Crack Down On Superbowl Expenses

July 30, 2010 by  
Filed under Recreation Sports

Even though the economy is suffering, and many of you are in debt, there is no reason that you cannot throw a really great Super Bowl Party.

Focus on not overdoing it. Make just one extravagant dish and play the rest off of that. A vat of chili, if properly seasoned can serve twelve people for twenty dollars. Chicken wings are quite inexpensive and easy to make. Coils of kielbasa, priced around five bucks are a cheap and delicious snack.

Due to the fact that the Super Bowl is a special occasion, go for hot food. Ordering big trays of Chinese takeout are less expensive and time consuming than cooking your own food.

Children at Superbowl parties can be tough to please. Vegetables, juice, chips, and a carvel football shaped ice cream cake priced at $22.99 will keep them at bay.

Drinks? The best choice for shoppers on a budget is beer and wine. A keg will save you about 40% according to experts. The wine doesn’t have to be fancy – a five liter boxed wine will be more than acceptable. If you encounter the troublesome guest who insists on liquor, get discount vodka, a half gallon for just fourteen dollars. Its cheap, and blends with about anything.

Even in tough times, it is a requirement to make the most of your game-viewing experience. A medium to large flatscreen is completely necessary. But if you don’t own one, rent one. Websites list 42 inch TVs for as low as $26.99 a week.

And then those pesky people who don’t watch football. A pool for small gifts like a store certificate or CD might inspire people who aren’t the least bit interested in football at all if a prize is awarded at the end of every quarter. Try to have experienced fans explain what is going on. Then, sit back, and enjoy your game.

Mallory Megan is employed by a debt collection agency. Also she composes stories on business, finance, consumer spending and collection agencies.

How Long Will A Negative Mark Stay On My Credit Report Part Two

July 16, 2010 by  
Filed under Credit

In the last article in this series I wrote about how long different marks remain on your credit report. I mentioned that mistakes will be removed immediately, soft inquiries will have no effect, and hard inquiries can hang around on your credit report for two years. Late payments have the capacity to do way more damage.

Although a few creditors may opt to show you mercy and remove past credit problems if you pay your account immediately, late payments can have an effect on your credit score for seven years. Luckily, these negative marks are common and do less damage to your score than the rest of the marks I will go on to discuss.

With a tax lien comes seven years of poor credit. When you don’t pay your income or property taxes when they were due, and the government comes in and claims ownership of your property, you’re dealing with a tax lien. Unlike creditors, no matter how fast you settle your tax lien, big brother is peeved that you made him go out of his way to take your property, and it will stay on your record for seven years.

Foreclosures are equally as damaging and they will be on your credit report for seven years. Foreclosures are looked at as one of the worst negative accounts that can appear on your credit report. In fact, if you do have a foreclosure on your credit history, good luck buying another home unless you are planning to pay for it all in cash.

It’s not the good old days anymore, so never default on those student loans either. Before the administration of President W., student loans generally were forgiven if they were declared when someone filed for bankruptcy. Now times have changed, so it’s crucial to pay your student loan debts. After 270 days of nonpayment, defaulting occurs, and before the loan defaults, you can bet your life that you will be the unlucky recipient of a whole slew of late payment fees.

The last, and most damaging negative mark that can be put on your credit report is bankruptcy. Bankruptcy will remain on your record for ten years, and rather than having a creditor pull your report, you may as well call them up and say “I am fiscally irresponsible and will be that way for the next ten years.” Declaring bankruptcy can hinder your ability to get a new car, any type of new credit or a new place to live. So watch your credit report, or you might end up living with that rude mother in law I wrote about in article one.

Mallory Megan works for Rapid Recovery Solution and writes articles on medical collection agencies. Unique version for reprint here: How Long Will A Negative Mark Stay On My Credit Report Part Two.

What To Search For When Looking To Hire A Collection Agency

June 5, 2010 by  
Filed under Business

When trying to search for a Business Collection agency, it is imperative for companies to find a collection agency that services their specific needs. Some companies may rely on collection firms more than others. For example, a self-employed graphic designer might only need to use a Collection agency’s services once during his or her entire career. However, a bigger company, such as a credit card company, may require the services of a Collection agency more habitually.

There are a few things that institutions should look for when selecting the right Business Collection agency. These include:

Price. Not all Collection firms will charge the same rate or the same way. The Majority Of Collection agencies do, however, set their rates derived from a percentage of the total amount of the monies to be collected. For example, a collection firm might charge 10% of the total collection amount to the business that commissions it. Some collection agencies charge on a contingency basis, meaning they only charge once funds have been collected, while others can charge a upfront fee for their services.

Reliability. Not all Collection agencies are identical when it comes to reliability and effectiveness. One of the most fitting ways to decide how trustworthy a Collection agency is likely to be is to carry out a simple background check on the agency using Internet searching tools or search with the Better Business Bureau. Also, many Collection agencies will offer references or have a list of clients that they have provided services for that new clients may check before hiring the agency.

Contracts. Some Collection businesses offer contract work or a retainer for their clients. In such a case, the agency may work a defined number of hours each month for a set fee. Enterprise’s need to be sure that they require a Collection agency’s services before they sign a long-term contract or retainer contract so that they can be sure that they get what they pay for.

Methods. It is important to ensure that a Collection agency is able to use a variety of methods when contacting non-payees. For example, Collection agencies should not only be able to approach a non-payee diplomatically through letter writing and phone calls, but the Collection agency should also be able to use legal courses of action, if necessary. May Collection agencies are part of law firms, which enables them to file legal cases easily and quickly, if necessary.

Rapid Recovery Solution is a medical collection agency.

How To Eliminate Debt

June 1, 2010 by  
Filed under Finance

Three steps to freedom form debt:

1. Stop acquiring new debt.

2. Establish an emergency fund.

3. Implement a debt snowball.

Here’s how to approach each step.

Stop acquiring new debt (This step can be accomplished in a minute.)

This may seem obvious, but the reason your debt is out of control is because you keep spending. Stop using credit. Don’t finance anything. Cut up your credit cards.

That last part may be tough. Don’t make excuses. I don’t care that some personal finance sites say that you shouldn’t cut them up. Destroy them. Stop rationalizing that you need credit cards.

* You don’t need credit cards for a safety net. * You don’t need credit cards for convenience. * You don’t need credit cards for sky miles.

You really don’t need credit cards at all. Credit cards are like quick sand, the more your struggle, the deeper in debt you go. Later, when your debts are gone and your finances are under control, maybe then you can get a credit card. (I don’t carry a personal credit card. I don’t miss having one.)

After you cut up your cards, stop all recurring payments. If you have a gym membership, cancel it. If you automatically renew your online video game account, cancel it. Cancel anything that automatically charges your credit card. Stop using credit.

Once you’ve done this, call each credit card company in turn. Do not cancel your credit cards (except for those with a zero balance). Instead, ask for a better deal. Find an offer online and use it as a bargaining wedge. Your bank may not agree to match competing offers, but it probably will. It never hurts to ask.

Establish an emergency fund (This step will probably take several months.)

For most, this is counter-intuitive. Why save before paying off debt? Because if you don’t save first, you’re not going to be able to cope with unexpected expenses. Do not tell yourself that you can keep a credit card for emergencies. Destroy your credit cards; save cash for emergencies.

How much should you save? Ideally, you’d save $1,000 to start. (College students may be able to get by with $500.) This money is for emergencies only. It is not for beer. It is not for shoes. It is not for a Playstation 3. It is to be used when your car dies, or when you break your arm in a touch football game.

Keep this money liquid, but not immediately accessible. Don’t tie your emergency fund to a debit card. Don’t sabotage your efforts by making it easy to spend the money on crap. Consider opening a savings account at an online bank like ING or e-trade. When an emergency arises, you can easily transfer the money to your regular checking account. It’ll be there when you need it, but you won’t be able to spend it spontaneously.

Implement a debt snowball (This step may require several years.)

After you’ve finally stopped using credit, and after you’ve saved an emergency fund, then attack your existing debt. Attack it hard. Throw everything you can at it.

Some experts say to pay your highest interest debts first. There’s no question that this makes the most sense mathematically. But if money were all about math, you wouldn’t have debt in the first place. Money is as much about emotion and psychology as it is about math.

There are at least two approaches to debt elimination. Psychologically, using a debt snowball offers big payoffs, payoffs that can spur you to further debt reduction. Here’s the short version:

1. Order your debts from lowest balance to highest balance. 2. Designate a certain amount of money to pay toward debts each month. 3. Pay the minimum payment on all debts except for the one with the lowest balance. 4. Throw every other penny at the debt with the lowest balance. 5. When that debt is gone, do not alter the monthly amount used to pay debts, but throw all you can at the debt with the next-lowest balance.

I’m a huge fan of the debt snowball. It still takes time to pay off your debts, but you can see results almost immediately.

Supplementary solutions

You can do other things to improve your money situation while you’re working on these three steps.

First, focus on the fundamental personal finance equation: to pay off debt, or to save money, or to accumulate wealth, you must spend less than you earn.

Curb your spending. Re-learn frugal habits. (Frugality is something with which most college students are all too familiar.) You can find some great ideas on the internet. Also check Frugal for Life.

While you work on spending less, do what you can to increase your income. If possible, sell some of the crap you bought when you got into debt. Get an extra job. (But don’t neglect your studies for the sake of earning more. Your studies are most important.)

Finally, go to your local public library and borrow Dave Ramsey’s The Total Money Makeover. Don’t be put off by the title – this is a fantastic guide to getting out of debt and developing good money habits. I rave about it often, but that’s because it has done so much to help my own personal finances. After you’ve finished, return it and borrow another book about money.

The most important thing is to start now. Don’t start tomorrow. Don’t start next week. Start tackling your debt now. Your older self will thank you.

Rapid Recovery Solution is a credit debt collection company. Get a totally unique version of this article from our article submission service

Zombie Debt Is Hard To Kill

June 1, 2010 by  
Filed under Business

Like the phoenix that rises from the ashes, so does so-called zombie debt. A consumer may think it’s dead, but it keeps coming back to haunt.

“Zombie debt is a phrase to describe all debt that a consumer had forgotten about or never even owed that comes back to haunt them,” said John Monderine, of Rapid Recovery Solution, Inc.

Joan Baker was tormented for years as collection agencies hassled her about debt that wasn’t even hers. More than a decade ago Baker had her identity stolen and since then debt collectors have been stealing her peace of mind.

“It is a nightmare. It won’t go away,” Baker said. “I had knots in my stomach. I was on the phone for hours.”

Baker reported a fraudulent $5,000 charge and still the debt collectors were persistent. When she refused to pay, they went after her credit rating. Each time she cleared her name with one agency, the cycle started up again because her debt had been sold to a different debt collection company.

Baker reluctantly sued the aggressive collection agency for fraud five years ago and was awarded $40,000.00

Her experience isn’t an isolated one.

When Larry Randazzo missed a Verizon bill for 11 cents, it ballooned into $4,000 seven years later.

Randazzo said the collector backed off when he made it clear that he knew his rights.

“If they are going after me, someone who has the resources to fight them, what are they doing to people who don’t understand their rights?” he said.

“I think what I did was make them aware that I was aware,” Randazzo said.

Almost all banks sell old debt. For example, a bank might sell a credit-card debt worth $10,000 to a debt collection company for only $100. Then, the agency turns around and aggressively tries to collect and whatever it receives is mostly profit.

This year more than $100 billion of “junk debt” is expected to be bought and sold on the open market, according to a report by debt collection advisory Kaulkin Ginsberg. A debt collection trade association said it polices its members.

“Once we determine that the complaint is against a member of ACA International, what we do is seek to work with the consumer and the debt collection agency to identify a solution,” said Rozanne Andersen, executive vice president of the Association of Credit and Collection Professionals.

How to Protect Yourself

First, ask for something in writing.

Consumers should be aware of the statute of limitations in their state. Most allot about seven years where you cannot be sued or have your credit rating destroyed.

“If a consumer believes that this debt that the debt collector is trying to collect from is past the statute of limitations, they should not pay it,” said Mauro.

Also, you should never let a collector debit your account because the money can often be difficult to get back.

Rapid Recovery Solution is a national debt collection company. Get a totally unique version of this article from our article submission service

Statute Of Limitations On Debt Collection

June 1, 2010 by  
Filed under Business

Statute of Limitations on Debt Collection is the amount of time that lenders have to collect their debts by suing you in court and by other legal methods. Once the statute of limitations period is over, the lenders cannot sue you in court. However, the debt that you owe STILL REMAINS. Do not think that once the statute of limitations period is over, your debt will disappear. It will not! Lenders can collect their debts owed via other legal methods like a debt collection company.

We should point out that there are NO Statute of Limitations on the following types of debt owed: Child support due payments, Federal & Local state taxes, Parking fines, illegal fines & Federal Student Loans.

Each US Statute has its own statute of limitations periods. Generally speaking, here is the statute of limitations on the following types of debt: Auto Loans: Debt owed on auto loans generally expires in 6 years. Unsecured Debt: 3-6 years after the last missed payment by a consumer, or last tracked activity.

The moment you sign that debt agreement, for example a car lease document, a personal loan or other types of loans, the Statute of Limitations period begins. However, this rule varies state by state. Some states also allow the ‘adjustment” of this period. For example, a person living in Alabama has credit card debt of $33000 and does not make a single payment for 3 years. Now in the state of Alabama, the statute of Limitations period is 6 years. If that person travels out of the state of Alabama (say to Mississippi) for 1 year, then his statute of limitations period STOPS up until he returns back to Alabama from Mississippi. Upon his return to Alabama, this period resumes again (3 more years).

Also note that after 3 years of having not made a single payment on your debt, you start making payments again. This new payment automatically resets the statute of limitations period to 0.

We will now abbreviate the word statute of limitations as SoL. Consider another example:

You sign an auto financing contract on February 2nd, 2005 where the first payment of $300 is due on March 2nd, 2005. In March, you never make a payment towards your debt. The SoL expires on March 2nd, 2011 (assuming you live in Alabama where the SoL period is 6 years). Why March 2nd? This is because March 2nd was the last time you made a delinquent payment on your loan, or this was your last missed payment. The SoL period starts counting from your last missed payment.

Now assume you get a call from a debt collection company and instead of paying $300/month, they say you can pay just $150/month. You receive this call on August 31, 2008 (2 years have expired on the SoL period). This offer sounds pretty good to you and you indeed do make the payment! Hey! The SoL period at this point automatically resets to 0 and will run for another 6 years!

To recap, every single payment you make towards credit card or personal loan debt resets the SoL clock. This resetting of the SoL clock applies only to unsecured debt and NOT secured debt. This is because in Secured Debt, the lender will simply confiscate your collateral (a pledged home, your car, etc) and will not have to deal with collection issues.

If your lender demands payment from you after the SoL period of collecting the debts is legally over, you will not have to go to court. The court will probably call off the case as soon as the Judge finds out that the SoL period is over. You should write up an “Expired Statute of Limitations” letter to your creditor and inform him that the SoL period is over.

Many people confuse the Statute of Limitations Period of Debt Collection with the SoL period for Credit Reporting. For instance, consider you live in Arizona where the statute of limitations period is 3 years. After 4 years, you can defiantly refuse to pay that debt and the court will rule in your favor. However, according to the rules defined in the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA), your delinquent debt will be shown for up to 7 years (since your last delinquent or missed annuity payment).

Rapid Recovery Solution is a medical debt collection agency. Get a totally unique version of this article from our article submission service

Debt Collection Practices

April 15, 2010 by  
Filed under Business

If you owe debt to a creditor collection agencies are allowed to report your debt to credit bureaus, file lawsuits against you, and should be taken very seriously. The best way to protect yourself and your financial situation is a methodical approach. First, know why you are being contacted. Know where the debt is from and exactly how much it costs.

Inquire about the name of the person calling, the agency, the creditor, and the agency’s address and fax number. You have every right to tell a collector over the phone that you want all future contact to be in a written form. Follow up all requests with a written request.

Keep in mind if you tell the collector not to contact you at all it the agency is entitled to contact you once more to inform you how it plans to proceed. Another request that can be made is that you are the only person that can be contacted. It might be a good idea to keep a file including dates and details of phone conversations and when you mail out or receive letters.

If you do send any written correspondence to the collections company do this by Certified Mail, Return Receipt Requested. This guarantees that the letter reached the collector, giving you a signed receipt as proof. If you work out a re-payment plan over the phone, ask for the terms of the plan in writing. Any promise to remove or adjust credit history should also definitely be documented.

Double check that you pay the right party; payments should be made to the collections company, not the creditor, unless otherwise instructed to do so. Closely examine the amount you are being asked to pay. Get an assessment of any interest, fees or charges that have been added.

If you feel that your collector is being abusive, make sure that you complain to the agency and keep this complaint on file. Finally, don’t ignore a collector even if you feel that the debt is not yours; they will continue to call and it may mean more trouble and time in the long run.

Mallory Megan is employed by a debt collection company. She also writes articles on business, finance, consumer spending and collection agencies.