Debt Handling Solutions


Sometimes debt can seem overwhelming. In those instances, or even before things get that far out of hand, get back to basics and try some of these debt handling solutions.

BASICS Lower insurance deductibles for your homeowners, renters and vehicles policies where appropriate and save money. Dont take chances on bouncing checks; instead get covered with overdraft protection and pay about the same as what it would cost for one bounced check to cover our account for an entire year. Ask your banker about packaged account services. Many offer free savings and checking accounts with free overdraft protection and checks, free online bill paying and more. When you shop, check your receipts, even for groceries. Many times items ring up at incorrect prices. Sometimes store policy allows for no errors, meaning you get the items free if it wrings up wrong. So carry along a handheld calculator or pencil with small notepad to tally up your charges.


REACH OUT- If you have medical debt, the first thing healthcare offices try to do is get you to charge the bills or refinance your home, etc. STOP. Before you take such a drastic step, check with legal counsel. There are often other steps to take first. For example, notify the billing parties and tell them you need to apply for financial aid. Many have forms to complete, and although they may be lengthy, remember theyre for free money to pay your bills. Reach out, take forms and fill them out. Then set up minimum payment arrangements for the remaining balances, even if its just $10 a month for 30 years. Healthcare bills are not like credit card debt and do not need to be reported to the credit bureau in the same manner.


Also reach out with merchandise and return any recently purchased items that you can for a refund. Credit cards and mail order companies generally allow you 30 days to inspect your purchase. Return any you can for refunds. If purchases are beyond the 30 days and for various reasons dont hold up to their end of the bargain; i.e. they broke already or never worked right to begin with, get on a letter writing campaign pronto. Write the place of purchase and copy the manufacturer, the distributor, the Better Business Bureau and your state Attorney Generals Office. State the reasons our product is faulty and that you want a refund. Its often rewarding to get help with other entities like these. No need to go it alone!


So before your debt gets out of hand, take charge and get back to basics. Put some of these debt handling solutions into practice and make the most out of what you have.




Credit Card Debt Relief News

  • Danny Schechter: The Next Bubble Is on The Way: Credit Card Debt (HuffingtonPost)
    Fewer people are paying their credit card bills on time. And more are using high-interest credit card cash to pay at least part of their mortgages instead of the other way around.

  • Which airlines have the most financial staying power? (USA Today)
    The recent plunge in oil prices has brought airlines some relief, but they're still facing serious financial pressure from near-record jet-fuel prices and a weak economy. A new surge in oil prices would worsen their losses and force them to spend their cash faster or sell assets to raise money to stay in operation.

  • Mortgage Solutions for Bad Credit Clients May Revitalize the Industry (Business Wire via Yahoo! Finance)
    DALLAS----i3 Solutions today announced that Chris Reshetar - The Mortgage Genius - was able to close more bad credit mortgage loans then ever before by utilizing i3 Solutions' S.O.S. - Score Optimization System, the latest technology in the credit repair industry.

  • Shoppers scrimp, retailers limp (Fort Wayne Journal Gazette)
    NEW YORK – Consumers are pulling back. The latest round of second-quarter reports shows more signs of financial stress on shoppers, as Target’s customers stick to necessities and have trouble making their credit card payments. Photo caption: Luxury goods retailer Saks Inc. reported a wider-than-expected loss for the second quarter Tuesday. Photo by Associated Press photos

  • Credit con game (Crain's New York Business)
    Debt settlement outfit falsely promised relief as clients' woes grew; regulator acts

  • Resolving shortcomings of the IRS (Daily Press)
    N ina E. Olson, the official appointed to speak out on behalf of U.S. taxpayers, has a few major gripes about the Internal Revenue Service. Among them, she believes the agency needs to better protect victims of tax-related identity theft and should get more information out to homeowners about a new law eliminating taxes on debt canceled as a result of foreclosure.

  • Victims of tax-related ID theft deserve more from IRS, expert says (The Clarion-Ledger)
    Nina Olson, the official appointed to speak out on behalf of U.S. taxpayers, has a few major gripes about the Internal Revenue Service. Among them, she believes the agency needs to better protect victims of tax-related identity theft and should get more information out to homeowners about a new law eliminating taxes on debt canceled as a result of foreclosure.

  • Airlines emerge from profit-killing oil slick (USA Today)
    Summer season's end is approaching with an eight-day Labor Day travel period for which the airlines' trade association forecasts a sobering 6% drop in demand from a year ago. Yet conventional wisdom about airlines' survivability is changing rapidly, thanks in large measure to a $30-plus drop in the price of a barrel of oil.

  • Taxpayer advocate details where IRS falls short (Everett Herald)
    Nina Olson, the official appointed to speak out on behalf of U.S. taxpayers, has a few major gripes about the Internal Revenue Service.

  • Public Notices (Columbia Star)
    NOTICE TO: CAROLINE SUSAN HALL, last known address in Richland County, South Carolina. Previously Elginwood Dr., Elgin, SC 29045. Please Contact: Marshall Hall, 1567 Brazell Rd.