Our President, Francisco, has explained
[translated by google " The Community, through various boards, two procedures agreed to prosecute defaulters. Those who live in Spain are in the hands of a lawyer who gets the relevant allegations in the courts of Estepona which is where it belongs the municipality of Manilva. Residents in the UK we are claiming their debts through a company that is dedicated to these purposes called "Kettlewel". The big problem that we encounter is the slow procedures." ]
Francisco invites me to take up the AEA the points about the status of debts and I am inclined to see if i can help.
a) the communications to debtors need follow the following criteria :-0
i) timely - we should ensure they are chased as soon as they are overdue
ii) collection effective - overdue debtors need to be clear that they will incur interest charges and costs and that ultimately the community will proceed to county court judgements (in the case of UK owners)
iii) incremental - starting with a prompt gentle reminder and turning up the notched.
iv) cost effective - where a debtor clearly cannot pay and where we are limited to two years backlog - it makes no sense to allow debts of five years or more to accumulate with interests and costs (which is what has happened) which are unlikely to be collected.
Where a debt is not collectable we fool ourselves to add collection costs and interest to the debt - when we know if it highly likely that the debt is irrecoverable. As this point the community profit and loss (income and expenditure) accounts need to report a costs to the community such debt collection activity.
I will ask AEA if they have a written, staged, collection process for community debts. If not why not and can I help them write one?
I will also ask to see copies of their template debt chasing communications sent by the administration to overdue owners - i.e. what chasing is done and when prior to handover to the collection agent. I may be able to help improve the english version. And it's useful toknow if there are phone calls made - these can be more effective for some instances.
Finally we should have an effective process to urge all new buyers (and existing owners too) to enter into direct debit payment arrangement for community fees (or failing that then at least a standing order).
It would be comforting to have more visibility over what action has been taken against each debt. If there is a standard process (e.g. friendly reminder, second warning, threat of legal action from AEA, with collection agent, CCJ awarded etc.) then each debt can be simply be graded against the stage of action.
Will keep you posted.
regards,
Paul