Ripoff Report Needs Your Help!
X  |  CLOSE
Report: #501652

Complaint Review: General Revenue Corporation, Sallie Mae, United Student Aid Funds, Inc. - Cincinnati Ohio

  • Submitted:
  • Updated:
  • Reported By: E-less — reno Nevada U.S.A.
  • Author Confirmed What's this?
  • Why?
  • General Revenue Corporation, Sallie Mae, United Student Aid Funds, Inc. 11501 Northlake Drive Cincinnati, Ohio United States of America

General Revenue Corporation, Sallie Mae, United Student Aid Funds, Inc. Wage Garnishment after making the required payments on time Cincinnati, Ohio

*UPDATE EX-employee responds: Higher Education Act

Show customers why they should trust your business over your competitors...

Is this
Report about YOU
listed on other sites?
Those sites steal
Ripoff Report's
content.
We can get those
removed for you!
Find out more here.
How to fix
Ripoff Report
If your business is
willing to make a
commitment to
customer satisfaction
Click here now..

I set up a 6 month payment program with General Revenue Corporation at which time I stated that our family was experiencing financial hardship as in we have lost over 75% of our families income in the last two years.


Now, General Revenue Corporation has garnished my husbands wages, who is the only working individual in our home for 15% of each net paycheck which is a total of 30% per month.  This amount is a larger percentage then if my husband had to pay for child support in the State of Nevada.


When I called General Revenue Corporation to speak with them, I was then told it was 9 months payments not 6 months.  I had the payments paid directly from my bank account so that General Revenue Corporation did not have to wait for a check.


What my question is in reading a rebuttal from a previous employee, is what federal statue governs General Revenue Corporation the ability to garnish 15% of each of my husbands net paychecks?


Yes, also I do understand that my husband signed a note to pay back this money.  But, we could not foresee that I would be unable to find a job for the last two years as our state as a 13.5% unemployment rate.


Due to General Revenue Corporation garnishing my husbands wages triple what the payment was to them we are facing the possibility of losing our home that we have owned for the past twenty years and raised our three children in.


Nothing like kicking a hard working american family while we are down. 

This report was posted on Ripoff Report on 09/29/2009 10:35 AM and is a permanent record located here: https://www.ripoffreport.com/reports/general-revenue-corporation-sallie-mae-united-student-aid-funds-inc/cincinnati-ohio-45249-1643/general-revenue-corporation-sallie-mae-united-student-aid-funds-inc-wage-garnishment-501652. The posting time indicated is Arizona local time. Arizona does not observe daylight savings so the post time may be Mountain or Pacific depending on the time of year. Ripoff Report has an exclusive license to this report. It may not be copied without the written permission of Ripoff Report. READ: Foreign websites steal our content

Search for additional reports

If you would like to see more Rip-off Reports on this company/individual, search here:

Report & Rebuttal
Respond to this report!
What's this?
Also a victim?
What's this?
Repair Your Reputation!
What's this?

Updates & Rebuttals

REBUTTALS & REPLIES:
0Author
1Consumer
0Employee/Owner

#1 UPDATE EX-employee responds

Higher Education Act

AUTHOR: Ladyirish - (U.S.A.)

POSTED: Sunday, January 24, 2010

The Higher Education Act authorizes the Department of Education's guaranty agencies (General Revenue) to garnish up to 15% of disposable earnings (the amount left after legally required deductions are made).  Fair or not, they're completely within their rights.


Three things you can do:

1) Request a garnishment hearing: This can occur even after the garnishment has been placed, and can be done in writing, in person or over the phone.  (I would recommend a phone hearing.)  Explain your financial situation to the judge, but also offer a consistant repayment plan you can manage in place of the garnishment.

2) Attempt to finances your loans through the William D. Ford program.  This may not be possible with the way the economy is (fewer consolidation opportunities are available), and it won't stop your garnishment until the consolidation has funded, but A) It WILL lift the garnishment within 90 days (max); B) It will set you up on an income-contingent repayment plan; C) It will remove the default loan(s) from your credit report within six months.

3) Continue with the nine-month program, if at all possible.  This will have a similar effect to the William D. Ford program, lifting the garnishment and removing the default status from your credit report.

 

Remember, General Revenue doesn't have to work with you.  Legally, your husband's loans are due in full ... TODAY.  (Actually, the day they defaulted.)  While frustrating frightening, you have to look at the situation for what it is.  What you need (financial hardship relief), isn't a luxury you're going to get, and is something that General Revenue isn't allowed (by original guarantor of the loan) to even consider. 

Respond to this report!
What's this?
Featured Reports

Advertisers above have met our
strict standards for business conduct.

X
What do hackers,
questionable attorneys and
fake court orders have in common?
...Dishonest Reputation Management Investigates Reputation Repair
Free speech rights compromised

WATCH News
Segment Now