Is bankruptcy for me

Consumer Bankruptcy

2009.02.12 21:35 Consumer Bankruptcy

Resources for those interested in bankruptcy, with a primary focus on consumer Chapters 7 and 13.This subreddit is established to discuss bankruptcy in the United States. If you are posting ANYTHING regarding bankruptcy in a country other than the United States, you MUST identify the country about which you are posting. If you are posting from within the USA, please list your [state] in the title of your post. Questions about Canadian Bankruptcy are best directed to /PersonalFinanceCanada/
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2009.02.09 03:42 Personal Finance

Learn about budgeting, saving, getting out of debt, credit, investing, and retirement planning. Join our community, read the PF Wiki, and get on top of your finances!
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2009.10.26 17:13 kahi Legal Advice ~ A place to get simple legal advice*

A place to ask simple legal questions.
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2024.05.14 12:40 Specialist_Bake6514 Vapiano P3: Italian Food Made in Germany

Vapiano P3: Italian Food Made in Germany
The kitchen is on fire. Welcome to the final part of the Vapiano story where the tables are turning. In the first two episodes we followed Mark Korzilius' journey from setbacks to founding Vapiano, a groundbreaking restaurant concept, highlighting its fresh ingredients, dynamic atmosphere, and data-driven operations that drove rapid success. While achieving initial profitability and garnering attention from industry giants like McDonald's, Vapiano's global expansion has led to stellar revenue growth. However, it has also resulted in the emergence of numerous side projects (or distractions), operational challenges, increased costs, significant investments, and a notable accumulation of debt. This underscores the prioritization of top-line growth over profitable growth. We will continue on this thread and see how the story ends, but I would encourage you to read part one and two for better context. Vapiano P1: Italian Food Made in Germany (substack.com). Let's dig in.
Before Going Public
We are now in 2015 and the year is a disaster for Vapiano's PR department. Employee time stamps are being manipulated, endless overtime for employees and high turnover in managerial roles are reported; mice in the kitchen and even rotten food allegedly found.
The company is confronted with allegations of exceeding working hours among trainees in an article published by Welt am Sonntag, while the same outlet accuses Vapiano of manipulating punch times. The auditing firm PwC is commissioned to investigate the allegations and finds that there is no systematic approach but rather misconduct by individual employees, a mistake that’s being corrected. Internal however, investigations into stamp times are carried out regularly now and beyond its obvious reputational impact, this sucks up valuable management time and attention.
In the summer of 2015 CEO, co-founder and investor Gregor Gerlach, who has been running the group since 2011 is stepping down and Jochen Halfmann is taking over. A new Vapiano People Program with an App is being developed with the aim to better interact with customers that will incorporate innovate features such as mobile pay. The German website sees a launch of new magazine to further promote the brand and there is now a full inhouse blogger and Instagram team being installed. In October the company buys seven restaurants from original co-founder, former co-investor and ex-president previously responsible for internation expansion Kent Hahne (2x Bonn, 3x Cologne, 1x Koblenz and one in Cologne that’s under construction). This package of Vapiano restaurants is very successful and generates net sales of more than 20 million euros in 2014. Hahne opened his first Vapiano restaurant in Cologne in August 2006 and in 2015 with his company apeiron AG, Hahne operates six L'Osteria franchise restaurants, a direct Vapiano competitor, and two self-owned restaurants GinYuu.
Then in November of 2015, the next public relations bomb goes off with allegations regarding the company's quality standards. The company immediately investigates the issue through internal and external specialists but finds no evidence of any quality issues. Nevertheless, knowing that the group is now being closely watched, the company’s already in place hygiene standards are being reinforced. Additional audits and inspections are performed nationally. Further, all Vapianos worldwide are being audited twice by the partners SGS Institut Fresenius and SAI Global. Auditing software is purchased to simplify the implementation of the audits and the resulting measures. Apart from the external examinations, there is a food sampling plan in place being performed continuously. Again, all of this sucks up costs, management time and attention. With all these tumultuous developments the company’s growth engine is undeterred. Revenue grows by a whopping 50 million euros to 202 million euros, an increase of 33%. Impressive. While average spent per customer increases in all countries, the number of customers per day in Germany decreases by 3.3% partially due to the negative press towards the end of the year. Five own, four JV and 19 new franchise restaurants are added that year to the group, the total number of own managed restaurants grows to 51, there are 31 JVs and 84 franchises which bringing the total to 166 Vapiano restaurants. Global restaurant sales are now above 400 million euros.
But while revenue grows by an astronomical 50 million euros, operating profits, alarmingly, shrink again. Gross margins are staying perfectly healthy above 75% but operating costs keep growing disproportionately fast. The Company’s outstanding debt jumps by almost 30 million, close to 85 million euros by the end of the year. With operating profits at 9.5 million euros, alarm bells should be going off right now.
In Q4 of 2015, new CEO Jochen Halfmann introduces Strategy 2020. The new strategy includes five essential points. One, profitable growth in the newly defined core markets of Germany and Austria as well as in the UK, Netherlands, France and USA. Two, operational excellence through strict “best practice” management. Three, further development and digitalization of the concept considering guest feedback. Four, greater focus on long-term employee retention and five, building a modern and sustainable IT landscape. Sound’s good on paper but let’s see how things pan out.
Vapiano's investments (capital expenditures) that year are primarily directed towards new restaurant openings, renovations of existing establishments, and share acquisitions in other Vapiano restaurants from franchisees or JV partners. A significant portion of funds is allocated to the digitalization of the guest experience, including the development of a new app scheduled for market release in 2016 and the implementation of a time recording system across all group restaurants. The world's first standalone Vapiano restaurant with a delivery service that year is built in Fürth, Germany. The company keeps expanding its presence in both inner-city locations and international markets, such as Shanghai, China.
To finance all of this, the group has its own operating cash flow which comes in at 18 million while capital expenditures are 26 million euros plus 14 million for acquisitions. The funding gab is filled with 26 million euros of new debt and a seven-million-euro equity raise. At that end of the year and after the equity raise Gregor Gerlach (through his AP Leipzig GmbH & Co. KG entity) holds 30.1%, Hans-Joachim and Gisa Sander through their Exchange Bio GmbH hold 25.5% and the Tchibo heirs, Herz through their Mayfair Beteiligungsfonds II GmbH & Co. KG hold 44,4%.
But for the first time the restaurant’s concept that was so successful to date is being questioned. Some customers are starting to mislike the operational flow of the concept itself. If you want pasta, you must queue for pasta. If you want pizza you stand in a different queue. A small side salad, yet another queue. "You spend more time carrying trays than an actress in Berlin-Mitte. The audience in the pasta limbo can only consist of people who have worked for an insurance company for a long time and, like Stockholm syndrome, they can no longer get away from the industrial canteen feeling," writes TV host Beisenherz provocatively. While overly harsh in his assessment he's not entirely wrong judging by customers venting their frustrations in forums and social media channels. It isn’t uncommon for those who ordered pizza to have already finished eating while there is little movement in the pasta queue. Long term that doesn't go down well, QSRs competitors like L’Osteria are handling this process differently, with much success.
https://preview.redd.it/6cas01oked0d1.png?width=1200&format=png&auto=webp&s=2da6e0b4bc0e07dbee558de412feb414cd598d4a

Tipping Point

Where are now in the year 2016 and things start to deteriorate visibility. Perhaps not for the leman’s eye but any business minded observer can see that there are problems under the hood. Yes, revenue grows yet another whopping 50 million to almost 250 million euros but half of that growth, comes from acquisitions of restaurants that the group didn’t already own 100%, which is now being fully consolidated within the group’s accounts. Here is a concrete example. In the past, Vapiano SE, the group’s top holding company held an indirect 50% stake in a French subgroup via the subsidiary VAP Restaurants SA, based in Luxembourg, and included this as an associated company in the Vapiano SE consolidated financial statements using the equity method. Due to the acquisition of additional shares in September of 2016, Vapiano SE's indirect share in the French subgroup increased to 75%. This means that Vapiano SE takes control of the French subgroup, which is therefore included in the group’s financial statements as part of the full consolidation. The revenue from the acquired subsidiary now recorded in the consolidated income statement amounts to 12.8 million euros. While that’s great for the top line, the loss of the fully consolidated entity equates to 0.2 million euros. Yes, you are buying revenue, but there are losses attached to them, not profits. A similar case is the Swedish entity that runs eight restaurants with revenue of 11.5 million euros but has losses of 235 thousand euros. So much for Strategy 2020 and “profitable” growth.
That year the group’s operating profits are absolutely tanking, halving to 3.5 million euros. Operating profits are now a mere 1,4% of revenue. Remember original founder Mark Korzilius who talked about operating margins of 25% to 28% at the restaurant level? Yes, there are overhead costs for the organization that sits above the chain of restaurants, but operating margins that low indicates a course correction is needed. What’s telling is that in the annual report, in the management discussion section, the company starts talking about EBITDA as a proxy measure of profitability, rather than operating profit or net income. This wasn’t the case in the years before. Is this window dressing for an upcoming IPO? EBITDA is short for earnings before interest, tax, depreciation, and amortization. How can you measure profitability of a restaurant chain that absolutely and unequivocally needs capital investment to maintain its restaurant operations, the very source of cash generation, by simply excluding this maintenance charge (depreciation in the income statement)? Vapiano’s own annual report talks about the fact that existing restaurants must be rejuvenated from time to time and that new interior designs have to be implemented every few years. These things wear and tear, they go out of style, kitchen equipment breaks and needs replacement. This business absolutely needs maintenance capital expenditure, why anyone talks of profits before these maintenance costs is beyond me. Fun fact: in the previous annual report EBITDA is mentioned seven times, mostly around restaurant acquisitions and financing, not however as a profit indication for the group. In the new annual report, EBITDA is mentioned 28 times. Maybe it’s just me but belated Charlie Munger liked to call EBITDA: bullsh*t earnings. When in doubt I stick with Charlie. Interestingly, EBITDA for Vapiano keeps growing while operating and net profits keep falling.
Operating cashflow for the group that year is about 21 million euros, but capital expenditure is 30 million and acquisitions for subsidiaries another 20 million. To finance these expenditures another 28 million euros of debt and 16 million of equity is raised. Net debt rises above 130 million euro. The operating cashflow of the group before any capital expenditures is 21 million euros. I am not sure free cash flow would be significantly positive after maintenance capex is paid out; it’s not broken out so we can’t be sure. Granted, I am not on the ground during this time, and I am not in the board room, I am simply reading what’s in front of me, but to me this is starting to look like a distressed situation. Regardless, the following year the company goes public.

IPO

Where are now in the year 2017 and its Vapiano’s first year as public company. The company’s annual report reads the following “Sales revenue, like-for-like growth (LfL) and the earnings figures EBITDA and adjusted EBITDA are used as the most important financial performance indicators for controlling operational business activities.” The very same report however also says: “The majority of the group's investments regularly go towards opening new restaurant locations and modernizing existing restaurants. The latter are differentiated into regular replacement investments that occur during ongoing operations (Maintenance CAPEX) and fundamental investments in the renovation of a restaurant (Remodeling CAPEX). On average, a restaurant remodeling takes place nine years after opening.” It says it right there in their own report; every nine years a remodeling is taking place. Remodeling and updating is not cost free, so why exclude depreciation charges which reflect capital expenditures? I understand that perhaps you would want to strip out one-off opening costs, that’s fine and fair, but don’t go overboard.
The number of restaurants increases by 26 (previous year: 13) to a total of 205. The increase consists of 27 new openings and one closure. Group revenue grows to an astonishing 325 million euros but here comes the shocker, operating profits turn negative to 25 million. Fine, strip out foreign exchange losses of 3 million, IPO costs of 5.8 million and new opening costs of 6.1 million and you still have 10 million euros of operational losses. All the while the debt load of almost 130 million hasn’t materially changed, so those operating losses are before a six-million-euro interest payment. 184 million euros are raised through the IPO of which 85 million go to the company. This money is earmarked for further expansion as the group has ambitions to almost double the footprint to 330 restaurants by the end of 2020. The company is currently not profitable on an operating basis, and still wants to expand aggressively? I don’t get it. The remaining 100 million euros of the IPO money raised is distributed to co-founder Gregor Gerlach and Wella heirs Hans-Joachim and Gisa Sander. The family office of the former Tchibo owners Günter and Daniela Herz with a 44% stake, don’t sell a single share. After the IPO, 32% of all the company’s shares are now in free float.
One year later, in 2018, things get even worse. Revenue grows to 371 million, but operating losses mount to 85 million euros, that’s before interest expenses of 9 million. Even the beloved EBITDA figure turns negative, meaning the operating business before any expansionary or even maintenance capital expenditures is loss making. All regions are experiencing significant deterioration in their earnings profiles. Like for like sales are down 1% across the board. That’s revenue, not profitability. The question naturally arises: is the Group approaching its natural saturation point here or this operational by nature? The operating cash flow is now 9 million while financing cost are close to 7 million. That leaves 2 million for maintenance capital for 74 own restaurants and 76 joint ventures ones. Describing this as financially tight, would be an understatement.
Things are not looking good at this point. Yet the company still grows restaurants by 26 new sites. 64 million euros are spent on acquisitions, new openings, and maintenance costs, financed through a 20 million-euro equity raise and 72 million of new debt. The Company now has net debt outstanding of over 160 million euros. After the equity raise and by the end of the year 2018, Mayfair owns 47.4%, VAP Leipzig, Gregor Gerlach’s entity owns 18.9% and the Sander couple own 15.5% of the company. Yes, the Sanders and Gerlach may have taken 100 million euros off the table, but they still have substantial skin in the game. Plus, Mayfair hasn’t sold a single share and instead injects more money into the company through the equity round. The stock has now fallen from its IPO price of 23 euros per share to under 6 euros by the end of 2018. Something must be done here. And indeed, there is pivot in strategy and a hard push for change. At last, the management team abandons its aggressive growth plan and curtails new openings significantly. Additionally, the team wants to run a thorough analysis of weak locations to then either discontinue or sell sites. In Europe, the operating focus will be put on corporate restaurants and joint ventures in major cities to ensure the ideal size and location to match the respective demographic target group. Outside of Europe, the franchising business is being expanded and at the same time a consolidation of the existing corporate and joint venture markets is being sought. All future investments will be reviewed to achieve higher rates of returns on new openings. Investments are also being made in the renovation of older restaurants. The goal in the future is to also open smaller formats, like Mini-Vapianos (less than 400 square meters) or Freestander at prominent transportation hubs outside city centers (currently in Fürth and Toulouse) to cater to individual location requirements, and to enter new partnerships. I am not sure why management hasn’t stopped all expansion altogether, bringing the ship in order first, getting profitable, clean up, all hands-on deck before considering any further expansions whatsoever. But again, it’s easy to comment from the sidelines; maybe they saw white spaces that would be covered by competing concepts if they weren’t moving fast and aggressively enough. Although pushing internationally means competing with local players such as Jamie's Italian, Prezzo, Pizza Express, Wagamama, Nando's and many more which brings in its own dynamic.
Management also aims to enhance guest satisfaction. This involves refining operational processes, reorganizing the support center, and refocusing on the core offering: providing fresh and high-quality Italian food at affordable prices for a broad audience. The group also aims to reduce waiting times, especially during lunch, while also improving the evening atmosphere. There is even what I would call an evolution, away from Vapiano’s original concept, reorientating the customer journey. The ordering flow is being changed, offering guests synchronized preparations of all dishes while eliminating wait times at the cooking stations. The open show kitchen remains, staying true to original mantra of freshness and transparency but now guests can choose their preferred method of ordering through a mobile app, using a digital order point (kiosk), or by personally placing an order with a waiter. Guests can still freely choose their table and are then informed about the complete preparation of their order through a pager or their smartphone. This is a substantial deviation from the original concept, but a needed one. The group is also exploring and implementing the expansion of take-away and home delivery services but only at suitable locations, not universally across new openings. I am not sure why home delivery is even a priority here; it adds operational complexity. It’s better to clean up shop first and get back to the basics before adding new complexities. To be fair management does try to simplify. There are 49 different permanent dishes on the menu and additional 10 seasonal ones. Customers can choose from eleven different types of pasta. There is simply too much choice, and it makes orders complicated. The company announced to slim the menu down to its most popular and typical Vapiano dishes. There’s no need for an Asian salad at an Italian restaurant. "We have to go back to the roots, i.e. classic, honest Italian cuisine" says COO Everke. Regardless, in November of 2018, the supervisory board pulls the plug on CEO Jochen Halfmann and replaces him with Cornelius Everke. Everke himself has just become COO five months ago. Since 2017 he was responsible for international expansion. From 2011 to 2017 that role was filled by Mario Bauer – put a pin in that name, he’ll play a key role in the groups fate later. Then nine months later, in the middle of 2019, Cornelius Everke quits. He essentially concludes that his skillset and experience in the areas of internation expansion is no longer needed in the foreseeable future. To put it differently: Vapiano has moved from a growth story and has become a restructuring case, and other skills are required for that job. In June of 2019 Everke says the following “(we’ve) made a bit of a mistake when it came to foreign expansion”. No sh#t. Vapiano postpones the presentation of the 2018 annual financial statements three times in the spring of 2019, citing negotiations over an urgently needed loan of 30 million euros. It’s not until the end of May that a binding loan commitment comes through from the financing banks and major shareholders.
We are now in August of 2019 and the corona pandemic is just around the corner. Supervisory board chief Vanessa Hall takes over as interim-CEO and things are unravelling. Visitor numbers are declining; originally, it was planned to sell the US business but halfway through the year the buyer cannot come up with the money. But not all restaurants are performing poorly. The group's poor figures contrast starkly as an example with the experiences of the Swiss-German franchisee, who runs six restaurants. The Sodano family in Switzerland pays Vapiano a royalty of 6% of sales for the use of the brand. Enrico Sodano explains in an interview that they operate largely autonomously from the licensor. If an “accident” were to occur, he could immediately replace the Vapiano sign with Sodano, he says. The family concluded the rents and contracts with employees and suppliers independently. The Sodano family have six locations in Bern, Basel and Zurich, around one million guests every year and 350 employees. Things are going well on the ground. The delivery service they’ve built is offering them a second income stream. Expansion into Winterthur, St. Gallen and Lucerne are being planned; small locations with 150 to 250 square meters and an attached delivery service. Originally, Vapiano restaurants used to be huge but for such a large restaurant to be profitable, 800 to 1,000 guests per day are needed. That’s possible in medium-sized cities, but not in smaller towns which is why the Vapiano group now also supports smaller formats. Back to our corporate drama. The 2019 annual report would be the last report the group files. By the end 2019 the outstanding debt of the company is at an astronomical 450 million euros. Revenue has grown by another 7%, produced by four net new openings through two JVs and two franchise restaurants but operating losses come in at 317 million euros. That sound like an absolute shocker at first but depreciation and amortization charges are 345 million, so that operating cash flow is actually positive but unfortunately capital expenditures and interest payments are so large that they are eating up all of the company’s operating cash flow. Then in the beginning of 2020 Corona hits with full force and the world shuts down. As a result of the measures to prevent further spreading of the virus, the group is forced to cease all global business operations (except in Sweden). While all these shutdowns are happening, the group is the middle of negotiating with its lending banks and main shareholders. There are additional financing needs for restructuring measures, even without a pandemic happening in the background. The situation is so dire that the company starts pleading to the German government to roll out the package of financial help more quickly. Unfortunately, it’s to no end. The rapid closure of restaurants and the resulting lack of operating cash inflows in conjunction with the additional financing requirements, lead to the company’s final knockout punch. In April of 2020, the Vapiano group officially files for insolvency proceedings. The end of an era.

New Beginnings

Because of the pandemic, the majority of the group's subsidiaries in Austria, the Netherlands, Denmark, the United States, Sweden, and China also file for insolvency or seek liquidation. The US business never gets sold in the end and is wound down. In the summer of 2020, significant group divestments occur, including the sale of 75% shares in the group's French subsidiaries, shares in franchisor companies, Australian subsidiaries, German subsidiaries, associated companies, self-managed restaurants in Germany, and insolvency-related sales in the Netherlands, Great Britain, and Sweden. The buyer of the Vapiano brand and one of these bundles of Vapiano restaurants is company named Love & Food Restaurant Holding, a consortium led by Mario C. Bauer – a name I told you to remember. Bauer was a former Vapiano board member and led the national and international expansion, opening 200 sites in 33 countries from 2011 to 2017 until he was succeeded by Cornelius Everke. Bauer didn’t feel comfortable with the IPO at the time but clearly has a lot of managerial and entrepreneurial talent.
The buyer consortium is an absolute A-Team comprised of European QSR top league hitters, including the founder of the Pret A Manger chain Sinclair Beecham; Henry McGovern, the founder and Ex-CEO of the giant international restaurant and foodservice operator AmRest; the Van der Valk Family that runs hotels and Vapiano restaurants in the Netherlands, and co-founder and ex-CEO Gregor Gerlach. The acquisition value is 15 million euros and entails 30 Vapiano restaurants in Germany, albeit that’s just the purchase price which comes on top of any capital investment needed to refresh and return the sites to its former glory. Nevertheless, just as a thought experiment, if you can get each site to 2 million euros of revenue and 400,000 euros in operating profit on average, which wouldn’t be an overly aggressively assumption given the company’s history, you’ve got yourself a package that can deliver restaurant-level operating profits of 12 million euros or more. It’s not disclosed how much capex was needed to refresh the operations, just that fact that the overall investment plus purchase price was a middle double-digit million-euro figure. Stil, it probably was a decent purchase. The same consortium buys Vapiano’s French business for 25 million euros just two weeks prior. After the transaction concludes, the master franchise is given to Delf Neumann and his Gastro & Soul GmbH. Neumann is an experienced operator, and he is ambitious to revitalise the brand with new services and products. For example, instead of pizza, the restaurants will be serving pinsa - a flatbread made from sourdough, wheat and rice flour, topped similarly to a pizza. It targets a more health-oriented customer base looking for a less calory heavy option. The menu overall is expanded by including a variety of vegan and vegetarian dishes.
https://preview.redd.it/kpt7ea6red0d1.png?width=1242&format=png&auto=webp&s=c9930ced85ee364e9df414547cae06b47a03fc19
Today Neumann’s Gastro & Soul GmbH operates 18 Vapianos on its own account and has 29 franchise sites, amongst other brands. By the year 2021, Vapiano operates 191 restaurants in 34 countries. This is around 50 fewer sites than before the bankruptcy. The number of branches is particularly thinned out in Germany – from 80 to 55. Nevertheless, Vapiano's home country remains by far the largest market, followed by France with 35 restaurants and Austria with 15 locations. “We have shrunk ourselves to health,” says Bauer in the aftermath and there is no further shrinking planned. Quite the opposite, the smell of expansion is in the air again – pun intended. Not as aggressively as before and with a new menu and ordering process.
Overall, the team around Bauer is filled with industry experts with knowledge and networks gained over decades who have a great track record, a long-term view, and the staying power to let Vapiano breath and finds its way back to success. The pressure of being a public company with all the associated quarterly, half-year and yearly disincentives have been removed. The menu is changed and extended with new types of pasta and sauces with significantly more vegetarian and vegan dishes available. Guests can order with restaurant staff, at terminals or on their phones and there are barcodes attached to the tables identify the respective seat. The food is brought to your table, all at the same time if you are in a group, no more annoyances with waiting in line. There is a plan for smaller, 350 square meter locations, with half the number of guests and significantly fewer staff and less set-up costs required to make the economics work. Locations that capitalize on remote work and increased demand for local lunch options, higher population density with shorter delivery routes and therefore cost-effective in house delivery services are targeted. And Bauer is testing the concept of ghost kitchens, which operate without a dining room or service staff, focusing solely on preparing food for delivery services, which for obvious reasons have a very different operational set up and footprint. Original founder Mark Korzilius however is not entirely convinced. He is not a fan of the pinsa for instance and he considers Vapiano's pizza as its cash cow, flagship product and believes that the core Vapiano proposition of Pizza, Pasta, Bar that has given the company its original success is being diluted. He instead admires the competitor L'Osteria, saying they’ve done a better job by focusing on Italian classics, especially the impressively large pizzas that sticks out beyond the plate is leaving every customer in awe. The guys who run L’Osteria are the same guys who have built Vapiano with him in the first place. Bauer on the other hand, like a true business leader, remains undeterred, stating that he is frequently asked whether Vapiano's restart was bold or foolish. He believes in entrepreneurship, franchising, in his experienced fellow partners and importantly the Vapiano concept. By the year 2024 you can find over 140 Vapiano branded restaurant in 27 countries across the globe, including locations far away from its birthplace like Australia, USA, Columbia, Chile, Bahrain, and Saudi Arabia. And why not? Italian food is, and will remain to be, incredibly popular. Vapiano offers fresh and tasty food at affordable prices in a good atmosphere. This combination of attributes should attract a lot of customers. It certainly has in the past.
For more stories: WIP Thomas Weitzendoerfer Substack
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2024.05.14 11:31 Straight_Tiger_9089 Settling 6 Figure Property Damage?

A debt collector is coming after me for a 6 figure debt due to property damage that I caused "allegedly" as found by an Insurance company. I won't dispute it, but will request verification of the debt since it's what you have to do. I have no assets, no degree, no job, no home. Just debt.
I was thinking of bankruptcy to wipe out everything, but would rather see what's the lowest all my creditors would settle for. However, I don't want to end up paying the 1099 Tax on a 6 Figure debt. It's not in collection and never had a trial or judgement, so no court records. The debt along with the damage is real since I was there to witness it.
Before I contact this collector, anyone have experience with settling this much? I believe I read you can ask them not to report a 1099, or is there another legal route? I'm thinking if I'm technically "judgement proof", regardless if they settle or don't, they get nothing and I go bankrupt.
Thanks
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2024.05.14 09:04 FurstWrangler Frontier 1 Gb / Eero 6 Plus

  1. Just had Frontier installed. Did speed tests with tech present and speed to router never got above 950 Mbs. Speed to both devices never exceeded 500 Mbs down/600 up. Devices both support 5/6/6e.
  2. Tech said it's a problem with my devices and left and said they only guarantee 1 Gb over ethernet. 🤨
  3. After he left I called Tech Support / Service and was on hold for 45 minutes. Some very tired lady answered and kept saying... hello? Hello? Sir I can't hear you. Maybe you muted your microphone?
  4. On support chat I told rep that I probably need eero 6e as 6 pro plus was passing traffic at less than half speed. They said eero 6e was only for 2Gb service. They said 6 pro plus is fine bit that problem would rectify itself in 24 hours because of "provisioning".
  5. How do I force this company to give me actual 1 Gb service??? Or maybe they're going back into bankruptcy and just don't care?
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2024.05.14 08:35 turquoiseanswers QMom says people will be rioting with pitchforks soon

My QMom was on the phone with my QDad earlier (on speaker so I heard everything) and she was all eager about how everyone will soon be “erupting with anger” due to the economy. Society will finally have enough of the “secret elites” controlling the world.
My dad’s response was “Nah, everyone around us are a bunch of mindless zombies now.”
Aside from a few conspiracy oriented people he knows, he thinks pretty much everyone else is “asleep and clueless to the real world.”
She’s gotten so obsessed with the economy and housing market. YouTube blasts in our house for several hours a day, and it’s usually the same “expert realtor” guy who walks up and down his street all day showing us the foreclosures and “disasters” in his upscale neighborhood. I looked him up and he’s MAGA too.
My parents are still waiting for “criminal corruption” to be exposed. Everyone you know will be rioting in the street demanding repentance from the evil people who made covid vaccines. I had to get all of mine done secretly. They’re still anticipating everyone dropping dead from it. Every case of cancer is blamed on it. They think spike proteins are shedding in the air so even the unvaccinated aren’t “safe.” My dad says he instead vaccinates himself everyday with probiotics.
My mom also freaked out today because some hospital chain I’ve never heard of filed for bankruptcy. It must be due to the impending collapse of the economy where the US Dollar will no longer exist, and also because “nobody” trusts the medical field anymore.
Shes terrified of being forced to use the new mandatory virtual currency that will be pushed on us “soon.” The masses will love it because everyone will be given an equal allowance from the government every month. There will be no rich or poor, and nobody will have to work anymore, so if you’re not “awake” like my parents you’ll be full of glee.
This wasn’t in their phone call today, but another thing bothering me is that my mom says I’m “over the hill” now because I didn’t get married at 18 and start popping out babies “like nature intended.” I’m still in my twenties, but I’ve already ruined my life because I haven’t fulfilled my duty of populating the earth.
She preaches that we’re meant to marry “the love of our life” as teenagers, but then she also likes to say “we don’t get married in heaven” so nothing we do on earth actually matters anyway.
I don’t know why but I also feel slightly guilty coming on here to talk about all this. I’ve been a regular poster in here for a few years now, and I know it’s a support group so that’s kind of the whole point. I’m guessing it’s because I was raised with the mindset of NEVER discuss anything personal outside of the family, because “it’s important to always keep things behind closed doors.” Therapy is taboo for that reason. My mom especially thinks therapists are out to get you and “load you up on drugs,” even though I’ve explained many times that therapists don’t even prescribe medication. They’re simply there to listen, which is something I don’t get at home.
I think my parents are just scared, and it devastates me how far it’s gone.
submitted by turquoiseanswers to QAnonCasualties [link] [comments]


2024.05.14 06:23 cyanideturtle My father checked his bank app for the first time in 2 years, found out he owes 40k in cc debt. what should we do?

I need some advice on what is the best thing for me to do. My father doesn’t speak good English, and he isn’t well educated on financial matters. Today, he went to restaurant depot to buy something, and his card was declined. When he called Bank of America, they said that he is past his credit limit and can’t spend any more money on this credit card. Tonight, he checked his bank app for the first time in 2 years and saw that he has over 40k in credit card debt in this one account. He said he pays what he owes every month, but never realized that he hasn’t paid off the whole thing because they don’t send the statement in the mail anymore. Overtime, the interest grew to 10k. 10k+30k=40k. Today, he owes 40k. He is heartbroken/angry and doesn’t know what to do. He wants to go to the bank tomorrow to negotiate for them to get rid of the interest amount by saying that he simply didn’t know. Knowing the bank system, I don’t think that would be possible. Should he file for bankruptcy? Or consolidate the debt? What is the best thing to do here to mitigate the debt. If the card didn’t decline today, this could’ve gone on another year :(
submitted by cyanideturtle to personalfinance [link] [comments]


2024.05.14 05:45 Notdennisthepeasant I want to talk about today's episode and I know it's going to lead to an argument.

Episode description: James talks to Mo about the supreme court’s decision not to hear the McKesson case, what it really means for protest, and wise legal strategy for protesters in a year of election and genocide.
Every time I hear an interview talking about this issue the expert says the same thing, which logically should mean that it's far more likely they are right, since they all seem to agree. They say it's not a big deal, and everything is okay, at least for now.
But then they say that the conversation isn't even about whether or not the person is guilty of negligence, but whether or not they can be sued for it in the first place. But that's the whole damn point! I don't care if the person is guilty of it in this case. If they can be sued then we are done here. That's actually what matters. If I can be sued because somebody at a protest that I put my name on the permit for broke a window, then I can never risk getting a permit.
Whether or not the organizer is found guilty is immaterial, as long as he can be found liable. And the fact that it is a civil issue instead of a criminal one is immaterial. Anyone who thinks being financially destroyed for the rest of your life is fine because you're not in jail is absurdly naive. Because you will end up in jail. Because they arrest you for trespassing when you sleep somewhere you shouldn't because you can't afford a house to live in anymore.
And they go on to say that the court isn't necessarily approving of the decision to hear the case, but their refusal to hear the case does result in the case getting heard. For real. Now it's possible for him to get found guilty of negligence because somebody at his protest hit a cop in the head with a rock.
The Democrats using the fat fucking Cheeto man as an excuse to open people up to liability in this way really does end political speech outside of corporations. And hear me out. If you form a corporation and that corporation gets the permission for protest and then gets sued for damage caused during the protest then it can just declare bankruptcy and vanish, but the price of that process is attorneys and accountants fees that put protest in the hands of only the wealthy as a means of speech.
So what I'm saying is, yes this is a big fucking deal, and often the expert who says it's not goes on to then explain why it is without seeming to fucking realize it. And the judge throwing in reference to the case where they decided that a threat doesn't have to be explicit to be counted as a threat as a explanation for their decision shouldn't make anybody feel better. If you are at a protest with a megaphone and you say anything that can be interpreted as threatening, even though you didn't specifically threaten or incite, you now can at the very least be sued into oblivion.
But don't worry, because you can win that case so this isn't a big deal... As long as you can afford to be sued of course. And you have a judge who is into cop, which is pretty fucking rare.
And I know the answer here is to not ever get a permit, but that suggests that saying someone should not get a permit creates liability, since your speech affecting my behavior makes you liable now. So be careful giving that advice I guess.
But maybe protest has always been a useless approach anyway
submitted by Notdennisthepeasant to itcouldhappenhere [link] [comments]


2024.05.14 04:28 bigboieatinspaghetti Please help guys

Please help guys
I didn’t know who to reach out to but this is one of my last resorts. My puppy was diagnosed with parvo today, he is only 4 months old and trying to pay for his care in my financial situation will put me in near complete bankruptcy. I don’t really like asking for charity but this little guy matters the most to me. Please and thanks to all. (Link in comments)
submitted by bigboieatinspaghetti to labrador [link] [comments]


2024.05.14 03:48 dreamsandpizza Would appreciate your thoughts

I have had people telling me to go bankrupt for about half a year now and have been looking into it. I work multiple jobs but was practically unemployed for a year or so before I got my current position and stupidly put my expenses that I couldn't afford (flights for funerals, a moving van to move across the country, rent, etc.) on my credit cards thinking I would land something eventually. I have a phd and came really close to getting some super high-paying jobs (a couple final rounds for 100k+ positions) but infuriatingly just couldn't land anything. Until I got a couple low-paying jobs (a teaching position, a retail position) and just worked my ass off to pay the bills.
Per a lot of people's advice I ended up ceasing my credit card payments a month ago so I am going on month 2 being late. My plan was to meet with a bankruptcy attorney a couple weeks ago and get my bearing on next steps. I had to postpone my meeting because my cousin passed away so I went to her funeral, and then finally discussed with an attorney when I returned.
The thing is, I was also interviewing for a new position during this time and FINALLY, after like three years, got an offer for a decent industry position. It doesn't pay a ton of money, and not enough to cover my monthly credit card debts, but enough to give me a little more work-life balance and still have a studio apartment and afford my food. Obviously I accepted it.
Because it is in a new state, the bankruptcy attorney that I met with told me to wait to file until I am in my new state. He said my salary will still be under the median average income in my new state, which means I will be eligible for chapter 7, but he said I need to establish residency for 3 months before I can file there. He told me to stop paying my credit cards, to not take on any side gigs, and to just meet with an attorney there when I am close to reaching 3 months in my new apartment.
The thought of not paying my credit cards for half a year before I file is really making me nervous. Is it really okay? I am getting so many phone calls all the time after just a month and know they will only get more aggressive, especially once I default and it goes into collections. I am also really nervous about them calling my friends, family and employers. The thought of my new bosses getting a ton of calls all of a sudden about my credit card debt is making me feel pretty uncomfortable, and my parents are really struggling with the thought of me going bankrupt, so I am going to have to deal with their anxiety, as well.
Would it be worth it to try to pay my minimum balance like one more time just to keep things from snowballing out of control? Should I tell my employers about my situation? Is there anything else I should be aware of or thinking about as I make this move and try to figure everything out?
I am also getting emails from a couple credit card companies saying that I can enroll in some sort 'financial difficulty' program, but I am not sure if I should pursue this route if I am planning on going bankrupt anyway, as it feels dishonest.
I don't know, I'm a little bit of a mess and would just appreciate any thoughts or advice that you might be able to offer. Thanks so much y'all.
submitted by dreamsandpizza to Bankruptcy [link] [comments]


2024.05.14 03:23 Normal_Post_7014 Personal experiences filing bankruptcy or consumer proposal?

Context: I’m 24, currently unemployed for the past two months (actively searching for work and working with job developers), no assets and have close to 65k in debt but 25k is OSAP which I’m not worried about because they’re on pause and have no interest
Of the remaining 40k, 30k is from my student line of credit that just recently got converted into a loan. The rest credit card debt (8.7k) from three different cards, one is 6.6k the two are about 1k each
The vast majority of my debt is from funding myself through school. I worked and received OSAP but still needed the line of credit since those weren’t enough for rent and groceries.
My credit score was always excellent up until two years ago where the credit card debt started building. My cat got very sick and long story short i maxed out my 7k credit card on him (worth it, he’s healthy and happy now) and that’s where all the cc debt comes from. I’ve always made my monthly payments that are over $300 on that one cc alone but it all just goes to interest so the principal hasn’t come down much, same with all my other debts
I pay roughly $750 towards debts a month. I just can’t afford that + rent + groceries + other essentials like bus pass, phone bill and medications etc. I quit my low paying job because of an extremely toxic environment and never thought it would take me months to find literally any min wage job especially since I have a degree + leadership experience on my resume.
I’ve only made it this far without working because of what I got back from my tax refund but I have literally no more money left to pay all my debts and am considering filing for bankruptcy (I have an appointment with an LIT to seek professional advice)
submitted by Normal_Post_7014 to povertyfinancecanada [link] [comments]


2024.05.14 03:03 Tmill233 Should I file?

I’m 30 years old with married with 2 kids. My wife is a stay at home mom so I’m the only bread winner. I currently make around $90k in the Dallas Fort Worth area. I currently have $19k in consolidation loans, $37k in credit card debt which is currently being managed by American Credit Counseling. I also have around $44k in student loan debt, all of which is through the government. The way things are sitting now, I am able to make all my payments, my wife an I have done a lot better with our budget since enrolling with American Credit Counseling, but we are one emergency away from having it run off the tracks. We own both of our cars out right, both cars are worth less than $6k each. We just resigned the lease to our house for 18 months. Part of me wants to just keep paying off the debts, especially since they have all been re-negotiated and have extremely low interest rates, a few are even at 0%. It will take around 63 months to pay off all of our consumer debts, but that leaving no cushion. The other part of me just wants to file bankruptcy, learn from my past mistakes and start over fresh. It would be nice to finally start saving for retirement, and have some savings for things like car troubles. I’ve been afraid to post this question because I’m honestly ashamed at how bad the debt became.
Edit: I forgot to add I’ve spoken to an attorney,they said I qualify based on my income and debt and they made bankruptcy sound amazing, almost to amazing.
submitted by Tmill233 to Bankruptcy [link] [comments]


2024.05.14 02:41 Nfmuevelo Potentially filling for CH 7

29(m) with about 14k in debt. Seasonal worker (pesticide technician). Made alot of bad mistakes in my 20s. Credit sucks. Have been starting to invest and been reading up alot on everything then all of a sudden, i get hit with a 9.5k collection that can not be paid even if i wanted to. I've been stressing alot, I'm smart enough to know the credit is already shot again. As I'm fixing everything of course. I spoke with a Bankruptcy attorney and he told me paying him $1.8k to rid of my 14k is probably my best bet. My dad is against it saying it'll run my CR and housing/car prospects for years. The attorney also made it seem like if i choose him it's basically guaranteed to be approved.
My question is, should I do this? Is it hard to be approved? Will it ruin me?
submitted by Nfmuevelo to Bankruptcy [link] [comments]


2024.05.14 02:36 NIGbreezy50 My thoughts on how Elon is running the company

Seeing all the Supercharger drama compelled me to make this post:
The year is 2009. Tesla is running short on money. The company has delivered its first 200 roadsters to buyers far later than anticipated. All delivered roadsters are recalled for safety issues. Just a few months before, Elon had laid off 20% of the company, presumably to cut costs. Elon had to wire his last 3 million dollars to the company with no guarantee of return because the company would otherwise not have been able to make payroll. To a lot of people, this was proof that the arrogant dot com millionaire would soon realise that he was ill equipped to run a hardware company.
In March 2009, Tesla engineer Peng Zhou leaks information relating to the company's finances to the press. When Elon found out, he fired Zhou and made him apologize to the company. Elon would then send documents to the rest of the employees compelling them to inform him if they had ever leaked information to the press with the promise that they would not receive consequences. Elon wanted to run a company in which important information was not being kept from any employees, but constant leaks would be a betrayal of that trust. To a lot of outside observers, Elon was an egomaniac obsessed with secrecy, whose witch hunt would create a negative atmosphere in the company that discouraged productivity, and Tesla would have been better off with a more stable and rational CEO. He was being "known more for feuds and firings" than building cars.
In the same month, Tesla unveiled a hurriedly built Model S prototype. Hurried, because Tesla was on death watch. Tesla had a significant backlog on roadster orders. The company was bleeding money. So to a lot of analysts, Tesla would never be able to deliver on an even more technologically challenging vehicle. The Model S was described as "absolute vapourware" - the type that was common in the software industry that Elon was coming from, but Tesla and Elon had the "gall" to take deposits on this imaginary vehicle. And even if they succeeded, Tesla would also never lead the EV revolution because they made toys for rich people. Fisker was a better candidate.
One more anecdote from another Elon company: In 2018, Elon was not happy with the progress being made by the Starlink team. 3 years after announcement, the starlink satellites that had been developed were too complicated and too expensive. Instead of reassessing with his team like a "stable" and "rational" CEO would have, Elon jumped straight to step 2 of his "algorithm" and deleted the executives outright. He and a group of trusted engineer would take on the former executives roles and do it themselves.
So, how did those decisions work out for Elon and his companies?
  1. Tesla delivered on all the roadster orders, unlike what experts and armchair executives thought
  2. Tesla did not go bankrupt, unlike what experts and armchair executives thought
  3. The leaks stopped, and productivity did not decrease due to the negativity, unlike what experts and armchair executives thought
  4. The Model S was released and delivered, and became the foundation the electric vehicle revolution was built on, unlike what experts and armchair executives thought. Fisker is preparing for bankruptcy.
  5. The executives fired by Elon moved on to Bezos' project Kuiper, where they are yet to launch anything significant. Meanwhile, Starlink is a mega constellation, has 2 million users, and made $6bn in revenue.
A more "stable" CEO would never have been able to take an automotive startup and make it the most valuable car company in the world, with over 1T in market cap at ATH. With a more stable CEO, electric vehicles would have been dead on delivery and Tesla would never have become synonymous with electric vehicles to the average person like they are today. I don't pay attention to any of the drama that happens day to day, like what's currently happening with the Supercharger team lately because that is how Elon has always run his companies, and I know that the drama is a part of the process. I will be voting to reinstate his pay package.
submitted by NIGbreezy50 to TSLA [link] [comments]


2024.05.14 02:30 NIGbreezy50 My thoughts on how Elon is running Tesla

Seeing all the Supercharger drama compelled me to make this post:
The year is 2009. Tesla is running short on money. The company has delivered its first 200 roadsters to buyers far later than anticipated. All delivered roadsters are recalled for safety issues. Just a few months before, Elon had laid off 20% of the company, presumably to cut costs. Elon had to wire his last 3 million dollars to the company with no guarantee of return because the company would otherwise not have been able to make payroll. To a lot of people, this was proof that the arrogant dot com millionaire would soon realise that he was ill equipped to run a hardware company.
In March 2009, Tesla engineer Peng Zhou leaks information relating to the company's finances to the press. When Elon found out, he fired Zhou and made him apologize to the company. Elon would then send documents to the rest of the employees compelling them to inform him if they had ever leaked information to the press with the promise that they would not receive consequences. Elon wanted to run a company in which important information was not being kept from any employees, but constant leaks would be a betrayal of that trust. To a lot of outside observers, Elon was an egomaniac obsessed with secrecy, whose witch hunt would create a negative atmosphere in the company that discouraged productivity, and Tesla would have been better off with a more stable and rational CEO. He was being "known more for feuds and firings" than building cars.
In the same month, Tesla unveiled a hurriedly built Model S prototype. Hurried, because Tesla was on death watch. Tesla had a significant backlog on roadster orders. The company was bleeding money. So to a lot of analysts, Tesla would never be able to deliver on an even more technologically challenging vehicle. The Model S was described as "absolute vapourware" - the type that was common in the software industry that Elon was coming from, but Tesla and Elon had the "gall" to take deposits on this imaginary vehicle. And even if they succeeded, Tesla would also never lead the EV revolution because they made toys for rich people. Fisker was a better candidate.
One more anecdote from another Elon company: In 2018, Elon was not happy with the progress being made by the Starlink team. 3 years after announcement, the starlink satellites that had been developed were too complicated and too expensive. Instead of reassessing with his team like a "stable" and "rational" CEO would have, Elon jumped straight to step 2 of his "algorithm" and deleted the executives outright. He and a group of trusted engineer would take on the former executives roles and do it themselves.
So, how did those decisions work out for Elon and his companies?
  1. Tesla delivered on all the roadster orders, unlike what experts and armchair executives thought
  2. Tesla did not go bankrupt, unlike what experts and armchair executives thought
  3. The leaks stopped, and productivity did not decrease due to the negativity, unlike what experts and armchair executives thought
  4. The Model S was released and delivered, and became the foundation the electric vehicle revolution was built on, unlike what experts and armchair executives thought. Fisker is preparing for bankruptcy.
  5. The executives fired by Elon moved on to Bezos' project Kuiper, where they are yet to launch anything significant. Meanwhile, Starlink is a mega constellation, has 2 million users, and made $6bn in revenue.
A more "stable" CEO would never have been able to take an automotive startup and make it the most valuable car company in the world, with over 1T in market cap at ATH. With a more stable CEO, electric vehicles would have been dead on delivery and Tesla would never have become synonymous with electric vehicles to the average person like they are today. I don't pay attention to any of the drama that happens day to day, like what's currently happening with the Supercharger team lately because that is how Elon has always run his companies, and I know that the drama is simply a part of the process.
submitted by NIGbreezy50 to electricvehicles [link] [comments]


2024.05.14 02:18 NIGbreezy50 My thoughts on how Elon is running Tesla

Seeing all the Supercharger drama compelled me to make this post:
The year is 2009. Tesla is running short on money. The company has delivered its first 200 roadsters to buyers far later than anticipated. All delivered roadsters are recalled for safety issues. Just a few months before, Elon had laid off 20% of the company, presumably to cut costs. Elon had to wire his last 3 million dollars to the company with no guarantee of return because the company would otherwise not have been able to make payroll. To a lot of people, this was proof that the arrogant dot com millionaire would soon realise that he was ill equipped to run a hardware company.
In March 2009, Tesla engineer Peng Zhou leaks information relating to the company's finances to the press. When Elon found out, he fired Zhou and made him apologize to the company. Elon would then send documents to the rest of the employees compelling them to inform him if they had ever leaked information to the press with the promise that they would not receive consequences. Elon wanted to run a company in which important information was not being kept from any employees, but constant leaks would be a betrayal of that trust. To a lot of outside observers, Elon was an egomaniac obsessed with secrecy, whose witch hunt would create a negative atmosphere in the company that discouraged productivity, and Tesla would have been better off with a more stable and rational CEO. He was being "known more for feuds and firings" than building cars.
In the same month, Tesla unveiled a hurriedly built Model S prototype. Hurried, because Tesla was on death watch. Tesla had a significant backlog on roadster orders. The company was bleeding money. So to a lot of analysts, Tesla would never be able to deliver on an even more technologically challenging vehicle. The Model S was described as "absolute vapourware" - the type that was common in the software industry that Elon was coming from, but Tesla and Elon had the "gall" to take deposits on this imaginary vehicle. And even if they succeeded, Tesla would also never lead the EV revolution because they made toys for rich people. Fisker was a better candidate.
One more anecdote from another Elon company: In 2018, Elon was not happy with the progress being made by the Starlink team. 3 years after announcement, the starlink satellites that had been developed were too complicated and too expensive. Instead of reassessing with his team like a "stable" and "rational" CEO would have, Elon jumped straight to step 2 of his "algorithm" and deleted the executives outright. He and a group of trusted engineer would take on the former executives roles and do it themselves.
So, how did those decisions work out for Elon and his companies?
  1. Tesla delivered on all the roadster orders, unlike what experts and armchair executives thought
  2. Tesla did not go bankrupt, unlike what experts and armchair executives thought
  3. The leaks stopped, and productivity did not decrease due to the negativity, unlike what experts and armchair executives thought
  4. The Model S was released and delivered, and became the foundation the electric vehicle revolution was built on, unlike what experts and armchair executives thought. Fisker is preparing for bankruptcy.
  5. The executives fired by Elon moved on to Bezos' project Kuiper, where they are yet to launch anything significant. Meanwhile, Starlink is a mega constellation, has 2 million users, and made $6bn in revenue.
A more "stable" CEO would never have been able to take an automotive startup and make it the most valuable car company in the world, with over 1T in market cap at ATH. With a more stable CEO, electric vehicles would have been dead on delivery and Tesla would never have become synonymous with electric vehicles to the average person like they are today. I don't pay attention to any of the drama that happens day to day, like what's currently happening with the Supercharger team lately because that is how Elon has always run his companies, and I know that the drama is a part of the process. I will be voting to reinstate his pay package.
submitted by NIGbreezy50 to teslainvestorsclub [link] [comments]


2024.05.14 02:15 simbaela Attorney’s family is milking it

I work for a small family-owned law office that specializes in estate planning, probates, bankruptcy & trust administration. The entire staff consists of the attorney, his wife, his son, and myself.
I was hired as a legal assistant but since I’ve completed my paralegal certificate program, I have recently been assigned a significantly heavier workload. I am still responsible for the administrative tasks of scheduling, client correspondence & menial paper-pushing tasks.
I am now also responsible for the entirety of the chap 7 bankruptcy process as well as the entirety of the trust admin process from the intake phone call to drafting the final letter. I am also still responsible for preparing the estate planning documents for signing.
My boss’s wife does absolutely nothing. Her title is “office manager” and she is responsible for billing (which she only works on 2x/month). Otherwise, she finds random tasks to do like cleaning out the fridge and putting sticky notes on random crap. His son also does nothing. He is supposed to prepare the deeds & PCORs (only in the estate planning aspect of our office as I do this for trust admin/probate cases).
We are so far behind because my boss is very popular & does not like telling clients “no.” But the son’s tab of work is also significantly far behind & today the attorney asked me, “why are they so far behind?” I just stared at him blankly because I was shocked that he was surprised to find that they accomplish nothing.
How do I address this and with whom? With them? With my boss? It is affecting our workflow and the attorney should truly be the only one thats backlogged. I could do everything the son does in one or two days tops. When I’ve offered to help him, he was very defensive and said he needed to complete them for “job security.”
I really like them as people. I just dont like when the wife tries to power trip and tell me I’m not working hard enough or whatever else she has to say. I used a lot of my sick time already because I had my wisdom teeth out & kept getting sick afterwards. I only have meetings to discuss my work ethic on days after I’ve used my sick time
I truly think they just need 4 people on payroll in case of another pandemic and foregiveable PPP loan….. (before they started there was 1 lady doing the work or all 3 of us and I genuinely think that’s all it should be)
submitted by simbaela to paralegal [link] [comments]


2024.05.14 02:07 x0xMidamix0x Previous employer swerving giving reference, against the reference clause of my severance?

Hello,
I was laid off in September. I’ve been unable to get any interviews except one in all of that time. Thankfully, it seems they want to hire me. However, the offer is pending them talking to my last job. They have been contacted multiple times and set up times to speak, but haven’t actually answered the calls.
As a part of my lay off, I had a “you can’t talk shit about me” reference clause put into my severance agreement as a response to their “you can’t talk shit about us” clause. It was essentially stating that they would give a non-negative reference if contacted for one. Them not giving this reference could cost me this offer. Do I have any legal grounds here to enforce the severance letter? What would damages even be, if I wanted to sue for breach of contract? I’m approximately a month away from eviction/bankruptcy so I’m desperate.
This is also the second or third? time they’ve violated the severance, including cutting off my insurance two months early and not giving me access to Cobra and also telling the state I was fired for misconduct instead of the truth that I was laid off, almost stopping me from being able to collect unemployment (another clause in the severance was that they would not take actions to stop me from getting unemployment but they sort of tried). So clearly they think they’re covered in some way.
NJ, in case it’s relevant.
submitted by x0xMidamix0x to legaladvice [link] [comments]


2024.05.14 02:04 Sea-Pea3480 How big of a cultural impact do you think Scandoval really had? Of course it is large now

But do you think it will be something that will carry on?
For some reason. I have been thinking about this a lot recently. I feel like Vanderpump Rules is always going to be a part of my life. When I am 60 years old, I will get a news alert about Lala claiming bankruptcy, and will say-wow. Then my kid ask "who is that again?"
I also see Vanderpump Rules still being viewed by younger people in the future. It will be sort of on par to me watching 90210 as 20 year old, it was old, but funny, but still good. I actually never did this, but friends of mine did.
I could see young girls wearing black SUR dresses as halloween costumes "ironically"
I could also see it just going in the same bin as Jersey Shore or the Real World, but idk i lean towards the former... it feels a lot different than those shows.
submitted by Sea-Pea3480 to vanderpumprules [link] [comments]


2024.05.14 01:13 Accomplished_Bet_560 Should I declare bankruptcy or seek debt relief with a debt of roughly 120K?

Hi Bankruptcy,
I currently live in California, and I was wondering what would be my best option between declaring bankruptcy and debt relief.
In summary, I have been scammed by Sochi, a masseuse school (I am only including it so you can be aware of their fraudulent behaviour). They created a fake high school diploma for me in order to reap the rewards of having access to a government loan, which cost me roughly 16K.
Additionally, I have also been in a car accident a few years ago. I am not certain of the nature of the accident, as in, I am not certain if it was officially declared criminal. In short, the other vehicle swerved purposefully in our lane and front ended us, and I was not the driver, so I definitely was not considered at fault. However, the accident caused me to be hospitalized for a total of 6 to 8 months. I was insured at the time, but due to the Californian law protecting the hospital from disclosing what can and cannot be covered by my insurance, I ended up with a bill totalling over 100K.
And finally, I have three small debts of roughly 3K total with different banks. Tl;dr: I wasn't able to pay them back because I was in the hospital.
Overall, I am thus looking at a crippling debt of 120K give or take.
Here is where I really need advice:
1) My current plans involve moving to another country to make a life with my partner. 2) If I get married to my partner, would my debt impact them as well, even though it would be in another country? And if so, how would it impact them? 3) Due to wanting to be there sooner rather than later, I have about a year and a half to clear my current debt situation. 4) I currently do not own a house or a car, and I have no dependants. 5) My credit score is currently completed ruined.
I am leaning strongly towards the bankruptcy route due to not owning any valuable assets, so my main questions specifically tied to bankruptcy are:
6) What kind of chapter would I have to sign for? 7) Does anyone know a good lawyer they could recommend in the Los Angeles county? 8) How much would it realistically cost me in court / lawyer fees? 9) How long does the process take, i.e. could it be resolved within a year's time?
I am still open to the idea of taking the debt relief option, but none of my current plans require for me to have credit. I am nowhere near having a down payment for a house, so I don't plan on acquiring a mortgage in the coming decade, and I could technically buy a used car with cash.
Thank you in advance for the help, I'm currently at a loss as to what should be my next step in this.
submitted by Accomplished_Bet_560 to Bankruptcy [link] [comments]


2024.05.13 22:30 plantsarecoolchris Real?

Real? submitted by plantsarecoolchris to blockfi [link] [comments]


2024.05.13 21:54 Affectionate_Ease978 Needing some encouragement

So needing some words of encouragement. I've just experienced a 3-month long manic episode, and in that time I was scammed online twice to the tune of $26k and purchased a $75k car without having a job. Don't ask me how the bank approved it without me having a steady income but my really beautiful credit history has now gone to poop in a handbasket and dropped -142. Bankruptcy is the only option I see and I'm in the process of my appeal for my SSDI case after the judge denied it. I'm going to try and seek hospitalization this upcoming week. But if anyone could try to just help me stay positive I'd appreciate it. I know I'm going to survive but eating this elephant one bite at a time is not to my tastebuds. Thanks for your help.
submitted by Affectionate_Ease978 to bipolar [link] [comments]


2024.05.13 21:48 Numerous-Cobbler-689 I spent some time over on WattsMurders yesterday and WOW….

What a bunch of SW worshipping nutcases! I used a different account because I knew I would be ripped to shreds for simply stating facts and my opinions on some things. Not ONE person was able to intelligently counter anything I said or provide facts to prove me wrong. It was all personal attacks, that I was a stalker, delusional, obsessive and - best of all - pissed that CW doesn’t want to fuck me. I mean WHAT?? What the hell is going on there?? They literally argue with PROVABLE facts, like SW never filed bankruptcy and she made all the money and on and on….The comments I made were legitimately in good faith (at first!) and while I was expecting a lot of kickback I also thought that a few people might intelligently engage me but nope! I don’t understand having this reverence for someone none of them even knew, to the point of extreme rudeness and name calling. Anyway, mostly just venting but I’d love to hear anyone else’s experience over there!
submitted by Numerous-Cobbler-689 to WattsFree4All [link] [comments]


2024.05.13 21:32 WndrLst_CrmeBrule I’ve been staying afloat on my bills, but got sick. This month I’ll be late on all my bills. I’m sinking and can’t pull out miracles to pay my bills anymore. I have zero savings now and all credit cards are maxed out. I haven’t been able to work for 8 days. So I’ll be behind due to a small check.

Im 50 years old. My debt is growing. I’m now late on all my credit cards and bills. I have zero money. Credit cards are maxed over $20,000, bank accounts are zero and I have no incoming money until I start hustling again. I am not the same person as I was. I’ve been sick for a while, but this time around I just can’t multitask physically or mentally like before. I am self employed. I didn’t work for 8 days due to illness. I’m usually able to pull myself together and make some money to make ends meet. But this time, my body just would not let me this time. I’m falling behind in debt. I can’t shuffle money and credit to get through this month this time. It even came to the point of taking out advance payday loans to pay my car payment and rent. I’m now struggling to pay my priority bills.
I have options. I looked into 3.
I can call all my credit cards and ask for a financial hardship program. I did call some and they offered a lower interest rate. They offered a lower monthly payment and closure of my cards. If all of them do this, I might be able to cover the monthly for each card. I won’t have anymore active credit cards and will live off of cash. I believe my credit score will sink.
I also called a non profit debt management. Green Path Financial Wellness. They will call all my credit cards too. They will negotiate a low interest rate and lower payment. They gave me an estimate. It looks like I’ll pay them $600 a month payment and they will pay each card for me. I will also pay a one time $85 fee and $28 a month for their service. My cards will be closed and it will take 2-3 years to pay off. If I can work hard I think this is doable.
Other option chapter 7 bankruptcy. All CC debt gone. Clean slate. But 10 years BK on record.
Any advice on what to do? Best option. If anyone did the financial hardship programs on their own or used Green Path Financial Wellness debt management please share your experience. Or filed bankruptcy.
submitted by WndrLst_CrmeBrule to povertyfinance [link] [comments]


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