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Upcoming Events
*OUTDOOR WORSHIP SERVICE:
Sun., July 10 in the park behind our church building, with potluck lunch to follow.
Please bring lawn chairs.
Coffee and drinks will be provided.
*VBS CALLING LAKE – July 18-22: If you want to volunteer, please contact Maria ().
The group will be leaving the church at 11 a.m. and returning by 4:30 p.m. each day.
*NEXT COMMUNITY MEN’S BREAKFAST:
The Mens Fellowship Breakfast for this month will be hosted at the Roszmann’s on July 23 at 8:00 a.m. Easy to find – 2 miles south on Highway 2, east on Aspen Ridge Road, south 1/2 mile on RR 224, turn right at street sign ROCKY LANE (across from Webers driveway). Par three golf, disc golf and soccer golf are available.
Suggested donation cost to play a round is $15.00. All proceeds will be donated to the Athabasca Teen Centre. So bring your sons and friends for some fun. Please feel free to just come for good food and fellowship (there is no speaker for this breakfast).
*NEW DIRECTORY: Photo taking of you and your family and addresses and phone numbers and email (if you wish to have that in there).
There will be a person available each Sunday to take photos before and after the services so please book your time now by emailing Barb Sawchuk at
or calling the church office at 780-675-3458 between 10 am and 12 (except Monday or Saturday).
Any questions please call Barb Sawchuk or Dee Seaton.
*NEXT EXTENDICARE (2 p.m.) & PVL (3 p.m.) SERVICES: July 24
*NEXT WIDOWS/WIDOWERS LUNCH: Mon., Sept. 26 @ 12:30 p.m.
*TUESDAY EVENING BIBLE STUDY: **on summer break
Sunday Mornings
Pre-service
Prayer Time @ 9:30
Worship Service @ 10:30 a.m.
Sunday School @ 10:30 a.m. for Preschool-Grade 7
BIBLE STUDIES
Updated June 2016
TUESDAYS @7:00pm - Ministry Centre Board Room - Al Walker leading *****ON SUMMER BREAK
YOUTH GROUP
Fridays @ 7 p.m. at ARC Ministry Centre*****ON SUMMER BREAK
Phone #: 780-675-3458
5210 - 47 Avenue,
Athabasca, AlbertaYour company and the law | ASIC - Australian Securities and Investments Commission
You are here:
Your company and the law
This information sheet explains the responsibilities of company officeholders. It covers:
who can be a company director or secretary
company director responsibilities, and
company records.
If you’re a director or secretary of a small company, you must follow the requirements set out in the Corporations Act 2001 (Corporations Act).
Obviously we can’t explain every obligation or cover every situation here. At times you may need professional legal advice.
Even if you appoint an agent to look after the company’s affairs, you—not the agent—may still be held responsible for those legal obligations.
Are you a small business operator?
Is your company registered as a charity with the Australian Charities and Not-for-Profits Commission (ACNC)?
If so, some of your reporting obligations to ASIC will no longer apply. .
What does the law expect of you personally?
As a director, you must:
be honest and careful in your dealings at all times
know what your company is doing
take extra care if your company is operating a business because you may be handling other people’s money
make sure that your company can pay its debts on time
see that your company keeps proper financial records
act in the company’s best interests, even if this may not be in your own interests, and even though you may have set up the company just for personal or taxation reasons, and
use any information you get through your position properly and in the best interests of the company. Using that information to gain, directly or indirectly, an advantage for yourself or for any other person, or to harm the company may be a crime or may expose you to other claims. This information need if you use it the wrong way and dishonestly, it may still be a crime.
If you have personal interests that might conflict with your duty as a director, you must generally disclose these at a directors’ meeting. This rule does not apply if you are the only director of a proprietary company.
What work must a director do?
You and any other directors will control the company’s business. Your company’s constitution (if any) or rules may set out the directors’ powers and functions.
You must be fully up-to-date on what your company is doing:
Find out and assess for yourself how any proposed action will affect your company’s business performance, especially if it involves a lot of the company’s money.
Get outside professional advice when you need more details to make an informed decision.
Question managers and staff about how the business is going.
Take an active part in directors’ meetings.
Only be a company director or a company secretary if you are willing, able and have enough time to put in the effort.
Avoid any company where someone offers to make you a director or secretary on the promise that ‘you won’t have to do anything’ and ‘just sign here’. You could be exposing yourself to many legal liabilities.
Can you sell shares to the public?
Proprietary companies are generally not allowed to raise money from the public by selling shares. Avoid anything to do with illegal fundraising.
Can anyone be a director or secretary?
You must not act as a director or secretary (or manage a company) without court consent if you:
are an undischarged bankrupt
are subject to a personal insolvency agreement or an arrangement under Part X of the Bankruptcy Act 1966 (Bankruptcy Act) that has not been fully complied with
are subject to a composition under Part X of the Bankruptcy Act and final payment has not been made, or
have been convicted of various offences such as fraud or offences under company law, such as a breach of your duties as a director or insolvent trading. If you have been convicted of one of these offences you must not manage a company within five years of your conviction. If imprisoned for one of these offences, you must not manage a company within five years after your release from prison.
If you become bankrupt, enter into a personal insolvency agreement or are convicted of a relevant offence at a time when you’re a director or secretary then you automatically lose that office. The company must then notify ASIC that you’re no longer a director or secretary of the company. For more information, see Information Sheet 14 Bankruptcy and personal insolvency agreements ().
ASIC can also ban you from being a company director in certain situations.
If you’re not allowed to be a company director or secretary, you’re not allowed to manage a company. It is a serious offence to set up dummy directors while you really manage the company.
Directors must also be 18 years or older.
What happens to dishonest directors?
Every year, the courts send dishonest and reckless company officers to prison, and impose heavy fines and award damages.
As the company watchdog, we investigate corporate crime. You can report dishonest company directors to us. We may take a number of steps against directors who fail in their duties.
What company records must you keep?
As a director, the law makes you personally responsible for keeping proper company records.
You must see that the company keeps up-to-date financial records that:
correctly record and explain its transactions (including any transactions as a trustee), and
explain the company’s financial position and performance.
All companies must have financial records so that:
true and fair financial statements of the company can be prepared if needed
financial statements can be conveniently and properly audited if necessary, and
the company can obey the tax laws.
If your company is a ‘small proprietary company’ or a small company limited by guarantee (as defined in the Corporations Act), it will generally not have to prepare formal financial reports under that Act each year and lodge them with ASIC. However, you must still keep financial records, and may need financial reports for managing and monitoring your company’s financial position and performance for tax purposes or for raising finance.
In most cases, large proprietary and public companies—even not-for-profit public companies—will have to prepare financial reports, have them audited and lodge them with ASIC.
Some public companies limited by guarantee are exempt from these financial reporting obligations and others have reduced auditing and reporting obligations. For more details on the obligations of limited by guarantee companies, see Information Sheet 131 Companies limited by guarantee—simplified obligations ().
What are financial records?
Some of the basic financial records that the law may require a company to keep are:
general ledger, recording all the company’s transactions and balances (e.g. revenue, expenses, assets, liabilities) or summarising transactions and balances detailed in other records
cash records (e.g. bank statements, deposit books, cheque butts, petty cash records)
debtor and sales records (e.g. a list of debtors and their balances, delivery dockets, invoices and statements issued, a list of all sales transactions)
creditor and purchases records (e.g. purchase orders, invoices and statements received and paid, unpaid invoices, a list of all purchases, a list of all creditors and their balances)
wage and superannuation records
a register of property, plant and equipment showing transactions and balances in relation to individual items
inventory records
investment records (e.g. contract notes, dividend or interest notices, certificates)
tax returns and calculations (e.g. income tax, group tax, fringe benefits tax and GST returns and statements), and
deeds, contracts and agreements.
A company would also normally prepare the following statements regularly (e.g. monthly) to manage its business performance and provide to lenders:
Statement of Comprehensive Income: a statement showing the company’s revenue and expenses and the profit or loss that results from these items
Statement of Financial Position: a statement showing the things of value the company owns and the debts the company owes, and
Statement of Cash Flows: a statement summarising cash inflows and outflows.
Get professional advice if you have any doubt about the content or type of financial records to keep. The lists above give examples only, because the financial records you need will vary from company to company.
You may keep some financial records electronically, but you must be able to convert them into hard copy so that you can give them to anyone entitled to inspect them. Make backup copies of electronic records regularly (for example, weekly or daily).
See also Information Sheet 76 What books and records should my company keep? ().
Your company must also keep some other basic records: see ‘Company housekeeping: other records and registers’ for more details.
Company housekeeping: Other records and registers
All company officers must make sure that the company attends to some basic ‘housekeeping’ matters. The directors remain ultimately responsible for the company’s compliance with the Corporations Act.
When a company is set up, you must:
register your company name with ASIC and obtain an
have a registered office. (If your company doesn’t occupy the same address as the registered office, then you must have written consent from the person who occupies the registered office.)
Make sure that you:
display the company name at every place at which your company carries on business and that is open to the public. Also, a public company must display its name and the words ‘registered office’ prominently at its registered office.
display the company name, the words ‘Australian Company Number’ (or ‘ACN’) or ‘Australian Business Number’ (or ‘ABN’) and the relevant number on:
the common seal (if the company has one)
every public document of the company
every negotiable instrument (e.g. cheque, promissory note ) of the company, and
all documents lodged with ASIC.
Your company must keep:
registers of members (shareholders)
registers of option holders (if you have them) minutes of general meetings
minutes of meetings of directors
registers of charges created by the company over company property (s271 of the Corporations Act was removed from registration under the Personal Property Securities Act 2009. You are required to have this register and make entries up until this point in time), and
financial records that enable an assessment of the company’s financial position and performance and are sufficient for financial statements to be prepared (and audited if necessary) for at least seven years after the transactions are completed.
For more about the ASIC forms your company must lodge, see Information Sheet 20 Checklist for registered companies and their officers ().
Your annual statement
Each year within a few days after your company’s review date (usually the anniversary of your company’s registration) we will send your company an annual statement to one of the following:
your electronic inbox if you have registered to use our electronic lodgement systems
the address of your registered agent if you have appointed one
your nominated mailing address if you aren’t registered to use our electronic lodgement systems, or
your company’s registered office address if none of the above apply.
If you have not received your annual statement within five days after the review date, you should contact us.
Check your annual statement
The annual statement sets out the company’s details recorded in ASIC’s register, such as the names and addresses of its directors and secretary, registered office, principal place of business, ultimate holding company (if any), share details and members’ details (members’ names and addresses only apply to proprietary companies).
If these details are correct and no other changes have occurred that require you to notify ASIC, then within two months after the review date:
you need to pay the annual review fee shown in the invoice that accompanies the annual statement, and
the director(s) need to pass a solvency resolution.
If any details on the statement are no longer correct, you must update them using
(Form 484 - online). You have 28 days from the statement’s issue date to lodge the form.
We may also require information to be lodged (e.g. where we notice that data is missing).
To avoid the payment of late fees or other non-compliance action you must:
pay the annual review fee within two months after the review date
lodge a Change to company details to update your company’s details if they change during the year, within 28 days after the change, and
lodge a Change to company details (if required) to update your company’s details, within 28 days after your annual statement’s issue date.
For more information, see Information Sheet 3 Annual statements and late fees ().
Pass a solvency resolution
The company’s directors must pass a solvency resolution within two months after the company’s review date, unless the company has lodged a financial report with ASIC within twelve months before the review date.
A positive solvency resolution means that the directors think that there are reasonable grounds to believe that the company will be able to pay its debts as and when they become due and payable. You don’t have to lodge notification of a positive solvency resolution with ASIC, but you must pay the company’s annual review fee. Payment of the fee is taken to be a representation by the directors that the company is solvent.
A negative solvency resolution means that the directors think that there are not reasonable grounds to believe that the company will be able to pay its debts as and when they become due and payable. If the directors pass a negative solvency resolution we must be notified using
Statement in relation to company solvency within seven days after the resolution has been passed.
If the directors don’t pass a solvency resolution within two months after the company’s review date, ASIC must be notified using Form 485 within seven days after the end of the two-month period following the review date.
Keep us informed of changes in your company’s details
Some of the more common things you must tell us are set out in the following table. The Corporations Act requires you to tell us about these changes within a certain time period. If you tell us after this time, you may have to pay a late fee.
Type of activity or duty
Change place you keep registers
If you want to keep registers of shares, options or charges at an address other than the company’s registered office or principal place of business, you must tell us where they are being kept within seven days after the change.
Change of officeholders or details of officeholders
If the officeholders (e.g. director, secretary or alternate director) of the company change, or if any personal details change, such as their residential address, you must tell us within 28 days after the change. You must also lodge the terms of appointment when appointing an alternate director.
Resignation of director or secretary
A director or secretary can tell us directly if they retire or resign. A copy of their letter of retirement or resignation from the company must be submitted with the form.
Change of registered office
If you change the company’s registered office or principal place of business, you must tell us within 28 days after the change.
Change of company name
If the company has resolved to change its name, you must tell us within 14 days after the resolution was passed. (New names are subject to availability criteria.)
Issue of new shares
If you issue new shares, you must tell us within 28 days from the date of issue.
Change to members (shareholders)
Proprietary companies must advise us within 28 days of changes to the top 20 members in each class of share held. Such changes include changes of name and address, increase or decrease in shares held and cessation of membership.
Changes to ultimate holding company
Proprietary companies must advise us within 28 days following changes to their ultimate holding company.
Division or conversion of shares
If you divide or convert shares into different classes, you must tell us within 14 days from the date of the division or conversion.
Negative solvency resolution
You must notify us of a negative solvency resolution within seven days after the resolution is passed.
Solvency resolution not passed
If no solvency resolution is passed within two months after the review date you must notify us within seven days after that period.
Change of company review date
You may apply to change your company’s review date if it is considered unsuitable. You must, however, be able to satisfy certain conditions to have the review date varied.
How do you get the information to us?
If you are a director or secretary of a company you can tell us about most changes to your company’s details using our .
Alternatively, if you lodge documents on behalf of a number of companies, you can lodge them electronically using our
which uses compliant software.
By lodging electronically you will:
have your information processed immediately, and
quickly meet your legal obligations.
You may also lodge the changes on a paper form. These forms can be downloaded from our website or obtained by calling us on .
If you use a lot of forms, interactive software is available, such as ‘ASIC Forms on CD-ROM’.
We also list the fees you must pay for lodging some forms on our website.
Send the completed form and fee (where applicable) to:
Australian Securities & Investments Commission (ASIC) PO Box 4000 Gippsland Mail Centre VIC 3841
What if your company can’t pay its debts?
You must ensure that your company is able to pay all of its debts as and when they become due for payment. A company is ‘insolvent’ if it cannot pay all of its debts as they become due and payable.
By law, you must prevent your company from incurring a debt when it is insolvent or about to become so. This means you must consider whether you have reasonable grounds to believe that the company will be able to pay a new debt when it becomes due, as well as pay all the other debts.
You may expose yourself to criminal prosecution, substantial fines or to action by a liquidator, creditors of the company or ASIC to recover amounts lost by creditors due to your actions.
Your personal assets—not just your company’s—may be at risk.
Common signs of financial trouble are:
low operating profits or cash flow from the main business
problems paying trade suppliers and other creditors on time
trade suppliers refusing to extend further credit to the company
problems with meeting loan repayments on time or difficulty in keeping within overdraft limits, and
legal action taken, or threatened, by trade suppliers or other creditors over money owed to them.
If your company is in financial difficulty or in danger of being insolvent, seek immediate advice from an insolvency professional. They will be able to explain your options to you. Your options may include re-structuring your company’s affairs, changing your company’s activities or appointing a voluntary administrator or liquidator to the company.
Do not assume that you will be able to trade out of the problem. Delay could be damaging to the company and to you personally, and may reduce the options available.
How do you close down your company?
You can apply to have the company deregistered, if certain conditions are met, using
Application for voluntary deregistration of a company.
The conditions are that the company:
is not carrying on business
has assets of less than $1000
has paid all its fees and penalties under the Corporations Act
has no outstanding liabilities
is not a party to any legal proceedings, and
all its members have agreed to the deregistration.
If these conditions are not met, the process is more complex and you’ll need the help of a professional adviser.
What can you find out about other companies?
See Information Sheet 26 Dealing with businesses and companies: How to avoid being swindled () for tips on avoiding shonky operators and fly-by-night companies.
You can find out more about a company you are dealing with by checking its identity to make sure that it really exists. You can check its status and see what forms it has lodged through the
at ASIC Connect.
Tell us if you think another company is trading while it can’t pay its debts. We may not be able to investigate everything, but we do keep detailed records of all reports of misconduct and may take action if we have evidence of serious wrongdoing. Tell us if you think that a company director is acting dishonestly.
A final word and to find out more
Finally, you are unlikely to get into trouble if you:
are honest and careful in dealing with the company and on its behalf with others
understand your legal obligations and make compliance with them part of your business
keep informed about your company’s financial position and performance
get professional advice or more information when you are in doubt, and
give the interests of the company, its shareholders and its creditors top priority.
Where can I get more information
For more about running your company, visit .
Contact ASIC on
or make an enquiry at .
This is Information Sheet 79 (INFO 79). Information sheets provide concise guidance on a specific process or compliance issue or an overview of detailed guidance.
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Some of the things you can do online:
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Last updated: 23/03/

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