After 28 years building a successful travel agency, 72-year-old John Williams said he had been destroyed by the pandemic.“We’ve scrimped and saved and got ourselves into a comfortable position, only to be slashed by this,” Mr Williams told the Saturday Herald Sun.Mr Williams, who runs a Helloworld travel agency and global destination wedding business, said he faced being forced to close the family businesses by March.Before the pandemic he had projected a 12 per cent increase in operations, but has earned no income since last March.And because of uncertainty around the reopening of international borders he has projected a disastrous 2021.“We’ve been forced to sell up things we’ve worked hard for for 28 years. Superannuation is gone. Banks won’t lend us any more money,” he said.“We’re at an age now where we should be retired but we can’t.“All our retirement savings are gone, all our assets are gone. If it was something that was our fault, that we could be blamed for, then fine. But this is something that has been imposed upon us.”Small Business Australia is pushing for federal legislative changes to protect small business owners from legal bankruptcy due to losing their business due to the COVID response.Mr Lang said it was too easy for creditors to bankrupt struggling businesses, making it hard for them to get back on their feet.He said recent insolvency law reforms didn’t go far enough and excluded 68 per cent of businesses.
“Through no fault of their own, business owners are being put out of business,” he said.“They may well have lost everything, and now they’re going to be prevented from getting going again in some way.“They have the skills and the mindset to be able to operate businesses; they were operating good businesses as of March of 2020, but they’re going to be severely restricted from doing that.“Most Australians I think will find it quite unfair what’s happening; we’re not all in it together. “And there’s got to be some things that can be done around this.”At a state level Mr Lang has called for a pro-rated commercial rent solution to keep small businesses afloat.Insolvency expert Andrew Spring, from Jirsch Sutherland Insolvency Solutions, said while $300bn of government support had kept businesses going, that support had run out.The decline in insolvencies, due to that support, was now expected to be reversed.He expected to see many businesses feeling the pinch and unable to invest in expansion and become unprofitable.Mr Spring said it was vital businesses proactively engaged with stakeholders and creditors if they were facing financial distress.A tipping point is expected to come when JobKeeper ends in March.
shannon.deery@news.com.au
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