Author Archive

Banks may hike education lending

Banks are likely to push home improvement loans and education loans with a Reserve Bank of India (RBI) panel asking the central bank to recognize larger loans in this segment as priority sector. Also, foreign banks will now be forced to lend 40% of their advances in the priority sector as against 32% earlier.

Other recommendations include allowing banks which have over-achieved their priority sector targets to pass on the benefit to banks that have fallen short.

This would be made possible through the sale of priority sector lending certificates which would pass on the benefit similar to how development rights or carbon credits are sold. The panel also wants loans to women to be classified as loans to weaker sections.

At present, education loans up to `10 lakh for studies in India and `20 lakh for studies abroad are reckoned for priority sector, which are proposed to be hiked to `15 lakh and `25 lakh, respectively. Home improvement loans of `1 lakh in rural and Rs 2 lakh in cities come under priority sector and this limit is proposed to be raised to `2 lakh and `5 lakh.

Although banks are free to charge any rate on priority sector loans, RBI penalizes lenders who do not meet targets by forcing them to invest in low-yielding bonds for rural development.

For lenders, meeting targets would become easier because the panel has merged direct lending and indirect lending targets within the overall 40% limit. However, there is a sub-target of 9% of bank loans to be advanced to small and marginal farmers.

To encourage banks to lend to education and farm sector, the panel has recommended setting up of a guarantee fund from a fraction of the interest on these loans which will compensate banks for defaults.

‘Swooping’ toward a high-risk thrill

 

PERRIS, Calif. — The competition was high-performance and high-risk, and Sean Carey and his 16 fellow skydivers knew it.

They were equipped with special parachutes that allowed a faster and better-controlled descent, and their goal Saturday was to dive toward a shallow pond in an advanced maneuver known as swooping.

One by one, they plummeted toward the surface, executing a last-minute turn to accelerate before leveling off and gliding just above the pond. But Carey, an instructor at Skydive San Diego who had done the maneuver successfully hundreds of times, made his turn too low and crashed into the pond.

Carey was the sixth highly experienced skydiver to be killed in the last year at Perris Valley Skydiving, one of the largest and most popular facilities for the sport in the nation.

The deaths reflect a divergent nationwide trend: equipment upgrades and safety rules have reduced overall skydiving fatalities among novices — but the smaller, more aerodynamically designed parachutes have allowed more experienced divers to take more risks.

Increasingly, industry veterans said, fatal accidents involve experts attempting advanced maneuvers with high-performance equipment — people like Carey, who according to his employer averaged 1,800 jumps a year and had won previous swooping competitions.

Last December, another experienced canopy pilot, as they are known, died making a landing error while swooping at Perris. The facility temporarily suspended swooping while it conducted a review of safety procedures.

The company’s general manager, Dan Brodsky-Chenfeld, said he found that Perris’ safety standards were as high as or higher than other facilities’ but further tightened requirements.

The facility had already required that before attempting a high-performance maneuver, a skydiver must have at least 700 jumps under his or her belt. After the December fatality, it added a requirement that skydivers receive special training before attempting swooping.

In the wake of Carey’s death, Brodsky-Chenfeld said he is again reviewing the standards.

High-risk maneuvers are clearly gaining the interest of top skydivers. Among the other daredevil moves is wingsuit flying, in which people glide across the sky in jumpsuits with fabric “wings” before deploying a parachute. Another is vertical formation skydiving, in which groups of skydivers grip one another’s limbs, their heads or feet pointed to the ground.

But many consider swooping to be the riskiest because the high-speed maneuvering is performed so close to the ground.

On Monday, parachutists at Perris Valley Skydiving — including some who witnessed Carey’s death Saturday — said they were shaken but not deterred.

“Bottom line is, this is the life we chose. We know this is dangerous,” said Joe Kaufman, an instructor at the facility, who has been skydiving for more than 20 years. Kaufman was not present when Saturday’s crash occurred.

Decades ago, industry experts said, fatal accidents involving faulty equipment were more common. Now, extra safeguards are in place and such accidents are rare.

In addition to a backup parachute, most skydivers — and all skydiving students — now carry an automatic activation device that will deploy the reserve parachute in the event of an emergency if the skydiver does not do so, said Nancy Koreen, a spokeswoman for the United States Parachute Association.

The technological advances that have made the equipment safer have also allowed the development of faster, more sensitive canopies. Experienced skydivers compare the performance canopies used by advanced skydivers to race cars. Canopy pilots can reach speeds as high as 75 mph at the beginning of a swoop.

Out of 25 skydiving fatalities nationwide in 2011, six involved landing errors, which have accounted for an average of one-third of skydiving fatalities each year for the last decade, according to the Parachute Assn. Nearly all of those accidents involved highly experienced skydivers attempting advanced maneuvers, Koreen said.

There are no industrywide regulations on swooping. Each skydiving facility is left to establish its own rules, although Koreen said they are asked to restrict swooping to a separate landing area.

Skydive San Diego president Buzz Fink said Carey’s co-workers there — and skydivers around the nation — were distraught and shocked by his death, but Fink does not believe the Perris facility could have done more to prevent it. Carey was a skilled canopy pilot who made an error during a maneuver he had performed more than 1,000 times before, Fink said.

“Skydiving was his life,” he said. “He loved it, he enjoyed it and it was his passion in life.”

———

(Times staff writer Rong-Gong Lin II contributed to this report.)

_

Mom accused of stealing education pleads guilty

NORWALK — A Bridgeport woman, who was arrested last year on a charge of stealing her 6-year-old son’s education in Norwalk, pleaded guilty Wednesday to larceny and subsequent drug charges and sentenced to five years in prison.

Tanya McDowell, 34, pleaded guilty to first-degree larceny by defrauding a public community under the Alford doctrine, indicating she disagrees with the state’s facts of the case but understands she would probably be convicted if the case went to trial.

McDowell’s attorney, Darnell Crosland, said his client agreed to accept the plea bargain, rather than continue fighting the charges.

“You shouldn’t be arrested for stealing a free education,” she said. “It’s just wrong.”

Wearing leg shackles, handcuffs and a large light gray sweatsuit, McDowell also quietly pleaded guilty to three counts of selling drugs to an undercover police officer.

In all, McDowell was sentenced to 12 years in jail, suspended after she serves five years with five years probation. She could be forced to serve more time if she violates the terms of her probation.

McDowell also pleaded guilty earlier this month in Bridgeport to two counts of sale of narcotics to undercover police officers. She is to be sentenced on the Bridgeport charges March 27 and faces up to five years in jail for those convictions.

As part of the plea bargain, McDowell would be able to serve the sentences from Norwalk and Bridgeport concurrently.

Crosland said he tried to separate the drug cases from the school case, but prosecutors and the judge would not split them. He said she was facing much more than 15 years in jail if he took all the cases to trial.

As a result he was forced to take an “all or nothing deal,” he said after the hearing.

Hudock said that as part of her probation, McDowell will have to make restitution to Norwalk in an amount that cannot exceed $6,200 — the estimated cost of her son’s education.

Crosland said his client is not sleeping and he is requesting she be placed in a crisis center at York Correctional Institute in Niantic.

Crosland said McDowell’s son is living with his grandmother and is now attending school in Bridgeport.

Following her initial arrest in April of last year, McDowell received national sympathy from education advocates after Norwalk police arrested her for sending her son to Brookside Elementary School in Norwalk while they alleged she was really living in Bridgeport.

McDowell claimed to The Advocate that she was homeless at the time — spending many nights in her van — and wanted a good education for her son while she was working in Stamford.

In mid-June, she was arrested for selling drugs to Norwalk undercover officers on five occasions in Norwalk and Bridgeport.

When she was picked up on the drug charges, police found her in front of Brookside Elementary School holding 30 small bags of marijuana and 23 small bags of crack cocaine, prosecutor Tiffany Lockshier said during her sentencing hearing.

Lockshier said that in January 2011, McDowell appeared at the Norwalk Housing Court during an eviction hearing and testified that she lived on Priscilla Circle in Bridgeport and not at the Roodner Court public housing complex as she had claimed to enroll her son at Brookside School. During earlier arrests, McDowell also claimed to Norwalk police that she resided at Priscilla Circle, Lockshier said.

Suzanne Vieux, the lead prosecutor in Norwalk, called the resolution of the case “fair.”

“This was a known drug dealer, as she was charged with sale of narcotics offenses in November of 2010, who admitted under oath in January of 2011 that she lived in Bridgeport while enrolling her child in Norwalk school system,” Vieux said in an email. “While there were many issues regarding educational inequities that were openly debated and ignited by this case, that should in no way deter from the fact that individuals who use city services to further their illegal narcotic conduct will be held accountable.”

john.nickerson@scni.com; (203) 964-2320.

Past foreclosure means waiting years for new loan

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Next to filing for bankruptcy protection, nothing wrecks your chances of qualifying for a home loan like a foreclosure.

And if you got out from under an oppressive mortgage through a short sale — when the bank agrees to accept less than what the homeowner owes — lenders can look upon you just as unfavorably.

It’s a reality that the former owners of the more than 4 million homes lost to foreclosure in the six years since the housing bubble burst will have to confront if they want to own again. But the passage of time makes all the difference.

That’s because mortgage-lending guidelines that most banks follow prohibit them from making loans to people with foreclosure or a short sale in their credit history, often for years. Never mind the hit that one’s credit score takes.

Still, some of the homeowners who were foreclosed upon when the market first started to skid are now looking to buy and getting loans.

“They’re probably going to pay a little higher interest rate, but with rates so low, a higher interest rate of 4 percent is not a big deal,” said Rosa Herwick, a broker and owner of Century 21 JR Realty in Henderson, Nev.

So how likely are banks to approve your mortgage application if you have a real estate-related blemish on your record? And can you do anything to spring yourself from the mortgage penalty box?

It depends on several factors, but largely on whether you had a foreclosure or a short sale.

FORECLOSURE

Generally, borrowers who have a foreclosure in their credit history can expect to wait between two to seven years before a lender will even accept their loan application.

The waiting periods stem from guidelines most banks must follow in order to be able to sell their home loans. That’s because potential purchasers, such as Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, each have a different set of guidelines for the loans they will buy and criteria for whom they deem a qualified borrower.

The fact is, a person’s credit score, employment history and other factors that make up one’s creditworthiness will take a back seat to these resale guidelines.

If a buyer with a past foreclosure is seeking a government-backed mortgage, the waiting period can vary before they can qualify.

Take the Federal Housing Administration, which insures roughly 30 percent of new loans. Under its guidelines, former homeowners must wait three years from the date of their foreclosure before they can qualify for backing by the agency.

Compare the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s housing program which requires three years, while the time penalty for a VA loan is two years. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, which own or guarantee about half of all mortgages, require the longest stretch: seven years after a foreclosure.

In some cases, the waiting periods for a foreclosure can be reduced.

Fannie Mae, for example, allows a three-year waiting period in the event the foreclosure was due to an extenuating circumstance. The company defines this as an event that was beyond the homeowners’ control and resulted in a sudden reduction in income or catastrophic increase in financial obligations. Think job layoff, medical bills or divorce.

FHA may grant an exception to its waiting period in the event a wage-earner becomes seriously ill or dies. A divorce may qualify for an exception, but only in certain cases.

SHORT SALES

The roadblocks for having a short sale in your credit history can be less severe, and in some cases, waived altogether.

FHA requires borrowers who weren’t paying their mortgage when they sold their house to wait three years before they can qualify for a home loan. That time penalty may be waived in certain cases, including long-term job loss.

There is no FHA time penalty for homeowners who made their house payments in the 12 months before their short sale.

The size of a down payment can also shorten the waiting period.

A down payment of 20 percent or more will cut Fannie Mae’s time penalty on a borrower with a short sale down to two years from seven. Buyers who put down 10 percent can qualify after four years.

CREDIT SCORE

It’s no longer just a waiting game for homeowners caught up in the earliest stages of the foreclosure crisis in 2007 and 2008.

There’s still the impact a foreclosure or short sale has on one’s credit score — still very much a factor in qualifying for a loan.

Like most credit blemishes, foreclosures and short sales will remain in your credit history for seven years.

As a general rule, the higher your FICO score, the more it will drop as a result of a bad debt, said Barry Paperno, consumer affairs manager for MyFICO.com, the consumer website for FICO.

FICO credit scores range from 300 to 850. In simulations, a foreclosure sent a FICO score of about 720 down to as low as 570 and took about seven years to recover fully, assuming everything else being equal.

Still, there are steps one can take to burnish one’s tarnished credit rating.

— While in the foreclosure penalty box, make sure to pay all your bills on time.

— Get more credit. This may sound counterintuitive after a foreclosure, but beefing up your track record of good credit accounts can help boost one’s credit score. A car loan or a credit card will do. But if you get a credit card, pay it off every month.

— Be patient. A foreclosure’s drag on your credit score will decline over time.

— Dispute any mistakes on your credit report, which can lower your score.

— Don’t close your oldest credit accounts. Your score gets a boost from older credit lines.

— Scale back your lifestyle and pocket the savings toward a future down payment.

Copyright © 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

USA Funds Borrower Connect Helps Colleges Improve Loan Default Rates

/PRNewswire/ — USA Funds®, a nonprofit organization that helps American families benefit from postsecondary education, has introduced USA Funds Borrower Connect™, a Web-based tool that helps colleges connect with their student loan borrowers to promote successful student loan repayment and curb loan defaults.

“Contact with student loan borrowers is a proven best practice for preventing student loan default,” said Denise B. Feser, USA Funds senior vice president, School and Student Services. “USA Funds Borrower Connect saves campus staff time and money by aggregating the student loan information they need and helping to automate outreach to student loan borrowers.”

USA Funds Borrower Connect offers college administrators the following benefits:

  • Aggregates loan data from multiple loan servicers, guarantors and the National Student Loan Data System, so schools can reach out to borrowers with Federal Family Education Loan Program loans, Direct Loans and put loans to address both two-year and three-year cohort default rates.
  • Automates the tasks of developing and sending letters and email messages and making telephone calls to targeted lists of student loan borrowers based on their repayment status.
  • Generates on-demand reports to help colleges analyze and track their cohort default rate trends.

ITT Educational Services Inc., the parent company of ITT Technical Institutes, has adopted USA Funds Borrower Connect as the cornerstone of its student-borrower services division. Division staff reach out to former students who are having difficulty making their student loan payments to counsel them about their options for resolving their payment problems.

“USA Funds Borrower Connect has the data we need for our student-borrower services staff to have informed conversations with our borrowers,” said Gregory C. Wallis, vice president, finance, ITT Educational Services Inc.

Wallis, who monitors trends in the student loan repayment status of as many as 160,000 former students, had been searching for a service that would provide the data to support communication campaigns to student loan borrowers who had attended ITT Tech, which has more than 130 campuses across the nation.

“With the advent of new three-year cohort default rate standards to determine whether colleges qualify to participate in federal student aid programs, we’ve received numerous requests from schools for a tool to support outreach to their student loan borrowers,” Feser said. “We believe that USA Funds Borrower Connect is a very cost-effective solution for colleges that want to reduce loan default rates and help their student loan borrowers avoid additional loan costs and damage to their credit by preventing loan delinquencies and default.”

For additional information about USA Funds Borrower Connect, college administrators can visit www.usafunds.org/borrowerconnect or contact USA Funds at (800) 766-0084.

Headquartered in Indianapolis, USA Funds is a nonprofit corporation that works to enhance postsecondary education preparedness, access and success by providing and supporting financial and other valued services. For more information about USA Funds, visit www.usafunds.org.

SOURCE USA Funds

UW police officer saves student’s life during Badgers hockey game Saturday

A UW-Madison police officer keeping an eye on behavior in the
student section during the University of Wisconsin men’s hockey
game at the Kohl Center on Saturday night may have helped save a
student’s life.

A 20-year-old student stood up at his seat and then collapsed.
He had no pulse and was not breathing, UW-Madison Police Capt.
Karen Soley said.

UW-Madison Police Officer John Deering saw the student fall,
rushed over and began chest compressions. Madison Fire Department
paramedics arrived a short time later and used an external
defibrillator to revive the student.

By the time they arrived at the emergency room of a local
hospital, the student was in stable condition.

Deering “happened to be in the exact right spot at the exact
right time,” Soley said.

Sgt. Aaron Chapin said Tuesday the student had gone into cardiac
arrest.

“I think they’re still trying to figure out exactly what caused
it,” Chapin said.

He credited the quick actions and prompt response by Deering and
other UW officers and paramedics with saving the student’s
life.

Census Bureau Webinar to Highlight Education Data (resend)


WASHINGTON, Feb. 22, 2012 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ — The following was released today by the U.S. Census Bureau:

(Logo: http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20110428/DC91889LOGO)

What:  The U.S. Census Bureau will hold a webinar news conference to release five education-related statistical products based on the Current Population Survey, American Community Survey and Survey of Income and Program Participation.

The webinar will highlight the latest findings on adult educational attainment, attainment levels and the likelihood of being unemployed, the geographic distribution of people who hold degrees in science and engineering and how earnings are tied to degree level, field of study and mode of high school completion.

The data sets being released are as follows:

  • Educational Attainment in the United States: 2011 (Source: Current Population Survey)
  • What It’s Worth: Field of Training and Economic Status in 2009 (Source: Survey of Income and Program Participation)
  • Educational Attainment in the United States: 2009 (Source: American Community Survey and Current Population Survey)
  • Field of Bachelor’s Degree in the United States: 2009 (Source: American Community Survey)
  • Characteristics of GED Program Participants (Source: American Community Survey, Current Population Survey and Survey of Income and Program Participation)

The news conference will consist of a simultaneous audio conference and online presentation. Information on accessing the online presentation is provided below. Reporters will be able to ask questions once the presentation is complete. We suggest reporters log in and call in early.

When: Thursday, Feb. 23, 2012; 2 p.m. (EST)

Who: Nancy Potok, Associate Director for Demographic ProgramsKurt Bauman, chief, Education and Social Stratification Branch — Social, Economic and Housing Statistics Division

Details:Audio conference ― access informationToll free number:  888-790-3288Passcode: CENSUSNote: Stay on the line until operator asks for the passcode. Do not key in passcode.

Online presentation ― access information:Please login early, as some setup is required.URL: https://www.mymeetings.com/nc/join/

Conference/meeting number: PW1440288Conference/meeting passcode: CENSUSIf closed captioning is required: http://livewrite.nccsite.com/view/cb0223

Follow @uscensusbureau on Twitter, Facebook, Flickr, YouTube and Ustream.Public Information Office 301-763-3030 e-mail: pio@census.gov

SOURCE U.S. Census Bureau

  • Facebook
  • Google+
  • Twitter