Tag Archive for consumers

Before You File for Personal Bankruptcy

Information About Credit Counseling and Debtor Education

The Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act of 2005 launched a new era: With limited exceptions, people who plan to file for bankruptcy protection must get credit counseling from a government-approved organization within 180 days before they file. They also must complete a debtor education course to have their debts discharged.

The Department of Justice’s U.S. Trustee Program approves organizations to provide the mandatory credit counseling and debtor education. Only the counselors and educators that appear on the U.S. Trustee Program’s lists can advertise that they are, indeed, approved to provide the required counseling and debtor education. By law, the U.S. Trustee Program does not operate in Alabama and North Carolina; in these states, court officials called Bankruptcy Administrators approve pre-bankruptcy credit counseling organizations and pre-discharge debtor education course providers.

Counseling and Education Requirements

As a rule, pre-bankruptcy credit counseling and pre-discharge debtor education may not be provided at the same time. Credit counseling must take place before you file for bankruptcy; debtor education must take place after you file.
In general, you must file a certificate of credit counseling completion when you file for bankruptcy, and evidence of completion of debtor education after you file for bankruptcy – but before your debts are discharged. Only credit counseling organizations and debtor education course providers that have been approved by the U.S. Trustee Program may issue these certificates. To protect against fraud, the certificates are produced through a central automated system and are numbered.

Pre-bankruptcy Counseling

A pre-bankruptcy counseling session with an approved credit counseling organization should include an evaluation of your personal financial situation, a discussion of alternatives to bankruptcy, and a personal budget plan. A typical counseling session should last about 60 to 90 minutes, and can take place in person, on the phone, or online. The counseling organization is required to provide the counseling free of charge for those consumers who cannot afford to pay. If you cannot afford to pay a fee for credit counseling, you should request a fee waiver from the counseling organization before the session begins. Otherwise, you may be charged a fee for the counseling, which will generally be about $50, depending on where you live, the types of services you receive, and other factors. The counseling organization is required to discuss any fees with you before starting the counseling session.

Once you have completed the required counseling, you must get a certificate as proof. Check the U.S. Trustee’s website to be sure that you receive the certificate from a counseling organization that is approved in the judicial district where you are filing bankruptcy. Credit counseling organizations may not charge an extra fee for the certificate.

Post-Filing Debtor Education

A debtor education course by an approved provider should include information on developing a budget, managing money, using credit wisely, and other resources. Like pre-filing counseling, debtor education may be provided in person, on the phone, or online. The debtor education session might last longer than the pre-filing counseling – about two hours – and the typical fee is between $50 and $100. As with pre-filing counseling, if you are unable to pay the session fee, you should seek a fee waiver from the debtor education provider. Check the list of approved debtor education providers at www.usdoj.gov/ust/eo/bapcpa/ccde/de_approved.htm or at the bankruptcy clerk’s office in your district.

Once you have completed the required debtor education course, you should receive a certificate as proof. This certificate is separate from the certificate you received after completing your pre-filing credit counseling. Check the U.S. Trustee’s website to be sure that you receive the certificate from a debtor education provider that is approved in the judicial district where you filed bankruptcy. Unless they have disclosed a charge to you before the counseling session begins, debtor education providers may not charge an extra fee for the certificate.

Important Questions to Ask When Choosing a Credit Counselor

It’s wise to do some research when choosing a credit counseling organization. If you are in search of credit counseling to fulfill the bankruptcy law requirements, make sure you receive services only from approved providers for your judicial district. Check the list at www.usdoj.gov/ust/eo/bapcpa/ccde/cc_approved.htm or at the bankruptcy clerk’s office for the district where you will file. Once you have the list of approved organizations in your judicial district, call several to gather information before you make your choice. Some key questions to ask are:

  • What services do you offer?
  • Will you help me develop a plan for avoiding problems in the future?
  • What are your fees?
  • What if I can’t afford to pay your fees?
  • What qualifications do your counselors have? Are they accredited or certified by an outside organization? What training do they receive?
  • What do you do to keep information about me (including my address, phone number, and financial information) confidential and secure?
  • How are your employees paid? Are they paid more if I sign up for certain services, if I pay a fee, or if I make a contribution to your organization?

Learn more>

A fresh start with bankruptcy? Lenders holding your credit report hostage after a BK.

This is a HUGE problem. In a financial version of Night of the Living Dead, debts forgiven by bankruptcy courts are springing back to life to haunt consumers. Fueling these miniature horror stories is an unlikely market in which seemingly extinguished debts are avidly bought and sold.

The case of Van Rathavongsa illustrates how canceled debts regain vitality. The Raleigh (N.C.) factory worker pulled himself out from beneath a mountain of bills by means of a bankruptcy proceeding that wrapped up in 2002. One of the debts the judge canceled, or “discharged,” was $9,523 Rathavongsa owed to Capital One Financial (COF), the big credit-card company. But Capital One continued to report the factory worker’s discharged debt to credit bureaus as a live balance, according to documents filed in U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Raleigh.

This kind of failure by creditors to update credit reports happens with some frequency, consumer lawyers and court-employed bankruptcy trustees say. And it can have consequences: In September, 2003, when Rathavongsa tried to close on a $274,650 mortgage for a new house, his would-be lender, Wachovia (WB), said he would either have to pay Capital One or show proof from the credit-card company that the debt had been discharged. Despite several calls and a letter from his attorney, he says, Capital One never revised the credit report. To obtain the home loan, Rathavongsa eventually did what many consumers in this situation do. He gave in and paid Capital One $9,523 he no longer legally owed.

“Happens All the Time, Your Honor”

Because of episodes like this, discharged debts have attracted the attention of little-known firms expert at buying and selling a range of delinquent consumer obligations. Back-due bills with a face value of billions of dollars change hands at a steep discount every year. Five of the companies in this business are publicly traded on Nasdaq. Others have large private-money backers. B-Line, in Seattle, was acquired last year by the Dallas-based hedge fund firm Lone Star Funds. The investment bank Bear Stearns (BSC) owns two bankruptcy-debt buyers: Max Recovery and eCast Settlement.

Read more>

Fixing your credit from divorce

Getting divorced is stressful enough but the effects on your credit reports can literally ruin you- financially. The good news is however that you can clean up your credit after a nasty divorce using some pointers below along with a lot of patience.

Determining your credit issues

First of all it is absolutely necessary to evaluate your credit as it stands now. Are there major issues like a pending foreclosure, unpaid credit card debts or even back child support hindering your credit? If so you need to approach each issue separate and use any documentation you have to prove that the item doesn’t belong there. Of course in a marriage both partners are usually responsible for debts incurred during the marriage but if the debts were incurred while you were separated or without your knowledge then you may not be liable for those debts. Sitting down and reviewing all three credit reports is a must.

One item may not be on all three credit reports so before you can begin disputing the entry to a credit bureau you have to determine which bureau is picking up the item and then write your dispute to that particular bureau. In your dispute be concise and include any documentation you have such as a copy of your separation agreement and who is to pay the debt and or your divorce papers to prove the debt was incurred after the divorce and without your knowledge.

Please note however that even a court ordered agreement of who pays what from the marriage does not overrule a contract that was created during the marriage. The creditor doesn’t care who the judge ordered to pay the debts and if one person defaults they have the right to go after either or both.

Contacting the credit bureaus

Once you have determined which debts you are going to challenge you then need to draft your dispute letters to the credit bureaus. There are three major credit bureaus and soon there may be a fourth bureau that you will have to consider.

Equifax P.O. Box 740241 Atlanta, GA 30374 800-685-1111

TransUnion Consumer Disclosure Center P.O. Box 390 Springfield, PA 19064-0390 1-800-888-4213

Experian P.O. Box 2104 Allen, TX 75013-2104 1-800-682-7654

Be sure to send your disputes CMRR- certified mail return receipt so that you will have a paper trail of your communications with the credit bureaus. By law the bureaus have 30 days to investigate the items and send you a new updated version of what they decided. If any portion of the item they investigated was obsolete or unverifiable, it will be removed. Even accurate but negative credit can be removed because the credit bureaus must be able to verify everything as 100% accurate. If they cannot, the item must be removed. This is how many charge offs, judgments, liens and even bankruptcies are removed. The Fair Credit Reporting Act governs these actions.

How long can bad credit remain legally?

That depends. It is 7 years for debts and 10 years for bankruptcy although some credit bureaus only report a bankruptcy chapter 13 for 7 years because at least the debtor is attempting to repay his debts. Judgments can remain until the statute of limitations expires to collect it.

Following up

Just as disputing is the only way to get results so is follow up. Without a solid plan of attack you will accomplish very little. Be sure you are diligent about following up on the bureaus investigation and if need be turn your efforts to the original creditor or the source reporting the item. If you are a patient person you can use credit repair aids and do the work yourself. If you are looking for convenience then you can hire a credit repair attorney to do the work for you. Either way the same methods are used which are disputing to the credit bureaus using the FCRA- Fair Credit Reporting Act, validating debts, checking SOL’s (statute of limitations for the collectibility of the debt) and and being persistent.

Kristi Feathers is an author and speaker on credit issues. To reach Kristi you can visit her site at http://www.kristifeathers.com/ or http://www.carreonandassociates.com/ to purchase her credit management guide for consumers

Affordable credit repair solutions

Consumers are often overwhelmed by credit repair. The words alone send some consumers into denial. Most are afraid they’ll make their credit worse or they assume hiring someone to do it for them costs too much money.

That’s not always the case. With the advent of technology, streamlining credit repair is getting faster and better for consumers. About 10 years ago, it was a tedious process getting your credit reports to a credit repair agency and waiting for results.

Nowadays, it can be as easy as signing up online and sitting back waiting for the results. Don’t get me wrong, I think a lot of people have what it takes to do the task themselves but if you’re one of millions who find it overwhelming or simply don’t understand or have the time to fix your credit, then hiring a pro can be beneficial.

As always, as with any service, know who you are hiring. When seeking a credit repair company always look to their policy of refunds or guarantees. Make sure the company has a clean and clear BBB record (Better Business Bureau) and make a list of questions to ask before you sign up.

Once you’ve decided who you’ll hire then you can get on the road to better credit. Critics often say that credit repair is impossible. I don’t buy that at all. I’ve repaired many many credit reports. It’s possible and fortunately for us consumers, the bureaus and creditors make lots of mistakes.

I say make your credit the absolute best you can. Once you get there, keep it pristine.

A good source of FAQ about credit repair is DSI. Click here to read their FAQ on credit repair procedures, guarantees and more.