Teachers left jobless as Japan language school goes bankrupt

Nearly 1,000 British language instructors were left fearing for their jobs yesterday after Nova, the scandal-ridden owner of Japan’s biggest chain of language schools, closed its doors and filed for court protection from creditors with debts totaling an estimated 43.9bn yen (£1.88m).
The firm, which has about 900 schools and 418,000 students, built its success on the back of advertising campaigns promising opportunities for “international exchange” at schools near railway stations staffed by native-speaker instructors. But its troubles began earlier this year when Japan’s supreme court ruled that it had acted illegally by refusing to refund students who had cancelled their contracts.

In June the trade and economy ministry ordered Nova to close some of its schools after ruling that it had misled students in advertising campaigns.

The negative publicity led to a dramatic decline in enrolments and left the school unable to pay thousands of its teachers, some of whom also face eviction because Nova failed to pay their rent, which is deducted from their salaries. Nova’s 2,000 Japanese staff have not been paid since July and about 4,000 foreign instructors have not been paid since September. Christopher Gunn, one of around 900 British Nova teachers caught up in the crisis, has had to borrow from friends to pay his 55,000 yen monthly rent and has only 3,000 yen left in his bank account.

“Until this morning no one knew what was happening,” he told NHK television. “I’m angry and a little upset but not surprised at all. I may have to borrow money for a plane ticket home.”

One British employee, who works as a trainer, told the Guardian she and her boyfriend, who will not be paid until next month in a new job, were living off the last of their savings and help from their parents. “Rent and bills are getting difficult to pay,” she said. Another British couple she knows are facing eviction, she added.

The Osaka district court will try to find sponsors to rebuild Nova’s business. Trading in Nova shares was suspended on the Jasdaq securities exchange in Tokyo, with the shares to be delisted next month.

The General Union, which represents many Nova employees, said the school’s troubles had reached crisis point. “This is a serious development that could force many students, instructors and employees to suffer losses,” the union’s chairman, Katsuji Yamahara, said.

The British embassy in Tokyo has set up an advice page on its website. It is putting British teachers in touch with a travel agency that has agreed to provide cheap flights to the UK. “We are doing everything we can in terms of consular support and advice but the one thing we can’t do is provide direct financial assistance,” a spokesman told the Guardian.

Nova president, Nozomi Sahashi, was fired at an emergency board meeting on Thursday for his “opaque way of fundraising and negotiating with potential business partners,” the company said.

http://education.guardian.co.uk/tefl/viewfromabroad/story/0,,2200354,00.html

Nova seeks court protection from creditors

Language school giant Nova Corp. filed for bankruptcy Friday with the Osaka District Court and said it would temporarily close all its schools nationwide.

The sudden move, which came just as labor authorities were about to question its executives, including its missing president, will leave about 300,000 students without lessons and 7,000 employees without jobs.

The nation’s biggest language school chain offered mainly English conversation classes to an estimated 420,000 students. It filed for protection from creditors under the Corporate Rehabilitation Law. It had about ¥43.9 billion in debt as of the end of July, including ¥4 billion in unpaid teacher salaries.

The court appointed two lawyers as administrators to freeze its assets and debt repayments so it can determine the company’s true financial situation.

The Jasdaq Securities Exchange said the same day that Nova stock would immediately be moved to a monitoring post and delisted on Nov. 27.

The court-appointed administrators will try to find a new sponsor to help the Osaka-based company rebuild. If they cannot find one within a month, they will dissolve the company, said Toshiaki Higashibata, one of the administrators, at a news conference in Osaka later in the day.

“If we do not take action, we will cause greater trouble for the people involved,” Nova said in a statement jointly signed by Representative Director Anders Lundqvist and two other executives.

“To avoid further confusion and drastically rebuild the company, we removed President Nozomu Sahashi from his post and filed with the court to start the rehabilitation process,” the statement said. “We profoundly apologize for the great trouble and concern we have caused through this procedure.”

Sahashi’s name did not appear on the statement and Nova said it did not know his whereabouts. Sahashi, one of Nova’s cofounders, has a 16 percent stake in the firm.

Nova said Sahashi was dismissed in absentia at an emergency board meeting late Thursday because he failed to adequately explain his “opaque way of fundraising and negotiating with potential business alliance partners.”

The board then appointed Shoichi Watanabe, Hitomi Yoshizato and Lundqvist as new directors with the right to jointly represent the company. Sahashi and Lundqvist founded Nova in 1981.

The decision to file for bankruptcy also was made at the meeting, the company said.

The struggling chain of English schools took a turn for the worse in mid-June after the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry ordered it to partially suspend business for six months for lying about its services when soliciting new students. Sales then plunged because the order prevented the school from recruiting new students and prompted many others to quit.

The administrators have decided to indefinitely close all of Nova’s 900 or so schools until it can sort out the mess and come up with a plan of action.

“It is to avoid confusion for now, maintain the company’s assets and judge whether corporate reconstruction is possible,” the administrators said in a statement.

While the schools are closed, they will try to come up with a new sponsor, transfer Nova’s ownership and resume operations as soon as possible to save the teachers’ jobs and resume classes, they said, asking employees to stand by.

Higashibata said the administrators were already in contact with prospective buyers. The candidates being discussed within the company so far include retailers Aeon Co. and Marui Group Co. and Internet firms Rakuten Inc. and Yahoo Japan Corp.

Nova said it is unable to give lessons and all reservations have been canceled. And since it is not allowed to pay back debt during rehabilitation, lesson fees already paid ? as well as lesson tickets already purchased ? cannot be refunded yet.

METI reportedly has asked an industry group to find new schools for Nova students.

Students who want to contact Nova about their individual cases are asked to do so via fax at (06) 6649-9790 or by regular mail to: Midosuji Minami Building 4F, 2-3-2 Nishi-Shinsaibashi, Chuo Ward, Osaka Prefecture.

Meanwhile, the Health, Labor and Welfare Ministry said it has begun accepting calls from Nova teachers concerned about their salaries and job insurance at (03) 3204-8609 in Tokyo and (06) 6344-1135 in Osaka.

Administrators said the issue of salary payments will hinge on whether the administrators can find a sponsor to rebuild the company and when.

The company has failed to pay about 2,000 Japanese employees since July and about 4,000 non-Japanese instructors since September, according to a union representing foreign teachers employed by Nova.

According to market research firm Yano Research Institute Ltd., the market for English-language schools in Japan in 2006 shrank 5.2 percent from the previous year to ¥345.9 billion.

Even before the business suspension, Yano said the market would shrink amid the ongoing population decline.

METI’s punishment on Nova’s discount system for long-term lesson contracts, which helped expand the market in the past, will inevitably cause the language-school business to slow down, the institute said in a report in July.

Nova was founded in 1981 as Nova Planning Ltd. According to METI, Nova told prospective students they could book language lessons any time they want and at any school nationwide. However, many clients complained that they were not able to reserve lessons during busy periods.

The METI probe also revealed that several Nova schools did not give full refunds to people who canceled lessons.

http://search.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/nn20071027a1.html

Western teachers in Japan face redundancy as Nova language schools close

Thousands of foreign teachers including 900 from Britain face redundancy, financial misery and eviction from their homes after the collapse of Nova, Japan?s largest chain of English language schools.

Diplomatic sources at the British and Australian embassies in Tokyo told The Times that they were expecting a ?significant exodus? of teachers, as unpaid staff struggle to find new jobs and buckle under Japan?s hefty cost of living.

More than 900 British teachers, a similar number from Australia and arbout 1,300 from the US – some of whom have families and have settled in Japan – have been plunged into legal limbo, their careers hanging by a thread.

For many Nova teachers, the lack of salary could leave them homeless within a few days because their rent is usually paid to landlords directly by Nova.

One British teacher, who rents his own apartment, said that he was expecting a sudden flood of colleagues to be sleeping on his floor as they struggled to find new jobs in a market with only limited opportunities.

The airline Qantas, in agreement with the Australian Government, has begun offering cut-rate, one-way tickets back to Sydney for Australians stranded by the Nova bankruptcy.

Many English-language teachers are preparing for what could be drawn-out and expensive legal battles. Teachers in remote, rural parts of Japan, often young university graduates living abroad for the first time, have found themselves stranded as their savings run out.

Today all 1,000 branches of Nova – Japan?s largest language school chain, with 50 per cent of the market – remained closed after the company filed for court protection from its creditors.

?I feel betrayed,? said Richard Naish, a 25-year old teacher from Bath, whose Nova branch is in remote Tochigi prefecture. ?The managers and teachers have all resigned around me and for the last few weeks I?ve had no boss at all.?

Mr Naish arrived for work yesterday to find a Japanese staff member in tears, removing her belongings and bolting the front door of the school – perhaps for good.

Nobody has yet been told whether Nova, and the jobs of its 5,000 employees, will survive into the new year. Nozomu Sahashi, the company?s founder, who was sacked by his board yesterday, has disappeared from public view. The company said that it was looking for other companies to mount a rescue bid.

Nearly 450,000 students expecting to be taught as usual were met with locked classroom doors this morning; about 2,500 teachers from Britain, Australia, Canada and the United States were told that lessons would be suspended indefinitely.

The ubiquitous chain, which is known as the ?McDonald?s of language schools? and is famous for recruiting aggressively at British university campuses, has not paid teachers for six weeks. Japanese support staff and administrators working for Nova have not received pay cheques since August.

Across Nova?s network of schools, hastily written pledges from Nova?s head office in Osaka have, on successive pay-days, offered false hope to the teachers that they would be paid the next day.

The company is crippled with debts of almost 50 billion yen (£210 million), and has been losing students as its image has crumbled.

?There has been a sense that Nova would go under for a few months, but we were just kidding ourselves for ages that it was too big to fail,? said Joe Berry, a teacher from Yorkshire who has worked for Nova for two years.

?But now we know this is it, and people are going to struggle. Some of these teachers have families, mortgages – it is such a shame it?s come to this.?

Nova?s problems stem from an ill-conceived expansion of its branch network across Japan, backed by a massive advertising campaign. The company was unable to find enough experienced teachers to staff its classrooms, and many students defected to rival schools after complaining about the poor quality of Nova?s language courses.

Nova?s plight deepened in June, when it received a six-month ban on enrolling new students after regulators ruled that Nova had lied in its advertisements. The company is also notorious for its treatment of teachers and Japanese staff and has been accused of violating labour laws.

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/asia/article2745177.ece

Nova files for court protection / President fired; firm seeking rehabilitation

Nova Corp., the nation’s largest English-language school chain, which has been in financial trouble for months, filed for court protection on Friday under the Corporate Rehabilitation Law and suspended the operation of all its schools.

As of the end of July, debts of the Osaka-based company were estimated at 43.9 billion yen, but with unpaid office rents and salary payments for its employees included, the liabilities in excess of assets are expected to reach tens of billions of yen.

Nova applied for the protection with the Osaka District Court on Friday, and the court appointed Toshiaki Higashibata and Noriaki Takahashi, both lawyers, as administrators.

The company’s business condition deteriorated in June after the Economy, Trade and Industry Ministry ordered it to partially suspend its operations, throwing its management into turmoil.

Recently, the company has failed to pay the salaries of teachers and other school officials, and it closed some schools. To avoid confusion and protect its assets from creditors, Nova temporarily shut down all of its 669 schools nationwide.

In an effort to find a sponsor for its rehabilitation, Nova reportedly plans to sound out at least four companies on their intention to become its sponsor.

According to sources close to Nova, the firm is considering starting negotiations with leading distributors Aeon Co. and Marui Co., and major IT firms Yahoo Japan Corp. and Rakuten Inc. Nova is expected to sound out these companies on their interest by the end of this month, the sources said.

The administrators said another company was interested in bailing out the troubled company.

At a press conference Friday afternoon in Osaka, the administrators said they could spend only one month finding a new sponsor due to the firm’s deteriorating corporate value. If they fail to find a sponsor within this period, they likely will file for bankruptcy.

Nova’s three board members, excluding cofounder Nozomu Sahashi, decided at an extraordinary meeting late Thursday night to dismiss Sahashi, 56, as president and to seek bankruptcy protection.

According to the administrators, more than 300,000 students had paid 40 billion yen in tuition in advance.

Shoichi Watanabe, 54, and two other board members obtained the company’s right of representation as of Thursday.

Under the Corporate Rehabilitation Law, repayment of prepaid tuition is ranked below payment of unpaid salary and loans from financial institutions. Therefore, it appears that it will be difficult for students to be fully reimbursed, according to sources familiar with the case.

Nova was cofounded in 1981 in Shinsaibashi, Osaka, by Sahashi and his two non-Japanese business partners. Nova succeeded in drastically boosting the number of its schools by promoting itself through TV commercials that emphasized its schools’ convenient locations close to stations, and its corporate mascot Nova Usagi (Nova rabbit).

In 1996, Nova was listed on the over-the-counter stock market, which is now the Jasdaq Securities Exchange.

In 2005, Nova boasted 977 schools and about 500,000 students nationwide, accounting for about 50 percent of the English-language school market in the country.

However, various problems have since emerged over the school’s management. For instance, the school refused to refund lesson fees prepaid by students.

After the Economy, Trade and Industry Ministry ordered the company to partially suspend its operations in June, the number of cancellations increased, throwing the company into financial chaos.

Starting in July, the company delayed in paying salaries and stopped paying office rents.

Since September, many schools have been shut down because the firm was unable to secure sufficient native-speaker English-language instructors.

In response to the report, the Jasdaq Securities Exchange in Tokyo suspended trading of Nova shares all day Friday. The Nova stock will be transferred to the supervision post Saturday prior to its delisting on Nov. 27.

http://www.yomiuri.co.jp/dy/national/20071027TDY01301.htm

Japan’s largest language school in receivership

Japan’s largest language school has been placed in receivership, affecting hundreds of Australian teachers and thousands of students.

Our correspondent in Tokyo, Shane McLeod, says with more than 900 branches across Japan, Nova language school was the country’s largest.

It employed more than 4,000 foreigners, including an estimated 1,000 Australians.

All of the company’s branches are now closed after the company was placed in receivership.

The court-appointed administrators say they will review the company’s operations to see if it can continue to trade, and say they are seeking new investors.

The company has reportedly amassed a debt of more than $US365 million.

http://www.radioaustralia.net.au/news/stories/s2071974.htm

Scandal-ridden English language schools close doors

Nearly a thousand British language teachers were left fearing for their jobs today after Nova, the scandal-ridden owner of Japan’s biggest chain of language schools, closed its doors and filed for court protection from creditors who are owed at least ¥43.9bn (£187m).

The firm, which has about 900 schools and 418,000 students, built its success on the back of aggressive advertising campaigns promising opportunities for “international exchange” at schools located near railway stations staffed by native-speaker instructors.

But its troubles began earlier this year when Japan’s supreme court ruled that it had acted illegally by refusing to refund students who had cancelled their contracts.

In June the trade and economy ministry ordered Nova to close some of its schools after deciding that its advertising campaigns had misled students.

The resulting negative publicity led to a dramatic decline in student enrolment and left the school unable to pay thousands of its instructors , some of whom face eviction because Nova has also failed to pay their rent, which is automatically deducted from their salaries.

Nova’s 2,000 Japanese staff have not been paid since July and about 4,000 foreign instructors have not been paid since September, according to union officials.

Christopher Gunn, one of an estimated 900 British teachers at Nova, has been forced to borrow from friends to pay the ¥55,000 monthly rent on his apartment and says he has only ¥3,000 left in his bank account.

“Until this morning no one knew what was happening,” he told NHK television. “I’m angry and a little upset but not surprised at all. I may have to borrow money for a plane ticket home.”

The Osaka district court will attempt to find new sponsors to rebuild Nova’s business. Trading in Nova shares was suspended on the Jasdaq securities exchange in Tokyo, with the shares to be delisted late next month.

The General Union, which represents many Nova employees, said the school’s troubles had reached crisis point. “This is a serious development that could force many students, instructors and employees to suffer losses,” the union’s chairman, Katsuji Yamahara, told Kyodo news agency.

The British embassy in Tokyo has received dozens of calls from worried teachers and has set up an advice page on its website.

“We are doing everything we can in terms of consular support and advice but the one thing we can’t do is provide direct financial assistance,” an embassy spokesman told Guardian Unlimited.

The embassy is putting British teachers in touch with a travel agency that has agreed to provide cheap flights to the UK.

Nova enjoyed huge popularity during the 1980s and 1990s, when it tapped into growing interest among mainly young Japanese in learning conversational English, French and other languages.

But on Friday morning all of its schools were closed and calls from anxious students and teachers went unanswered.

Its president, Nozomi Sahashi, was fired at an emergency board meeting last night for his “opaque way of fund-raising and negotiating with potential business partners,” the company said. Mr Sahashi has not been seen for several days and has failed to respond to repeated requests to meet trade ministry officials.

Nobutaka Machimura, Japan’s top government spokesman, told reporters: “This matter affects not only the students but foreign teachers and staff. I hope that the impact can be minimised.”

http://business.guardian.co.uk/story/0,,2199977,00.html

Japan’s Nova in financial crisis

Japan’s largest chain of foreign language schools, Nova Corp, has filed for court protection from creditors.

The firm, which mainly offers English classes, has more than 800 schools and 400,000 students across Japan.

But in June, it was ordered to suspend part of its operations, after a court ruled it had misled customers in advertisements about some services.

Since then, student enrolment has fallen sharply and Nova has accumulated debts of up to JPY50bn ($437m, £213m).

Its 2,000 Japanese staff have not been paid since July and some 4,000 non-Japanese instructors have not been paid their salary for October, union officials said.

Nova has now closed all its schools, Kyodo news agency said.

A court-appointed trustee will sort out its debts and seek sponsors to rebuild its business, Japanese media reports said.

Nova is one of Japan’s major employers of foreign nationals. Murdered Briton Lindsay Anne Hawker was working for Nova at the time of her death.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/asia-pacific/7063205.stm

Aussie teachers lose jobs in Japanese school shutdown

Japan’s troubled language school Nova says it will apply to the courts for bankruptcy protection, after it announced that a boardroom coup had ousted its elusive president.

Nova is one of Japan’s largest language schools, employing more than 4,000 foreign teachers, many of them Australians.

Nova will seek court protection from its creditors over more than $400 million in debt, which is a step to avoid bankruptcy.

The company has failed to pay its foreign staff this month, and has not paid its Japanese employees since July.

http://abc.net.au/news/stories/2007/10/26/2071245.htm?section=world

Nova files for bankruptcy with debt of ¥43.9 billion

Missing president dismissed in absentia

Nova Corp., Japan’s largest language school chain, filed for bankruptcy Friday with estimated debts of about ?43.9 billion as it failed to recover from a crippling penalty for false advertising.

Osaka-based Nova said it applied for protection from creditors under the Corporate Rehabilitation Law with the Osaka District Court, and pledged to find a sponsor for rehabilitation under the supervision of a court-appointed administrator. The court accepted the application.

The Jasdaq Securities Exchange said Nova’s stock has been suspended from trading and will be delisted on Nov. 27.

The company, offering mainly English conversation classes to an estimated 420,000 students nationwide, said it has shut down all its schools, and Nova President Nozomu Sahashi, who has a 16 percent stake in the company, is nowhere to be found.

The company said Sahashi was dismissed as president during an emergency board meeting held without his presence late Thursday night because he failed to adequately explain his “opaque way of fundraising and negotiating with potential business alliance partners.”

The board then appointed Shoichi Watanabe, Hitomi Yoshizato and Anders Lundqvist as new directors with the right to jointly represent the company. Sahashi and Lundqvist founded Nova in 1981.

The decision to file for bankruptcy was also made at the meeting, the company said.

Nova’s decision to seek court protection came just as Nova employees and the Osaka Central Labor Standards Supervision Office were turning up the heat over workers’ unpaid salaries.

The company has failed to pay about 2,000 Japanese employees since July and about 4,000 non-Japanese instructors since September, according to a union representing non-Japanese teachers employed by Nova.

Nova was already coming off of two consecutive years of net losses when its final spiral began earlier this year. Customers complained that the chain was running misleading ads about its services. Nova was also facing numerous lawsuits from students who wanted fuller refunds from canceled lesson contracts.

The crippling blow came in June, when the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry ordered Nova to partially suspend business because of false advertising. The penalty, which included a ban on long-term lesson contracts, caused student enrollment to plummet and sparked the closure of several schools. Paychecks began coming in late.

Nova was founded in 1981 and took off on a rapid expansion in the 1990s. It grew by offering cheaper lesson fees than rivals and launching aggressive marketing campaigns that spread to TV in the 1990s. After enrollment rose from 320,000 in business 2001 to 480,000 in 2005, it commanded as much as 47.0 percent of the English-language school market.

http://search.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/nn20071026z1.html

Nova language school chain goes under

[Nova] had been reeling from an administrative punishment issued in June over illegal practices, including deceiving would-be students with misleading advertisements.

One focus of attention will be whether Nova’s estimated 300,000 students will be able to receive refunds for the lesson fees they paid in advance.

The prepaid fees account for about 20 billion yen of the company’s liabilities.

Another question concerns the wages in arrears to many of about 4,000 instructors and 2,000 other employees.

http://www.asahi.com/english/Herald-asahi/TKY200710260289.html