Zombie Debt
Yesterday there was an
article from an insolvency trustee firm
Hoyes & Michalos about collection agencies, and that they can pursue debts
forever.
Well, yes they can,
but that’s stupid of the agency to do so.
I’ve heard and used the
phrase ‘zombie debt’ over the years – that’s debt that has no purpose walking
around, but does. It’s past the statute
of limitations for legal action, it’s past the statute of limitations for credit
reporting, it’s not something that should survive beyond that because it’s a
judgment, student loan, credit union wage assignment, or something like
that. Really, after 6 years, there’s no
point in calling a consumer – the window of opportunity is closed.
First of all, it’s a waste
of manpower. The odds of someone paying
an account that’s 90 days old are much higher than calling someone on a debt
that’s 12 years old. Collection agents
have to be paid wages, and there is a cost to making collection attempts beyond
that (licensing, insurance, software, lettering, etc).
Secondly, there are no
consequences. A collection agency
usually will offer consumers the opportunity to pay to avoid interest
accumulating, reporting to the credit bureau as a registered item, or even
legal action. But after the window of
opportunity to bring these consequences to bear, the agency is now
toothless. Sure, they could appeal to
the consumer to repay the debt on moral grounds (‘it’s the right thing to do ‘)
or by being annoying (‘these calls will continue until this debt is paid’) but
no one wins there – it’s not going to work for an educated consumer, and it
just brings the reputation of our industry down.
Lastly a consumer that
isn’t going to suffer any consequences can just ask for the calls to stop – an email,
fax, registered letter, or SMS is all it takes to stop an agency collecting zombie
debt in it’s tracks.
Now a few agencies are
bad actors, and they try to scare people into paying old debts – they’ll lie
and threaten legal action, they’ll attempt to reset the debt’s age so they can
report to the credit bureaus, or other unsavory tactics … but fortunately,
those old school agency tactics are dying out.
Of the 178 licensed agencies in Ontario, I would guess there are less than
10 that would do such a thing – but of course, they are using tactics from
20-30 years ago and continue to give our industry a bad reputation.
Every province and
territory has a law governing collection agencies, and every single one says an
agency cannot threaten action they are not legally entitled to take – if you are
a consumer and think your rights are being violated, or you need to make a
complaint, here are some useful provincial links:
Alberta -- Creditors,
collection agencies and debt repayment | Alberta.ca
British Columbia -- Debt
collection - Consumer Protection BC
Ontario -- Stop
collection agency calls | Ontario.ca
Quebec -- Debt
Collection Agencies | Éducaloi (educaloi.qc.ca)
Worth mentioning -- in many provinces, courts were closed or suspended during the pandemic of 2020-2021, so the statute of limitations for legal action may be extended 6-12 months, depending where you live.
Also, worth noting, in the provinces of
Alberta and Manitoba, it is expressly against the collection acts and regulator policies to
call on a debt past the statute of limitations.
As well, if you have a debt on your credit
bureau that’s over six years old (seven if there is a judgment) you can dispute
the debt
Dispute
Equifax Credit Report | Equifax Canada
http://www.transunion.ca/ca/personal/creditdisputes_en.page
This is the twenty
first century – many collection agencies have adapted to the times, and work
with strict compliance guidelines, care about their reputation on social media,
and have an open dialog with the regulators.
It’s time to stamp out the hard pursuit of zombie debt.
While my company is a
collection agency, we’re happy to help consumers fight debts that aren’t legal
or legitimate – if you need advice or help, feel free to reach out to us at Debt Settlement |
Kingston Data & Credit (kingstondc.com)
And if you have questions, are an industry
colleague who want to make things better, or one of the bad actors that want to
yell at me for calling out their bad behaviour, feel free to drop me a line.
Thanks kindly,
Blair DeMarco-Wettlaufer
KINGSTON Data & Credit
Cambridge, Ontario
226-946-1730
blair@receivableaccounts.com
The problem is, the Registrar of the Ministry of Goverment and consumer services doesn't make an example out of these bad actors by issuing monetary penalties. They have the enforcement to do so, they jusy dont act. Many complaints of these zombie debts have been fowarded to the ministry. Including cease and desist correspondence. Your right it does bring the industry down. I believe the Registrar needs to be replaced with less bias
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