, the US could achieve important reductions in serious injury and death. Motor vehicle crashes remain the leading cause of death for children older than 4 years and resulted ...
Scientists reach the ultimate goal -- controlling chirality in carbon nanotubes
2013-04-29
An ultimate goal in the field of carbon nanotube research is to synthesise single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWNTs) with controlled chiralities. Twenty years after the discovery of SWNTs, scientists from Aalto University in Finland, A.M. Prokhorov General Physics Institute RAS in Russia and the Center for Electron Nanoscopy of Technical University of Denmark (DTU) have managed to control chirality in carbon nanotubes during their chemical vapor deposition synthesis.
Carbon nanotube structure is defined by a pair of integers known as chiral indices (n,m), in other words, ...
Postcode inequality for cancer diagnosis 'costs lives'
2013-04-29
Hundreds of women with breast cancer living in England's most deprived areas would have better survival rates if they were diagnosed at the same stage as those who lived in affluent areas.
A new study led by the University of Leicester, working with colleagues from Public Health England and the University of Cambridge, investigated how much of a difference late-stage diagnosis had on women from deprived areas.
The team calculated how many deaths would be postponed beyond 5 years from diagnosis if as many women in the more deprived areas were diagnosed at an earlier ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Discovery: The great whale pee funnel
Team of computer engineers develops AI tool to make genetic research more comprehensive
Are volcanoes behind the oxygen we breathe?
The two faces of liquid water
The Biodiversity Data Journal launches its own data portal on GBIF
Do firefighters face a higher brain cancer risk associated with gene mutations caused by chemical exposure?
Less than half of parents think they have accurate information about bird flu
Common approaches for assessing business impact on biodiversity are powerful, but often insufficient for strategy design
Can a joke make science more trustworthy?
Hiring strategies
Growing consumption of the American eel may lead to it being critically endangered like its European counterpart
KIST develops high-performance sensor based on two-dimensional semiconductor
New study links sleep debt and night shifts to increased infection risk among nurses
Megalodon’s body size and form uncover why certain aquatic vertebrates can achieve gigantism
A longer, sleeker super predator: Megalodon’s true form
Walking, moving more may lower risk of cardiovascular death for women with cancer history
Intracortical neural interfaces: Advancing technologies for freely moving animals
Post-LLM era: New horizons for AI with knowledge, collaboration, and co-evolution
“Sloshing” from celestial collisions solves mystery of how galactic clusters stay hot
Children poisoned by the synthetic opioid, fentanyl, has risen in the U.S. – eight years of national data shows
USC researchers observe mice may have a form of first aid
VUMC to develop AI technology for therapeutic antibody discovery
Unlocking the hidden proteome: The role of coding circular RNA in cancer
Advancing lung cancer treatment: Understanding the differences between LUAD and LUSC
Study reveals widening heart disease disparities in the US
The role of ubiquitination in cancer stem cell regulation
New insights into LSD1: a key regulator in disease pathogenesis
Vanderbilt lung transplant establishes new record
Revolutionizing cancer treatment: targeting EZH2 for a new era of precision medicine
Metasurface technology offers a compact way to generate multiphoton entanglement
[Press-News.org] Fees to Drop for Insolvency Options, Says Debt Solutions Company www.scottishtrustdeed.co.ukProtected Trust Deeds are to undergo an overhaul aimed at reducing the fees charged by insolvency practitioners, says Debt Solutions Company Scottish Trust Deeds.