Fortune | FORTUNE 2024年10月26日
A 38-year-old with $38,000 in student debt tells other generations, ‘I highly recommend finding a way to avoid taking out loans’
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文章讲述了一些人在学生贷款还款重启后面临的困境,如Megan McClelland需重新规划预算,Justin Cole为还款发愁等。同时提到了一些贷款减免或救济的途径,以及Megan对高中生的贷款建议。还提到了相关支持和报道信息。

🧑Megan McClelland是加州一所高中的辅导员,她通过兼职增加收入,在贷款暂停期间还清车贷并首次有了积蓄。还款重启后,她需重新规划预算,减少外出就餐,增加兼职。

👨Justin Cole每月需偿还约166美元的贷款,虽工作有加薪但未生效,且他还有其他债务。他希望贷款能被免除,以改善信用状况和开始存钱。

💡提到了一些学生贷款救济途径,如公共服务贷款减免计划,以及错误认证、借款人辩护、学校关闭、完全/永久性残疾免除和收入驱动还款等替代还款计划。

📚Megan McClelland现在花很多时间辅导高中生如何避免背负沉重贷款,她自己虽努力工作但仍有债务,她以自身经历建议学生寻找避免贷款的方法。

Megan McClelland, 38, said last year that she started asking for more shifts with a catering company and a winery to help supplement her income.McClelland’s main job is as a counselor at Petaluma High School in California. During the more than three years payments were suspended because of the pandemic, she paid off her car loan and was able to save for the first time. She’ll put the $235 she was spending on her car payment toward her student loan, but that still leaves another $270 or so in her budget she had to reallocate or earn.“It had been a huge relief the past few years to not have that financial burden,” she said. “In the next months, I’m looking to see where I can scale back in my budget. Probably less going out to eat, and more picking up side gigs.”And Justin Cole, 35, of Little Rock, Arkansas, said he didn’t know how he was going to come up with the $166 a month once repayments restarted. That’s the estimated payment on his roughly $19,000 of loans from paying for college more than 10 years ago.“I’m already in a mountain of debt, and while I just got a raise at work, it doesn’t go into effect until we’re full staffed at my family practice clinic,” he said.Cole works the front office at a medical practice, checking in patients, handling records and managing payment collection. Some of his other debt comes from medical expenses after a car accident early in the pandemic.“If those loans were forgiven, I could finally work on getting my credit up and actually saving money for once,” he said. “If they were forgiven out of the blue, I’d be ecstatic.”Unfortunately for borrowers, the Supreme Court rejected a plan by President Joe Biden’s administration to wipe away $400 billion in student loan debt.How to get student loan relief or forgivenessThe Public Service Loan Forgiveness program is one of several avenues for relief still available to many with student debt. After Biden’s original plan for forgiveness was struck down by the Supreme Court last July, the White House has said it will use the Higher Education Act to bring cancellation to more borrowers. It’s currently undergoing a process known as “negotiated rule-making” to determine the details of that plan.Other sources for relief for borrowers include: false certification, borrower defense, closed school, total/permanent disability discharges, and alternate repayment programs like income-driven repayment.McClelland, for her part, said she now spends a lot of time counseling high school students on how to avoid taking on burdensome loans.“I had no financial guidance when I was younger, from my own parents or from school,” she said. “I didn’t ever understand the long term impact.”Despite working while in school and since — moonlighting at Starbucks, wineries and restaurants as well as counseling — McClelland still has a balance of about $38,000 in debt, from original loans of $10,000 towards her undergraduate studies and $40,000 for her masters in counseling at Sonoma State.“I knew I wanted to go to college, and my parents didn’t have any money,” McClelland said. “I tell kids all the time, openly, ‘As someone who was once in your shoes, I highly recommend finding a way to avoid taking out loans.’ When you’re 17 or 18 years old, you think, ‘Oh, sure, I’ll figure this out.’ Then it’s frustrating to still be in this financial situation.”___The Associated Press receives support from Charles Schwab Foundation for educational and explanatory reporting to improve financial literacy. The independent foundation is separate from Charles Schwab and Co. Inc. The AP is solely responsible for its journalism.This story was originally published on September 30, 2023.Recommended newsletter Next to Lead: Get the strategies and insights you need to make it to the corner office, delivered to your inbox each week. Sign up here.

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