Tag Archives: Student Loan Debt
Does An Indiana Bankruptcy End Student Loan Payments?
So far, the education debt crisis has triggered lots of talk and lots of editorials but almost no action. Yet recent evidence suggests that the crisis may be even worse that observers first believed. It appears that the Obama administration inflated repayment rates. Furthermore, a recent study details the long-term effects of massive education… Read More »
Student Loans And Bankruptcy In Illinois
Rising tuition costs and a competitive economy have produced a student loan crisis in America. Roughly 44 million people owe about $1.5 trillion in education debt. This debt load forces many recent graduates to put off certain purchases and also work at jobs they may not particularly like. Until about 1975, education debt was… Read More »
The ITT Bankruptcy And Student Loans
According to a government estimate, Uncle Sam will eventually spend about $461 million in education debt bailouts for students of the now-defunct college, but as these debts are only dischargeable in bankruptcy in limited circumstances, a taxpayer-funded bailout is probably the only option. The closed school discharge — a loophole in most federally-guaranteed student… Read More »
Feds Scrutinize Student Loan Repayments
Shortly before President Donald Trump was sworn into office, the Consumer Financial Protection bureau filed suit against one of the country’s largest student loan servicers. According to court documents, Navient was guilty of two sins. First, it failed to properly credit additional payments on existing loans, although part of the blame may fall on… Read More »
Changes Coming To Student Loan Payments?
President-elect Donald Trump wants to tweak existing federal programs and help borrowers repay their school loans at a comfortable pace. Under a plan he proposed in October 2016, monthly payments would be capped at 12.5 percent of the borrowers’ income for 180 months (15 years), and once the repayment period expires, any remaining student… Read More »
The Changing Face Of Bankruptcy And Student Loans
There is an old axiom among lawyers that “bad facts make bad law,” and the law regarding student loans and bankruptcy is an excellent example of this old saying. Congress passed the Bankruptcy Act in 1867, and passed substantive amendments in 1898. The Bankruptcy Code remained essentially unchanged until 1938, when lawmakers introduced the… Read More »
Former ITT Tech Students Begin Student Loan Strike
A few debt-ridden former students of the now defunct for-profit college are taking a stand against high student loan payments by intentionally refusing to make payments. More than 100 people announced the joint effort in a letter to President Barack Obama and Education Secretary John King. Despite the former college’s assurances that nearly three-fourths… Read More »
Student Debt Relief Scams
Are you struggling to make your monthly student loan payments? If so, you are not alone. Young Americans are carrying an unprecedented amount of student loan debt and many borrowers are having a hard time keeping up with their loan payments. Unfortunately, scam artists are capitalizing on this situation by running ads offering student… Read More »
Bankruptcy And Student Loan Debt
Until recently, it has been widely accepted that student loan-related debt can only be cancelled in a bankruptcy proceeding if the borrower is able to show that paying the debt would impose an ‘undue hardship’. Successfully showing an undue hardship in a bankruptcy case is hard to do and rarely happens. However, this may… Read More »