This Bright-Eyed Young Man Was Utterly Demolished By Studemotorcycle loansnt Loans

this bright-eyed young man was utterly demolished by student loansEven as total outstanding student debt rises to $1 trillion, lawmakers have yet to allow loans to be discharged in bankruptcy. Without an escape clause, these loans can strangle a person.Take 36-year-old Nick Keith, who remains $142,000 eight years after graduating from culinary school. He’s featured in a new film, “Default: The Student Loan Documentary,” in which several college graduates expose the pitfalls of the private student loan industry.”I want to educate the public about the facts,” Keith told Your Money. “My life has become a daily swim in a tar pit with very little hope of ever getting out.”Without Family Support, Turning to Culinary SchoolKeith’s father only agreed to co-sign a student loan if he stuck with an engineering degree at Iowa State University, but even with decent grades, he knew it wasn’t a right fit. He dropped out sophomore year and later turned to the California Culinary Academy — without his dad as a safety net — hoping to put his love for healthy eating to use. “The culinary academy commercials were on the Food Network every 15 minutes,” he said, and only required 12 months of study with a three month externship. He fell for their sales pitch hook, line and sinker.”I should have seen all the signs. [The campus tour guide] had a used car salesman answer for everything,” Keith recalls. The magic answer was always “99 percent” — whether Keith asked how many enrolled students graduated or how many graduates scored jobs afterward. Feeling confident, Keith took out $46,000 in private loans.He then took out another $14,000 in federal loans to cover his rent, since the school’s fees didn’t include room and board. But “I was lied to about the terms of the private student loan,” Keith says. “And after completing the program, my first job in the culinary field (working on a meal assembly line) paid $10 per hour.”Not the First to Be DupedIn September, the California Culinary Academy agreed to pay $40 million back to thousands of students in a class action suit claiming they were misled about the program. The school allegedly boasted a “48 percent to 100 percent” success rate for graduates looking for work, but students claimed the calculation included jobs that didn’t require a culinary education at all.With just a part-time job, it took Keith three months to make the first loan payment of $1,300.He was also paying a 19% variable interest rate – nearly triple the capped interest rate on federal unsubsidized loans.Related StoriesStudent Loans: Your 5-Step Plan to Pay Them OffCan’t Get a Mortgage? Blame Your Student LoansMiddle-Aged Workers Flock Back to School … and Student Loans“I spoke to (private loan issuer) Sallie Mae. I wrote to Sallie Mae. But Sallie Mae would not refinance my debt with a reasonable interest rate or reasonable payments,” he says. “I could not afford to make a student loan payment because my choice each month was to either pay my rent or make a student loan payment.”Sallie Mae’s best offer? A $50 to $100 reduction in his monthly payments.Bankruptcy Wasn’t an OptionNo matter how deep borrowers find themselves buried in student loan debt, federal law prevents them from discharging it in bankruptcy court — unless they can prove “undue hardship.” “Most bankruptcy attorneys do not pursue a discharge of student loans because the undue hardship restriction is such a harsh standard,” according to Mark Kantrowitz, publisher of FinAid.org.With no hope of meeting his monthly payments, Keith threw his hands up and basically let the debt collectors have at him. “They call every day, a couple times a day,” he says. “I send their numbers straight to voicemail.”Eventually he stopped making loan payments altogether

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