When your total debts (excluding the mortgage on your principal residence) exceeds $250,000 you will not be eligible to file a Consumer Proposal. However, you would be able to file a Division I Proposal. Just like a Consumer Proposal, you will be making a formal offer to creditors to settle your unsecured debt.
Upon filing a Division I Proposal, your Licensed Insolvency Trustee will call a First Meeting of Creditors (FMC) within 21 days. At that meeting, the creditors will have a chance to ask the debtor questions and consider the terms of the proposal. The creditors will then vote on the proposal. The creditors who are owed the most will exercise greater influence when deciding whether your proposal is accepted or rejected. For every $1 of unsecured debt you owe them, creditors receive one vote.
The creditors can accept, reject or adjourn the meeting to further consider the proposal or request an amended proposal.
If the Division I Proposal is accepted, the Trustee will book a Court date and notify all stakeholders that the creditors are in agreement. The Trustee will then seek a Court Order to confirm the Proposal. In a Consumer Proposal, no Court attendance is required.
If the Division I Proposal is rejected by the Creditors, then there is an automatic Bankruptcy. A Bankruptcy FMC will immediately follow. If a Consumer Proposal is not accepted by the creditors, there is no automatic Bankruptcy.