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TWO QUESTIONS: School and Foreclosure

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  • cin
    replied
    Angelina, you couldn't touch ANY of your retirement funds? I can't touch anything in TIAA, but the money I have in CREF are liquid. Maybe that's because I was employed for (2 months short of) 30 years? I also have some money in Fidelity. About 2 years ago, the University I worked for added Fidelity as an option other than ONLY Tiaa-Cref ....

    I have about 60K total liquid (Cref and Fidelity) and the money in TIAA cannot be touched. I am only planning to take enough from the 60K to "clear" 15K for tuition. I want it to be obvious to a bk trustee that the ONLY reason I took that money was for tuition ....

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  • cin
    replied
    One more thing I need to investigate is to open a "self-directed 401K". I was told I could set this up, hire a "custodian" to direct it, and have them direct some funds to pay for my tuition, bypassing the Unemployment department completely. If ANYONE here knows anything about this, could you sent me an e mail? I am at

    [email removed]

    Thanks!!
    Last edited by HHM; 08-06-2012, 06:05 AM. Reason: Someone can PM, but publishing email is not good idea.

    Leave a comment:


  • cin
    replied
    Thank you again everyone. I read in Massachusetts that funds for training were just approved in late July -- these funds are NOT available through unemployment yet, but instead are being released TO the companies/schools who have agreed to train folks like me (Workforce Competitive Trust Fund). This led me to the name of a woman at Blue Hills Regional Community College, and I will send her an e mail today and hopefully meet with her this week or next .... I am doing everything I can think of to go to school next September and pay for it in July .....

    As for online courses, that is not possible ... there are a lot of labs I would have to go to, which cannot be done from home. BUT I thought i might be good idea to try to find some online courses to get a jump on anatomy, physiology, nutrition, math, etc ... I graduated HS in 1977! Back then, I was 17, lived here in Mass, and decided to move to San Diego and smoke a bit of "something" and find the meaning of life .... How awesome to be so free of worry ....

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  • jcsawyer
    replied
    Federal pell grants are not being cut it would definitely give her at least another $5500 for tuition that she doesnt have to take out of the 401k, also my local Community college is offering free retraining courses if you are unemployed! They are also online you dont have to go to the school to do it. It is also in the medical field so it is also an option. Be sure to count all of your chickens, it seems to me that you are attempting to hatch them before they are even laid!

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  • AngelinaCat
    replied
    Originally posted by kawh View Post
    Also, the 401k she has may have a rule like mine did, that you can't take out or rollover just part of it, it has to be all or nothing. Sometimes the funds you have in a 401k won't all transfer to the new custodian. Then they have to liquidate some of your holdings and you wind up with cash instead. This may not be the best market timing for that to happen, with cash earning so little and equities down. Just depends on what the 401k currently holds for investments.
    I would add to this comment that in addition to the 401k that 'Hub liquidated, I have a TIAA-CREF account that I got back in 1976. I cannot touch it until I am 65. Period. Which turned out to be a good thing, because if I could have gotten to it about the time we liquidated the 401k, I would have. So perhaps in a few more years, I might have a little bit extra Retirement...

    As to the schooling, go to your Financial Aid office, and / or the Guidance Office and see if you qualify for a Pell Grant. Even though I think I heard that they were being cut, it is still worth a try.

    Good luck to you.

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  • cin
    replied
    Yup, I just learned about the hampster wheel game too! LOL....

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  • keepsmiling
    replied
    Originally posted by tobee43 View Post
    we're pretty much happy that you found us 2

    keep...why do you never cease to amaze me LOL!!! i thought that site was a secret, since i haven't heard many talk about it.
    Tobee my dear friend-- everything I know I learned from the amazing people here.
    You can learn a lot when you waste I mean spend as much time here as I do.

    Leave a comment:


  • tobee43
    replied
    Originally posted by cin View Post
    Wow this info is very helpful -- You folks are awesome! I can't even TELL you how relieved I am to have found you!!!
    we're pretty much happy that you found us 2

    keep...why do you never cease to amaze me LOL!!! i thought that site was a secret, since i haven't heard many talk about it.

    Leave a comment:


  • kawh
    replied
    Originally posted by keepsmiling View Post
    ... the Hampster Wheel game...
    omg, I just looked up what this is, had not heard of it. Sounds like a valid passtime.

    Leave a comment:


  • cin
    replied
    Wow this info is very helpful -- You folks are awesome! I can't even TELL you how relieved I am to have found you!!!

    Leave a comment:


  • keepsmiling
    replied
    You don't have to worry about bk right now. Only if they come after you for deficiency.
    Local attorneys should give you a feel for whether that's likely to happen.

    And- by playing the Hampster Wheel game-- you can hold off foreclosure for a while.

    Leave a comment:


  • tobee43
    replied
    cin, i know you want to pay for school, but remember opportunities for funding that school will come in Oct. when you are collecting your benefits from the state. there are programs with reduced tuition, or even free.

    also, since you have mentioned in previous posts that you are not planning on staying since your house is so much underwater, you should stop paying your mortgage now and begin to save for the eventual move.

    here's how the foreclosure process works in MA step by step:


    How are Massachusetts mortgages foreclosed?

    "The primary method of foreclosure in Massachusetts involves what is known as non-judicial foreclosure. This type of foreclosure does not involve court action but requires notice commonly called foreclosure by sale. When the mortgage is initially signed it will usually contain a provision called a power of sale clause which upon default allows the lender to foreclose on the property in order to satisfy the underlying defaulted loan which is sometimes referred to as a bond. An attorney usually acts as a representative of the lender to effectuate the sale which typically occurs in the form of an auction. Auctions are conducted by an auctioneer. Because this is a non-judicial remedy there are very stringent notice requirements and the legal documents are required to contain the power of sale language in order to use this type of foreclosure method. Judicial foreclosure is often referred to a foreclosure by entry or action. "



    Power of Sale Notice Requirements:

    "Prior to initiating a foreclosure the lender must record a notice of foreclosure sale in the county in which the property is located.

    1. Notice of the foreclosure sale as described above must be served on borrower by registered or certified mail at least fourteen (14) days before the foreclosure sale date. The notice must be published once a week for three (3) weeks prior to the foreclosure sale. The first publication is required to be at least twenty-one (21) days before the sale, and the publication must be in a newspaper in general circulation in the county in which the property to be foreclosed is located.

    2. The property is sold at a public auction based on the notice and the time date, and place specified therein. The property is sold to the highest bidder, with a private auctioneer usually conducting the sale.

    In Massachusetts, the lenders can also go to court in what is known as a judicial foreclosure proceeding where the court must issue a final judgment of foreclosure. This process is called foreclosure by entry or action. The property is then sold as part of a publicly noticed sale by the sheriff. A complaint is filed in court along with what is known alis pendens. A lis pendens is a recorded document that provides public notice that the property is being foreclosed upon.

    How long does it take to foreclose a property in Massachusetts?

    Depending on the timing of the various required notices, it usually takes approximately 75-90 days to effectuate an uncontested non-judicial foreclosure. This process may be delayed if the borrower contests the action in court, seeks delays and adjournments of sales, or files for bankruptcy."

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  • cin
    replied
    Thanks btbeme and kawh. I have had my 401K for 30 years, am fully invested, and bk can't touch it (it's mostly in TIAA-Cref). If I use it for school, I don't have tyo pay the 10% penalty tax. So .. I have to get through to July, pay the 15K tuition from my 401K, and THEN file for bk ... I think it's all about timing here. My unemployment will start in late October (there was a delay because I got severance) and it's enough to pay for my mortgage and health care ... I am in a bind unless my ex-employer settles with my lawyer for a little more money to tide me over longer. So with tuition due in July, how do I put off filing until then .. that's my dilema. Although I understand taking money for a 401K is a BAD idea usually, I HAVE to learn and new trade -- I have to STRESS that otherwise I will be competing with 25 year olds with college degrees who don't need benefits and that makes me realize I am utterly screwed for the next 15 years. This is my ONLY chance to turn this around -- I will be collecting unemployment, had a qualifying event to tap into my 401K (job loss), and if I play my cards right, I won't have to pay the extra 10% penalty. I have a total of 160K and 50 is liquid ... so taking out 25K to pay tuition seems like my ONLY option to make getting LPN certification a possibility seem smart -- no age discrimination, growing at 20% ... otherwise I might as well take what I have left, take a vacation, sell my belongings and find a shady spot to live in my car. (53 year old, single, no family, no friends with an "extra room", under water by 70K, no job prospects ... what would you do?)

    Leave a comment:


  • kawh
    replied
    I really like your answer, btbeme. Becoming underwater on a mortgage should not be an automatic log flume ride to bk, when cin owes so little other debt.

    Also, the 401k she has may have a rule like mine did, that you can't take out or rollover just part of it, it has to be all or nothing. Sometimes the funds you have in a 401k won't all transfer to the new custodian. Then they have to liquidate some of your holdings and you wind up with cash instead. This may not be the best market timing for that to happen, with cash earning so little and equities down. Just depends on what the 401k currently holds for investments.

    Leave a comment:


  • btbeme
    replied
    Originally posted by cin View Post
    A lot also depends on if the lawyer can get anything from my **** employer .... I HATE not having control over this! It depends on the employment lawyer .. it depends on if my ex-employer will settle with me, it depends on the bk laws ... UGH!!!
    That's why they call it "practicing law." No guaranteed outcome.

    I gotta toss this out there... Have you explored refi or loan modification options for your condo? Federal programs won't really consider you to be "at risk " until you have missed two or three payments - payments that could go toward school, Visa card, etc. I'm just saying that BK will follow you for 10 years, whereas late payments, a short sale, or even a foreclosure all have lesser and shorter term consequences.

    Let's say it takes a year to kick you out (you miss payments, apply for modifications, etc - essentially play the delay game) or close a short sale. Would those saved mortgage payments be enough to retire your credit card debt?

    Explore your options. See if it makes sense to do what you can to live "mortgage free" for as long as you can in your current place while paying off Visa. Should you get booted out via foreclosure or via short sale, there is a definite timeline that you can stretch before anything happens, and 9-12 months is a pretty good estimate. Get creative and see if that might work. And if it does not, then the BK option isn't going away anytime soon.

    DON'T TOUCH your 401(k) unless it is life or death. And then, keep receipts.

    Leave a comment:

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