Bankruptcy Debt Reporting

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Should You Declare Bankruptcy?

Author: Raul Levine

Personal bankruptcy generally is considered the debt management option of last resort because the results are long-lasting and far-reaching. A bankruptcy stays on your credit report for 10 years, and can make it difficult to obtain credit, buy a home, get life insurance, or sometimes get a job. Still, it is a legal procedure that offers a fresh start for people who can’t satisfy their debts. People who follow the bankruptcy rules receive a discharge – a court order that says they don’t have to repay certain debts.

The consequences of bankruptcy are significant and require careful consideration. Other factors to think about: Effective October 2005, Congress made sweeping changes to the bankruptcy laws. The net effect of these changes is to give consumers more incentive to seek bankruptcy relief under Chapter 13 rather than Chapter 7. Chapter 13 allows you, if you have a steady income, to keep property, such as a mortgaged house or car, that you might otherwise lose. In Chapter 13, the court approves a repayment plan that allows you to use your future income to pay off your debts during a three-to-five-year period, rather than surrender any property. After you have made all the payments under the plan, you receive a discharge of your debts.

Chapter 7, known as straight bankruptcy, involves the sale of all assets that are not exempt. Exempt property may include cars, work-related tools, and basic household furnishings. Some of your property may be sold by a court-appointed official – a trustee – or turned over to your creditors. The new bankruptcy laws have changed the time period during which you can receive a discharge through Chapter 7. You now must wait eight years after receiving a discharge in Chapter 7 before you can file again under that chapter. The Chapter 13 waiting period is much shorter and can be as little as two years between filings.

Both types of bankruptcy may get rid of unsecured debts and stop foreclosures, repossessions, garnishments and utility shut-offs, and debt collection activities. Both also provide exemptions that allow you to keep certain assets, although exemption amounts vary by state. Personal bankruptcy usually does not erase child support, alimony, fines, taxes, and some student loan obligations. Also, unless you have an acceptable plan to catch up on your debt under Chapter 13, bankruptcy usually does not allow you to keep property when your creditor has an unpaid mortgage or security lien on it.

Another major change to the bankruptcy laws involves certain hurdles that you must clear before even filing for bankruptcy, no matter what the chapter. You must get credit counseling from a government-approved organization within six months before you file for any bankruptcy relief. You can find a state-by-state list of government-approved organizations at the U.S. Trustee Program, the organization within the U.S. Department of Justice that supervises bankruptcy cases and trustees. Also, before you file a Chapter 7 bankruptcy case, you must satisfy a “means test.” This test requires you to confirm that your income does not exceed a certain amount. The amount varies by state and is publicized by the U.S. Trustee Program.

Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/finance-articles/should-you-declare-bankruptcy-1430389.html

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Central District Consumer Bankruptcy Attorneys

Expert Central NJ Bankruptcy ...

Bankruptcy Filers Should See Improved Credit Score

Author: David Siegel

A recent court order has required the three major credit bureaus (Experian, Equifax and TransUnion) to clean up the credit reports of millions of consumers who have filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy protection. What often has happened is that old debt, discharged in the bankruptcy filing continues to appear on individual’s credit reports.

The case has come out of the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California and the Honorable Judge David O. Carter has made the ruling. He has given the credit bureaus until today (October 1, 2008) to revamp their systems to handle making the required changes. According to Jane J. Kim of the Wall Street Journal, Experian and TransUnion appear to have already updated their systems. Equifax, on the other hand, has not issued a comment.

In my personal experience as a consumer bankruptcy attorney, I have heard countless horror stories from clients whose credit reports were filled with misinformation. Particularly, discharged debts were not properly updated on the credit bureaus. The creditor, who has just had a debt eliminated, has no incentive to help assist the debtor by reporting the debt as discharged to the bureaus. Under the new court order, the impetus has been placed on the bureaus to make sure that prior debt, discharged in a chapter 7 bankruptcy case, does not show as due and owing.

As a bankruptcy attorney, I always advise about the fresh start that Chapter 7 usually provides. The misinformation on the credit bureaus after the discharge has been a frustrating event that debtors have had to confront. It usually involved a letter writing campaign, disputing the negative items on a credit report that should have been eliminated.

It will be very interesting to see what kind of bounce prior clients receive to their credit score. It could mean a substantial savings when it comes to obtaining future credit. With the credit score being so important today, any increase in the credit score can means thousands of dollars over the course of an auto loan or mortgage.

If you have had a Chapter 7 bankruptcy case within the last ten years, I would recommend obtaining a copy of each of your three credit reports from the major bureaus. This can be done for free at www.annualcreditreport.com. If you are seeing negative information that should have been removed, take the necessary time to dispute that information in writing. By doing so, and with the help of the recent court order, you should see an increase in your credit score.

Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/law-articles/bankruptcy-filers-should-see-improved-credit-score-586211.html

About the Author

David M. Siegel is the author of Chapter 7 Success: The Complete Guide to Surviving Personal Bankruptcy. He is a member of the American Bankruptcy Institute and currently practices bankruptcy law in Chicago and its surrounding suburbs. Additional information is available at Chicago Bankruptcy.


Bankruptcy Requirements

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Credit Counseling Clients Hurt by Latest Bankruptcy Requirements

Author: Cary Olson

The Bankruptcy Abuse and Consumer Protection Act was passed in early 2005 with the overwhelming support of the President, both houses of Congress and the major credit card companies.  The law, which created sweeping changes in American bankruptcy law, was passed in order to reduce the possibility that consumers with heavy debts might avoid choose to avoid paying them by seeking debt relief through the courts.  The Act has many provisions, but the one that may hurt consumers the most was the one provision that was intended to help – the requirement that debtors undergo mandatory credit counseling before filing for bankruptcy.

On the surface, the requirement seems to be laudable.  Few people ever receive any sort of formal money management training, so a bit of counseling, even as bankruptcy approaches, might help debtors avoid further financial trouble in the future.  The law was passed with the intention that, once educated, consumers would stay out of bankruptcy court in the years to come.

It hasn’t worked out that way, and the bankruptcy law is largely to blame.  The law did not set a fee for this required credit counseling, but a fee of was suggested and consumers who cannot afford to pay the fee may ask to have it waived.  Only certain nonprofit counseling agencies would be approved for pre-bankruptcy counseling.  These requirements have resulted in a mess in the counseling industry that benefits virtually no one.  Relatively few agencies have been approved; the ones that have are very busy.  The suggested fee of , when paid at all, is not enough to cover the costs of keeping the agencies’ offices open.   Consumers are ending up getting their “counseling” via the Internet, or a conference call, or in a large group meeting.  This sort of thing may satisfy the requirements of the law, but it isn’t helping the people it was intended to help.

Credit counseling is certainly a worthwhile endeavor, but only if done properly.  The counselor and the client should have sufficient time to become acquainted, discuss an overview of the counseling process and to have an in-depth discussion of the client’s specific financial situation.  After all, if the client cannot receive information that he or she can apply directly to his or her own finances, the entire point of providing the service becomes rather moot.

Instead, we have a situation where the clients are being poorly served and the counseling agencies are barely scraping by financially.  It seems unlikely that this is what Congress had in mind when they passed the bill.  Anyone who has a problem with debt would certainly benefit from counseling and is encouraged to seek it out.  Those who do would be advised to select a counseling agency that has the time and resources to provide the in-depth sort of help from which a client can actually benefit.  Otherwise, the result is a waste of time for all involved.

Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/finance-articles/credit-counseling-clients-hurt-by-latest-bankruptcy-requirements-2463838.html

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Bankruptcy Rates

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How bad does bankruptcy affect my credit score?

Author: Mel Jensen

How bad does bankruptcy affect my credit score?

Bankruptcy will always be the most negative thing on a credit report. It will have a major impact on your score but it can be offset by what is left on your credit report. It is important that you work to correct what is on your credit report and what caused you to file bankruptcy.

The number of accounts included in your bankruptcy will also cause greater damage. The bankruptcy can be listed on your credit report for up to 10 years. Each account that you have listed in the bankruptcy can also be reported on your credit report. Those items should also show that they were included in the bankruptcy. Many times those accounts don’t get updated so they show that they were charged off or maybe even in collections. You will need to dispute them to get them to report accurately. It may also take several disputes to get that corrected.

It is critical that if you have filed bankruptcy recently, then you should begin to rebuild your credit as soon as possible. Start by opening a small credit account (secure account if necessary) and build your credit. Only apply for credit that you need and don’t open too many accounts.

Do credit repair on your credit history on anything that is not reporting accurately. Then keep up all accounts by paying them on time and in full. This will help rebuild your credit and you will see your credit score rise as those bad accounts get older and older.

Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/credit-articles/how-bad-does-bankruptcy-affect-my-credit-score-837600.html

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Bankruptcy Reform

Obam-O's Breakfast of Chumps ...

Bankruptcy Backfire! Is Bankruptcy “Reform” Biting the Hand that Fed it?

Author: Warren Graham

As anyone who follows the world of bankruptcy knows, as of October 17, 2005, substantial and, from the point of view of consumers, painful changes were made to the Federal Bankruptcy Laws. At the behest, primarily, of the credit card providers and banks, who had been lobbying for years, new legislation was drafted and approved setting the stage for stricter requirements governing (primarily, though not exclusively) personal bankruptcy. This legislation came at great cost to its proponents, and it was expected that it would lead to fewer defaults and more repayment plans, all of which would redound to the benefit of the banks and credit card issuers.

While it is still too early to say, with any certainty, what the overall effect on defaults will be, it seems that, statistically, Chapter 7 filings are rising again, and the expected relative increase of Chapter 13 repayment plans may not, in fact, be materializing. Fewer debtors than one might expect have been disqualified from Chapter 7 relief by “means testing.”

In addition, at the same time that the new bankruptcy laws were taking effect, credit card issuers and banks were finding creative ways to avoid usury problems by domiciling themselves in creditor-friendly states, such as South Dakota, and default rates for consumers now exceed 30% in some cases. Defaults, for those consumers (virtually all of them, I daresay) who have not read the fine print in their credit card disclosures, may be caused not only by late payments, but by high debt to income ratios observed in periodic reviews by card issuers, and defaults under other credit card agreements. The consolidation of issuers, of course, means that there are only a few issuers out there now. Coupled with this have been changes to “minimum payment” rules, so that where a credit card holder carrying a balance might have been able to carry a 0 per month minimum payment, the combination of 30+% APR’s and higher minimum payment rules may have increased that to 0, or more. Multiply that by the 5 or 6 cards that a consumer might be holding, and, well, one can easily see where this is going. But that same cardholder is now facing higher obstacles to Chapter 7 filings, simply by being, statistically, in the “middle class” and exceeding his or her state’s median income.

What will the result of this be? It’s hard to tell, but one likely scenario is higher defaults with no bankruptcy option. For those cardholders who own a home, with equity, Chapter 13 may not be a viable option because of the sheer amount of debt they are now carrying, relative to their incomes, so the risk of losing their homes may be substantially enhanced. If this happens on a large-scale basis, there will surely be an outcry to “reform” the “reform.” The credit card issuers and banks, having paid dearly for this legislation, may well have overplayed their hand.

Furthermore, those cardholder who can, have, in large numbers, been paying off their balances, outraged as they are by being socked with APR’s exceeding 30%. This has already hurt the bottom line of credit card issuers and their bank affiliates, who make nothing on cardholders who don’t carry a balance. The pot of gold for them is in cardholders carrying balances and paying high rates, and even better, those consumers paying late fees when they get in over their heads, or overlimit fees when, as in many cases, the suddenly increased interest rates take them unexpectedly over their limits. Late fees and overlimit fees are often now in the – range.

The result? Less income for the creditors as consumers have wised up. MBNA and Capital One, two huge credit card providers, are seeing their profits sink. Other credit card providers are reporting similar results. Highly dependent on your desire to run up debt, these companies are now seeing their profit margins drop sharply. In a nutshell: high consumer debt equals big profits; low consumer debt levels equals low profits.

During the last five to ten years, beginning in the halcyon days of the late 1990′s when, it seems, everyone was an internet or high tech millionaire on paper, Congress was amenable to bankruptcy reform to address real or perceived abuses. The banks had the will and the cash to finance legislation and, after years of almost getting there, finally got to the “Promised Land” in 2005. By contrast, consumers, many of them unsophisticated, who had been given credit cards as if they were candy, with low “teaser” rates, just couldn’t resist the lure of easy credit, big screen TV’s. Predictably, they acted irresponsibly. But while the lobbyists worked their magic for MBNA and Chase, the consumer had no lobby with which to oppose bankruptcy reform. I’m sure that for the most part, they had no clue as to what was in store for them. Those consumers in the lower economic strata still have no lobby, but they will still be eligible for Chapter 7 relief. The challenge for the banks is the pain is moving up the ladder to the middle class homeowner. The howling is bound to be heard, and soon.

Warren R. Graham
Copyright 2006

Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/finance-articles/bankruptcy-backfire-is-bankruptcy-reform-biting-the-hand-that-fed-it-24989.html

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