Categories
Selected Articles

Two arrested in connection with death of Cork woman Vanessa O’Callaghan

Spread the love

Vanessa O’Callaghan died at Cork University Hospital three days after an assault

Spread the love
Categories
Selected Articles

US Navy Warship Rearms at Sea With One Eye on China War

Spread the love

The Navy previously called rearm-at-sea a critical ability to any future conflict in the Pacific.

Spread the love
Categories
Selected Articles

Woman Asks Best Friend’s Boyfriend for Outlandish Favor—Shock at His Reply

Spread the love

Social media users adored the boyfriend’s response in the viral clip, with one saying: “your friend needs to marry him immediately.”

Spread the love
Categories
Selected Articles

Dean Cain admits romance with Pamela Anderson was short-lived for this one reason

Spread the love

“That candle burned hot and short,” Dean Cain said.

Spread the love
Categories
Selected Articles

8 million student-loan borrowers on Biden’s SAVE plan now face interest charges again after a yearlong pause

Spread the love

Shadows of college graduates
Interest charges for student-loan borrowers on the SAVE plan resume on August 1.

  • After a year’s pause, interest charges for SAVE student-loan borrowers restart in August.
  • Trump’s administration recommended that borrowers on SAVE switch to a new repayment plan.
  • Beginning next year, borrowers will have two repayment options due to Trump’s spending law.

President Donald Trump isn’t saving the SAVE plan.

The Department of Education announced earlier in July that interest charges for student-loan borrowers on the SAVE plan are restarting on August 1 after being paused for a year while the plan was facing legal challenges.

SAVE, created by former President Joe Biden, intended to give borrowers more affordable monthly payments with a shorter timeline to debt relief. The plan was blocked in July 2024, and 8 million enrolled borrowers have been in a forbearance without interest accumulating.

That relief is officially over. The department said that it is restarting interest charges on SAVE accounts to comply with the court order that blocked the plan, although the order did not explicitly provide instructions on handling the interest charges. Interest rates vary depending on when the loan originated. Today’s undergraduate direct rate is 6.39%.

Linda McMahon, Trump’s education secretary, said in a statement that she recommends borrowers “quickly transition to a legally compliant repayment plan,” like income-based repayment, to avoid balance growth.

Some Democratic lawmakers previously criticized the interest charge restart and urged the administration to reverse course. On July 14, Sens. Elizabeth Warren, Bernie Sanders, and Chuck Schumer sent a letter to McMahon saying that the restart is “devastating for millions of American families.”

“It defies logic and the law that a months-old preliminary injunction against SAVE, which makes no mention of the interest-free forbearance, requires you to start charging interest to millions of borrowers in forbearance now,” they wrote.

The lawmakers also cited a backlog in income-driven repayment plan processing that would make it difficult for borrowers on SAVE to switch to a new plan. While the department said in its press release announcing the interest charges that borrowers who switch to a new plan “can expect quick and timely processing,” the department in May reported a backlog of nearly 2 million income-driven repayment applications.

The income-based repayment plan, which the department specifically mentioned as a viable option for SAVE borrowers, is also facing a debt relief processing delay. The department posted on Federal Student Aid that loan forgiveness through IBR plans is paused to update payment counts without providing a timeline for when relief will resume.

For now, borrowers can choose to remain on SAVE while interest accumulates, or they can switch to a new plan and make payments. Due to Trump’s spending law, student-loan borrowers will have two repayment options beginning July 2026: a standard repayment plan or a new Repayment Assistance Plan that forgives borrowers’ balances after 30 years.

The new plans are less generous than existing ones, including the SAVE plan, which Trump’s spending law eliminates.

These changes come amid Trump’s broader plans to dismantle the Department of Education. The Supreme Court ruled that the department can proceed with firing nearly 1,400 workers, and limited staff means likely hurdles in carrying out the student-loan repayment overhaul.

Are you enrolled in the SAVE plan? Share your thoughts with this reporter at asheffey@businessinsider.com.

Read the original article on Business Insider

Spread the love
Categories
Selected Articles

Death toll from Russian strikes on Kyiv rises to 26 as Ukraine calls for UN security council meeting

Spread the love

Over 150 injured making Thursday one of the deadliest days for the Ukraine capital since start of war

The death toll from Thursday’s Russian attack on Kyiv has risen to 26 with over 150 injured, making it one of the deadliest attacks on the capital since the start of the full-scale war in 2022.

Responding to the attack, Ukraine called for an emergency meeting of the UN security council this afternoon as it seeks to unite its allies and ramp up pressure on Russia to end the war.

Continue reading…


Spread the love
Categories
Selected Articles

UK house prices rebound as market recovers from June dip

Spread the love

Average price of property rises 0.6% in July to £272,664, says Nationwide

House prices in the UK returned to growth last month, as the market recovered from a dip in June after the end of a tax break on stamp duty.

The average price of a home rose 0.6% in July to £272,664, bouncing back from the biggest month-on-month fall in more than two years in June, according to Nationwide.

Continue reading…


Spread the love
Categories
Selected Articles

Country singer Conner Smith returns to the stage after tragic crash that killed elderly woman

Spread the love

“I’ve found in the darkest of moments, the Lord is so much closer than ever before,” the country crooner said.

Spread the love
Categories
Selected Articles

Flight attendants sue Boeing over MAX 9 panel blowout incident: report

Spread the love

The lawsuits, filed on Tuesday in Seattle’s King County Superior Court, accused Boeing of product liability for delivering a plane that was unsafe to operate and for negligence in manufacturing practices, the paper said.

Spread the love
Categories
Capitol Riot

Find Lilly Clinical Trials

Spread the love

Take the Next Step A Study of Mirikizumab (LY3074828) in Pediatric Participants With Moderately to Severely or Active Ulcerative Colitis (SHINE-2) Enrolling Conditions: Ulcerative Colitis Trial Name

Spread the love