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Sallie Mae Unemployment Penalty Leads College Grads To Join Campaign In Protest

Loans

First Posted: 01/27/2012 2:07 pm Updated: 01/27/2012 2:07 pm

Over 50,000 college grads across the country have joined a campaign on change.org urging student loan giant Sallie Mae to stop charging unemployed borrowers a $50 fee for forbearance on their loans, according to PRWeb.

The campaign was launched by Stef Gray, a recent college graduate who took out private loans through the company and was hit with the $50 fee when she requested a delay on the repayment of her loan due to unemployment. After graduating, Gray found herself without a fullt-time job and with no co-signers for her loan, since her parents had passed away. As a result she was forced to go into forbearance, or suspend the repayment of her loans.

Gray told PRWeb, “For Sallie Mae to tack on these extra fees just to pad their profits is to kick people like me when we’re already down. Charging a forbearance fee is wrong, and more than 50,000 people who agree are standing with me.”

The campaign is gaining strength as millions of student loan borrowers could be seeing the interest rates on their loans rise significantly unless Congress extends a rate reduction passed in 2007 and set to expire this July. While the current interest rate, based on the 2007 reduction, is 3.4 percent, the rate could double to 6.8 percent, adding more fuel to the fire of protests against student loans.

As of Friday afternoon, nearly 70,000 people had signed the petition.


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Over 50,000 college grads across the country have joined a campaign on change.org urging student loan giant Sallie Mae to stop charging unemployed borrowers a $50 fee for forbearance on their loans, a...
Over 50,000 college grads across the country have joined a campaign on change.org urging student loan giant Sallie Mae to stop charging unemployed borrowers a $50 fee for forbearance on their loans, a...
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06:16 PM on 08/22/2012
I haven't paid back as much as you guys have, but I have paid back as much as I could. It is sad that they now harass me and threaten me with legal action, when that will accomplish nothing but to make it more difficult to pay them back. I hope that someday I will be able to lead a normal life, but they have given me no choice except to remain unemployed sometimes - as becoming employed may actually decrease the likelihood of repayment. I do after all, need money for food and maintenance of a vehicle. I want to work. I want to live. I will give all the money I earn to them, and probably never pay them back.
05:34 PM on 06/20/2012
I'm a college grad (1989) who started out with a 10,000 balance. I have been paying since 1990. I've had several deferrment periods but am sure Sallie Mae has gotten 10,000 plus back. I still have a 5,000 balance. I'm hoping Suze Orman, or somone will tell me how to go through the loan forgiveness process as it has been 20 plus years now. I notice Sallie Mae says I've been repaying for 10 years, but it's actually since 1990. I will be looking for answers!!!!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Vote For Chunk
11:03 PM on 04/22/2012
And the extermination of the middle class continues, all with American approval. I wonder how many of these fools will be voting for Romney this election. The American dream is dead
03:58 PM on 02/08/2012
Are student loans forgiven if the student has passed away? And how would you go about having this done? Thank You
10:26 AM on 01/30/2012
My husband I were looking at current mortgage rates last week - about 3% interest. If home buyers are charged as little s 3% then government-backed student loans should charge the same. There is no reason why somebody buying house deserves a lower rate than somebody going to college.
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lcr999
scientist
11:51 AM on 01/31/2012
Because a house is collateral.
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09:47 AM on 01/30/2012
Most college educations are a scam! Yes. You heard it right, a scam. And college administrators know this to be true.

If you were to poll student graduates as to why they went to college, the majority of them will tell you that they went to college because they were brainwashed into believing that this is all part of the American dream. And as such, that by receiving a college diploma, not only will they be able to gain employment in the major of their choosing, but they will also receive higher wages than a person who does not possess a college education.

Banks don’t give out mortgages to individuals who are unemployed, or who have no signs of being able to repay a mortgage. So why do banks and this corrupt government give out loans to students to major in areas of study where no jobs exist??

College is big business. They have to sell dreams. How else do you scam and coerce a young naive student into agreeing to put themselves in hock for $50K+ unless they are brainwashed and sold false dreams of gainful employment and higher paying jobs?

College’s, banks and government have a moral responsibility to make sure that they are committed to finding gainful employment for these students. Colleges need to up the ante with Corporate America to see to it that these students find suitable employment!

This is NO way to start one’s life out – IN MASSIVE DEBT AND UNEMPLOYED!!
03:46 PM on 02/02/2012
Most bank fees are an even bigger SCAM.
05:55 AM on 01/30/2012
It's interesting how many people have absolutely no sympathy for the students. Look, if a person spends thousands in credit card debt on vacations and boozing, they don't give the vacation back but they CAN file bankruptcy and start over. Not those who went to college. Students are told they NEED a degree in order to have a career. They are told, over and over, to choose what interests them the most. They are told that they should take out loans because it will be easy to pay it back. There is almost no counseling about finances. Unlike those looking for housing, who are older and should be doing their research, these are just KIDS and they don't understand what they are getting into. Important info is not given them, and they are pressured and misinformed about loans. They graduate and find that they cannot get jobs, and so they can't make their payments. As time goes by the interest makes your loan double and even triple. How is this ok? If you want people to pay back their loans you have to make it possible. All payments made go to the interest and after years of regular payments you can't even make a dent in your principal balance. The end result is adults in their 20s and 30s unable to pay back loans OR buy houses, cars, or other major purchases. This is going to be incredibly disastrous for our economy.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
EgoNarroVerum
06:42 PM on 01/29/2012
Why are government backed student loans charging interest anyway?! Student loans should be at close to zero percent interest. Why do we loan banks money for nothing and s_crew students. Anyone who has had a student loan also knows about all the onerous roadblocks they put in your way to pre-pay principal... they are going to get their pound of flesh from students. Student loans will be the next "housing bubble" type crisis.
03:51 PM on 01/29/2012
I can't understand why the government understands the necessity for extending the unemployment benefits for skilled workers who have lengthy resumesbecause jobs are unavailable but don't see this as the same problem. Even worse, most college grads don't have much of a work history. How will they find work when others can't. Why wouldn't the government extend the deferment period after graduation due to the unavailability of work. I don't think the debt should go away. These students chose to incur the debt but how are they supposed to magically find jobs when the government acknowledges that jobs are hard to find for people with better chances for finding one.
11:29 PM on 01/28/2012
I wrote an article about this as well...CHECK IT OUT HERE "State, Private, and Community College Costs in New York" http://voices.yahoo.com/state-private-community-college-costs-york-10879461.html?cat=4
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08:26 AM on 01/28/2012
nobody is asking for the loans to be forgiven, just for the $50 fee to delay payment due to unemployment. i can't wait until the tr00ls find themselves without their dimes.
alunsulen
Digging the liberal hatred!
08:49 PM on 01/27/2012
What a lowlife! She owes Sallie Mae money and has the gall to suggest that they give her an extension for free. The company should sue and stick it to her!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
gifu
08:53 PM on 01/27/2012
Loan deferrment is not a crime.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mass maritimer
The cake is a lie
04:44 PM on 01/28/2012
Too many of us refuse to help people unless we think they deserve it. And we are very, very good at finding the smallest reason why they won't ever deserve it. We americans are greedy, judgmental pricks
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
gifu
08:47 PM on 01/27/2012
I had a conversation with the after hours operators who sub-contract for salliemae once in regards to an error in how I paid my monthly bill. I missed a month due to change in address and I was told by this operator that "I was one of the many losers who don't pay their bills". This smarmy, angry male was the most offensive person I have ever had the misfortune of speaking to in all my 40 years. I could not believe the arrogance and mean spirit of this person. Thanks, Sallie Mae.
11:14 PM on 01/29/2012
That probably because Sallie Mae uses inmates for their phone reps...LOL (I hope I'm kidding about this)
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
knightie2008
02:09 AM on 01/30/2012
Actually the last time I spoke to Sallie Mae the rep and the manager I spoke to had a distinct middle eastern accent...I was so angry that I advised them that from that point on I would only send snail mail in response to any correspondence they sent me. I refuse to speak to some (potentially) outsourced company working for SallieMae about my student loans!
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saint bernard mom
and Newfie Gram ♥spay♥neuter♥adopt♥
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CymroTramor
saysomethinginwelsh
08:15 PM on 01/27/2012
WE can bail out the banks with the ceo's making record bonuses, but we can't forgive student debt to give the young a fighting chance in this f&^%ked up economy????? where are the middle class priorities?????
08:29 PM on 01/29/2012
She's only asking for the $50 forebearance fee to be waived, not her entire loan. She can really stick it to them by declaring bankruptcy - then they get nothing, ever, instead of getting their money repaid at a later date. I'd have done that to them already, myself, except my loan was co-signed by my sister and there's no way I'd jeopardize her credit rating that way. Even if I don't eat for a week, that Sallie Mae payment gets made.
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spydrworks1067
10:57 PM on 01/29/2012
I have a federal student loan through Sallie Mae. It is not dischargeable in a bankruptcy.
09:54 AM on 01/30/2012
middle class doesn't give campaign contributions.

it adds up.