Life led Elizabeth Hadzic and Kim Coles to bankruptcy court.

Hadzic, 50, a psychotherapist in Maryland, doesn’t make enough to support herself and her adult son, whose health struggles set her back thousands of dollars. Coles, an accountant in Oregon in her late 60s, was laid off last year.

Both have tens of thousands of dollars in student loan debt. Although they have been making payments on those loans for years, they no longer can. And both, in the absence of an alternative, have resorted to taking the costly, typically unsuccessful route of trying to get their loans discharged in bankruptcy court.

That’s where things diverge.

For Hadzic, bankruptcy is proving to be the answer to her financial woes. After months of litigation, she’s on track for a full discharge. In Coles’ case, the government is putting up a fight − though she is of retirement age − against discharging the balance of a loan she’s been paying down for more than a decade.

“I always paid my student loans,” Coles said in an interview. “I was never late.”

The disparity in how the government is treating their cases is indicative of the intractability of one of the country’s most extreme and inaccessible forms of student debt relief, as the Biden administration grapples with finding alternatives to the kind of sweeping student loan forgiveness option that the Supreme Court struck down in June.

  • ares35@kbin.social
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    4
    arrow-down
    49
    ·
    11 months ago

    one of these women is in her ‘late 60s’ and only been paying student loans for ‘more than a decade’–they would have phrased that differently had they been paying for more than 20 years.

    so she went back to school on loans at what? aged 50? 55? older? why??

    • PsychedSy
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      12
      ·
      11 months ago

      Am I not allowed to go to uni because I got a job? The fuck?

    • StupidBrotherInLaw@lemmy.world
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      11
      ·
      edit-2
      11 months ago

      I got my first degree in my twenties, then got hurt and was unable to continue that career, so I went back to school in my late forties to get into another career I can actually perform.

      We’re old and we exist.