While there’s no simple equation that would allow borrowers in Hawaii to figure out whether or not bankruptcy protection would be a proper fit for their own family, any consumer who finds him or herself struggling to afford the minimum monthly payments from their credit cards should at the least see what other options are available. For that matter, Hawaiian debtors who have looked at their assembled bills with a realistic and clear eyed appraisal only to discover that their household capacity for gross income in the next few years put against the family cost of living expenses and utility obligations would not allow for the elimination of the total debt load must seek out the professional services now available throughout the islands. While your authors appreciate that many of the hard working men and women of Hawaii will do everything possible to pay back the loans that they have lawfully taken out in good times and bad, waiting until the last moment in the vain hopes of some mystical deliverance from crushing financial burdens will only end in heart ache and household economic instability. Like it or not, consumer credit is a fact of life in Hawaii and most everywhere across the United States, and that is why America first initiated bankruptcy protection: to offer borrowers a fresh start. Unfortunately, Chapter 7 bankruptcy in Hawaii no longer provides the same guarantees following the congressional legislation and subsequent alterations of the bankruptcy code that occurred in the fall of 2005, and many of the borrowers that fought until their last breath to right their household budget without employing high priced debt professionals only to inevitably decide upon bankruptcy protection as what they believed to be their final alternative came to find out far too late in the debt relief game that there were far more effective programs at hand. Within this article, we will explain a bit more about what personal bankruptcy protection now means to the Hawaiian borrower and what options may provide a less disastrous solution to spiraling financial obligations.
As most Hawaiian residents already know, a good portion of the average citizen’s debts would not be able to be affected by governmental bankruptcy protection. Alimony and child support and other familial debts are – and, we would agree, should be – essentially removed from all bankruptcy actions, and the same could be said for tax liens and penalties that came about as the consequence of criminal proceedings. Cash advances above eight hundred dollars that were taken out less than three months from the moment that the borrower files his or her papers run the risk of being considered fraudulent by the Hawaiian courts. Purchases of luxury goods above five hundred dollars that were taken out less than ten weeks before the time of filing face similar risks, but, obviously, there’s a good deal more leniency given the right bankruptcy attorney. Student loans, though they would seem superficially to be the same as medical bills or credit card accounts or any other unsecured debt burdens, are similarly rendered immune to bankruptcy protection after a congressional dictum from the mid 1990 (at a time when, according to some studies, a majority of the United States representatives had defaulted upon at least some portion of their own educational loans), but they tend to feature the lowest interest rates and easiest tax deductions this side of home mortgages upon primary residences. Those mortgage loans – as well as vehicle loans or any other secured debt – must be formally reaffirmed before a Chapter 7 bankruptcy could proceed (the reaffirmation meetings are generally held over the phone and should largely be considered a formality), and, in the event of a Chapter 13 debt restructure program, they may be forcibly refinanced to indulge easier payments and preclude foreclosure and forbearance which, given the sad state of Hawaii real estate during our national economic crisis, has become an all too real threat for citizens throughout our state.
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