Hi Dr Debt
There is a problem with the role of the PIP as an independent mediator.
There is a conflict between their initial debt advisor role as an advisor acting in the client's best interest and in their later PIP role as a mediator.
So when I go to Jim Stafford for an intial meeting to explore my options, he is a debt advisor acting on my behalf. As a good advisor, he will set out the options and the pros and cons.
For most professionals, he would advise against a PIA and try to negotiate a deal directly with the bank. He would be firmly on the clients' side. He would adopt the role as described by Tommy McGibney - his opening negotiating position would be "Well my client must maintain a house and car in line with his status in society. And he gets a lot of his clients through the Parents' Council in St Gerards and on his two annual holidays to very expensive places. So to maximise his income, he needs to spend a lot".
Tommy sums it up well:
As an advocate, his role is to represent, and argue on behalf of, his clients. The argument that some people need bigger houses than others may well be a tendentious one, but he is well entitled to make it, regardless of whether he actually believes it himself in the context of any particular situation.
The problem for Jim and for other debt advisors/PIPs , is that if he accepts his clients' nomination as a PIP, he must then switch from debt advisor mode to independent mode. That will not be easy to do.
In fact, I think that this is where Jim slipped up badly on the radio. He was talking as if he was acting on behalf of his client and making these "tendentious" arguments.
I was taken to task by a would-be PIP at a public meeting for suggesting that a Split Mortgage might be a fair outcome. He said that he would be batting very hard for his client to get the negative equity written down. He had to be reminded that his role as a PIP, was as an independent mediator.
The legislation, and all the publicity around it, has been very clear - we want to keep people in the family home, except in really exceptional circumstances. I don't agree with that, but I am in a minority.