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What Happens to Condo or Homeowners Fees in Bankruptcy?

Many New Yorkers live in condos or homeowner communities as opposed to independent, single-unit owner-occupied or rental housing. Keeping a home in New York bankruptcy is a common topic, as is protecting the interests of renters—including those in rent-stabilized units—but not so much is said about condos or homeowner communities. In New York City such …

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Bankruptcy Courts: Parent PLUS Loans Stay, Bar-Exam Loans Go

Two bankruptcy cases made the news in March that will be of interest to New York bankruptcy debtors. One of them was even a Brooklyn bankruptcy. The first case appeared in the Boston Globe. Echoing my post on the economic risk calculator, a debtor earned $165,000 annually as president of a manufacturing company and borrowed …

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Downsizing Can Benefit Above-Water Homeowners

There’s quite a bit to say to homeowners who are underwater on their mortgages: short sale, offering the deed in lieu of foreclosure, refinancing, obtaining a mortgage modification, staying and paying, surrendering the home in New York bankruptcy, or even walking away. By contrast there isn’t much advice for homeowners who are barely above water. …

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New York Fed: Consumer Debtors Getting Older

The Federal Reserve Bank of New York regularly produces interesting analyses of consumer credit, and recently it’s blogged about how patterns in consumer debt behavior have shifted for both younger and older demographics between 2003 and 2015. Its findings have some implications for economic growth, young student-loan borrowers specifically, and possible trends in New York …

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7 Ways Debtors Benefit From the 2016 Bankruptcy Dollar-Amount Adjustments

Step aside February 29th, April 1st is the real leap year for 2016. No, the calendar didn’t change; rather, the federal government will adjust the Bankruptcy Code’s dollar amounts to correspond with inflation, something it does once every three years. Specifically, section 104(a) lists all of the parts of the Bankruptcy Code containing dollar figures …

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Student-Loan Delinquencies Fall Hardest on Middle-Income Minorities

A few weeks back, the Washington Center for Equitable Growth (WCEG) continued its geographic study of student-loan debt, this time focusing on debtors’ races. Because of the fraught path to discharging student loans in bankruptcy, falling behind on loan payments can disqualify debtors from helpful protections like income-based repayment programs. Consequently, when the WCEG found …

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Researchers Disagree Over Debt-Management Strategies

It’s unusual for august publications like Scientific American to discuss why people might not manage debts as well as they should, particularly those who are otherwise good with numbers. Nevertheless, that’s exactly the question a guest blog post tackled recently: Debtors with multiple debts tend to focus on paying down the ones with the smallest …

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