WyoTech is a for-profit vocational school focusing on vehicle servicing and repair and other skilled trades. WyoTech has six campuses. It is a division of Corinthian Colleges, Inc. a publicly traded corporation and owner of Everest College, Everest University, Everest Institute, and Heald College.
On its Web site, WyoTech promises to help its students find grants, financial aid, and loans.
Private student loans define a default as occurring after 120 days of non-payment. Regarding collections, private student loans are similar to unsecured debt. If you default on a private loan, the creditor or collection agency must sue you in civil court. If a judgment is won, the creditor or collection agency can ask to have wages garnished and/or liens placed against properties or financial accounts. The only thing that differs a private student loan from an unsecured debt is the fact that private student loans are not dischargeable in a bankruptcy filing, generally speaking.
Private lenders must file a lawsuit against you and obtain a judgment before they can garnish your wages, so it takes private student loan lenders longer to begin a garnishment than the Dept. of Education to accomplish the same thing. Depending on where you live, private lenders with a judgment against you could garnish as much as 25% of your after-tax wages. However, the amount that can be garnished is specific to your state, so you need to look into your state laws on garnishment to determine how much of your pay can be garnished by private lenders.
Texas and Pennsylvania, for example, do not allow wage garnishment for unsecured debts such as private student loans. To try to stop a garnishment resulting from a private loan, you should contact the creditor to discuss your financial situation and try to negotiate an alternate payment plan. Unfortunately, the creditor may not be willing to stop the garnishment voluntarily, forcing you to explore alternative options.
Options
As mentioned above, private student lenders must use your state's court system to get a judgment, which if granted will allow the lender to get a garnishment, account levy, or lien. You mentioned you live in Wisconsin. To learn more about your rights as a Wisconsin resident, see the Bills.com resource Wisconsin Collection Laws. Readers in other states can find information on the Bills.com Collection Laws page. You must look to your state's laws to learn your rights to defend yourself in a lawsuit. You must also look to your state's laws to learn the limits for wage garnishment, account levy, and lien.
I hope this information helps you Find. Learn & Save.
Best,
Bill
November 12, 2010
Loading more commentsSince you don't have facebook, please provide us with your location and a valid email address so we can answer it. Without a valid email address,we can't reply. (Go back to login with Facebook)
Due to the high volume of comments received, we cannot publish and/or respond to every comment received. If you have a specific question, we recommend you search our site for an answer before commenting.
* Bills.com will not share, sell, lend, or make public your e-mail address. We reserve the right to delete any questions or comments that violate the Bills.com terms of service.
We get a lot of comments! To help us show our boss that this is a valuable service, so we can keep providing it, we ask you to do 2 things before commmenting:
Log in
Like us
Submit your comment!
Due to the high volume of comments received, we cannot publish and/or respond to every comment received. If you have a specific question, we recommend you search our site for an answer before commenting.
* Bills.com will not share, sell, lend, or make public your e-mail address. We reserve the right to delete any questions or comments that violate the Bills.com terms of service.
Thank you for your comment. Your comment will be posted shortly.
Comments (1)