I was reading a quarterly law update in Colorado BK.
Some guy was trying to get out of his student loans only 3 years after getting his master's degree maintaining an undue hardship. They stated that he was healthy, well-educated, and employed and the debtor had not tried to minimize current household expenses.
Now, this is the part that bugs me: "The Court also found that the debtor was not actively maximizing his personal and professional resources, including attempts to find work in his field, to obtain a higher paying job, and was not willing to relocate to obtain a higher paying job."
I know this only applied in this case for someone trying to weasel out of their student loans, but that statement burns my butt!
I have a master's degree (which I'm only going to reveal if asked now). When I was part of an "involuntary resource reduction"--or as Trump would say, "You're Fired", 700 of us were dumped into the local workforce after 1,000 from the same company were dumped the previous year. A few other tech businesses folded and before we knew it, there were over 5,000 dumped within a very short time period into a saturated market.
I went from job interview to job interview hearing the word "overqualified" one too many times along with "we can't afford you" before even asking my past salary and current salary requirements. The only jobs that would maintain my last salary would require 85-100% travel, and, physically and mentally, that was something I just could not do anymore (I had done that for about 3 of my 10 years at the other company.)
Has anyone ever heard of this [not utilizing one's degree] being used to deny someone their BK request stating that they should be making a better monthly income?
P.S. Jane, hope you read this since I know you're in the same boat with "over-educated".
Some guy was trying to get out of his student loans only 3 years after getting his master's degree maintaining an undue hardship. They stated that he was healthy, well-educated, and employed and the debtor had not tried to minimize current household expenses.
Now, this is the part that bugs me: "The Court also found that the debtor was not actively maximizing his personal and professional resources, including attempts to find work in his field, to obtain a higher paying job, and was not willing to relocate to obtain a higher paying job."
I know this only applied in this case for someone trying to weasel out of their student loans, but that statement burns my butt!
I have a master's degree (which I'm only going to reveal if asked now). When I was part of an "involuntary resource reduction"--or as Trump would say, "You're Fired", 700 of us were dumped into the local workforce after 1,000 from the same company were dumped the previous year. A few other tech businesses folded and before we knew it, there were over 5,000 dumped within a very short time period into a saturated market.
I went from job interview to job interview hearing the word "overqualified" one too many times along with "we can't afford you" before even asking my past salary and current salary requirements. The only jobs that would maintain my last salary would require 85-100% travel, and, physically and mentally, that was something I just could not do anymore (I had done that for about 3 of my 10 years at the other company.)
Has anyone ever heard of this [not utilizing one's degree] being used to deny someone their BK request stating that they should be making a better monthly income?
P.S. Jane, hope you read this since I know you're in the same boat with "over-educated".
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