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Is this Australia’s oldest lawn mower?

<p dir="ltr">Geoff has tried to retire five times but just can’t seem to adhere to a lifestyle without work. </p> <p dir="ltr">A bit shy of 80, Geoff and his wife Gayl, 69, have together purchased a Jim’s Mowing Franchise and is now mowing lawns in Mackay and Ayr.</p> <p dir="ltr">The even more exciting bit is that Geoff is basically booked out - working from sunrise to sunset. </p> <p dir="ltr">"I'm up at 5.30 every morning and in bed by 8. I work from sun up to sun down," Geoff said. </p> <p dir="ltr">"I've got so much work I am now going to employ my own kids and my grandkids. They have to help me out because I've got so much work on I can't keep up with it all.</p> <p dir="ltr"> "People can't believe I'm turning 80 and I'm mowing five lawns a day."</p> <p dir="ltr">Geoff and Gayl are part of a group of retirees who refuse to stop working. </p> <p dir="ltr">A study of 4,000 elderly people, conducted by National Seniors Australia shows 20 per cent of pensioners would consider returning to the workforce after retirement if Age Pension requirements. </p> <p dir="ltr">Sixty per cent of respondents said the main reason to re-enter the workforce was to earn more money, while 15 per cent wanted to keep active, and 12 per cent wanted to contribute to society. </p> <p dir="ltr">Professor John McCallum, Chief Executive Officer (CEO) and Director of Research at National Seniors said that elderly Australians re-entering the workforce will become more common. </p> <p dir="ltr">“We have got something we are looking backwards at and not looking forwards for the next 20 years of an ageing society, which continues to 2040, and not setting up the systems to really make it work and to benefit the economy, frankly,” he said. </p> <p dir="ltr"><em>Images: Supplied</em></p>

Retirement Life

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“Worst time of my life”: Former Pie Face franchisee left with nothing

<p>A former Pie Face franchisee has tearfully described how she lost everything at the banking royal commission.</p> <p>Marion Messih on Tuesday told the commission she had bought a Pie Face franchise with her brother and sister-in-law in Werribee in Victoria for $330,000 in 2013.</p> <p>The trio believed they could earn $50,000 each a year from the business – but it didn’t take long before they realised the business wasn’t profitable.</p> <p>“If we earned $500 in a week it was a miracle, which was pretty woeful to be honest,” she told the royal commission today.</p> <p>Ms Messih claimed the former owner had exaggerated the profitability of the shop.</p> <p>“He had run the business down. By the time we took it over, the clientele wasn’t there,” she said.</p> <p>Despite that, Ms Messih and her brother and sister-in-law worked hard to slowly boost sales and they were on track to make the business profitable – until Werribee Plaza, where their Pie Face is located, started major renovations.</p> <p>“People avoided Werribee Plaza with a passion,” Ms Messih said.</p> <p>The business was struggling as the same amount of rent was still needed to be paid, so Westpac agreed to a payment plan.</p> <p>However, after Pie Face went into voluntary administration, the bank approved a hardship plan, which meant repayments were stopped to allow Ms Messih to find another job.</p> <p>But Ms Messih’s mother fell seriously ill at the same. She decided to sell her investment property, for which she received $750,000. She planned to use the money to pay off the remaining money owing on her investment property, her mortgage and her portion of the business loan debt.</p> <p>According to Ms Messih, Westpac agreed with that plan but the day before the sale settled, the bank reneged and told her they would use the proceeds of the sale to recover the entire debt –  including the half belonging to her sister-in-law.</p> <p>“It clearly shattered me because that was not all my debt,” she said.</p> <p>Ms Messih’s sister-in-law proposed paying back $50 a week towards her debt, which Westpac “laughed at” and refused.</p> <p>“When the settlement happened on my property, they took it all,” Ms Messih said.</p> <p>When she went to the Financial Ombudsman Service she was told the bank able to recoup 100 per cent of the loan, as she had used it as security to secure her half of the loan to begin with.</p> <p>But Ms Messih said she had lost everything.</p> <p>“I worked hard to get where I was. I should be retired by now but I still owe money,” Ms Messih said.</p> <p>“It was overwhelming and stressful. It was the worst time of my life ... and I don’t ever want to go through it again.</p> <p>“I’ve always paid all my debts upfront and to continually get phone calls from institutions asking when I’m going to make payments ... was really hard.</p> <p>“My kids paid my bills and my loans for me; that’s not what a mother does.”</p>

Money & Banking

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The heartbreaking truth behind buying a franchise: "They're ruining lives"

<p>The truth behind buying and operating a franchise is being exposed as the Senate undertakes an inquiry into the industry, reading the heartbreaking submissions Australians have sent in.</p> <p>“Being a franchisee has destroyed the lives of myself, my family and caused severe financial distress at 70 years of age,” one person wrote.</p> <p>“I am … now working to try and keep the family home and repay significant loans incurred in relation to the franchise business.”</p> <p>An Australian-wide study asked franchisees if buying a franchise was the worst thing they ever did. 70 per cent of those who had franchises that failed, agreed. Surprisingly, 60 per cent of those whose franchises didn’t go broke, also agreed.</p> <p>Some franchisees become very rich from the companies, with restaurants like McDonald's running so smoothly that there are rarely ever complaints.</p> <p>However, other franchisees have found themselves in unimaginable financial hardship due to the parent company’s unfair business practices.</p> <p><strong>Muffin break</strong></p> <p>Certified practising accountant, Faheem Mirza, started looking for a job where he didn’t have to work full-time so he could care for his child, who requires full-time NDIS support.</p> <p>However, Mr Mirza claims when he bought a Muffin Break franchise, he was told the cost of labour wold be between 21 to 30 per cent of sales. The franchising company denies this claim.</p> <p>“No actual store data was made available prior to the actual commencement of the store operations,” wrote Mr Mirza in his submission to the Senate inquiry.</p> <p>“Once the operations started in June 2016, the labour costs were much higher than anticipated.”</p> <p>Although the sales were going well, Mr Mirza found that running the franchise above board and legally was going to put them in a difficult financial position.</p> <p>The franchising company that owns Muffin Break, Foodco, told Mr Mirza to work up to seven days a week in the café without drawing any wages.</p> <p>“They told me to consider underpaying staff,” he also said.</p> <p>Foodco denied the allegations and there is no external evidence to support the claims about the cost of labour.</p> <p>“We strongly refute the false allegations made by Mr Mirza,” said a Foodco spokesperson.</p> <p>“Our success is entirely underpinned by the success of our franchisees and we are committed to high levels of transparency.”</p> <p><strong>Gloria Jeans</strong></p> <p>Elke Meyer worked as a contractor at Retail Food Group, the brand that owns Gloria Jean’s, up until 2016. She would collect the money owed from the coffee chain franchisees.</p> <p>She recalled the most haunting story that one franchisee told her.</p> <p>“I became deeply concerned with the situation among an increasing group of franchisees when a female franchisee of a Gloria Jeans franchise advised me she and her husband and two young sons had sat on the floor the night before and hugged, and her husband had decided to take his own life so they could get the life insurance and pay out their debt to [Retail Food Group],” wrote Ms Meyer in her submission to the Senate inquiry.</p> <p>“There was an overwhelming sense of hopelessness among a lot of the franchisees I dealt with, but this instance was the most extreme.” (The man did not take his own life in the end.)</p> <p>A spokesperson from Retail Food Group said company’s franchises survive longer than the average small business in Australia’s tough economy.</p> <p>“Indeed, latest Australian Bureau of Statistics data indicates that new small businesses suffered from a failure rate of circa 45% during [the 2014 to 2017 financial years]. By way of context, average franchisee tenure within [Retail Food Group’s] brand systems well exceeds the timeframe contemplated above,” the spokesperson said.</p> <p>Did you or someone you know buy a franchise? Tell us about your experience in the comments below.</p>

Money & Banking

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