Debt-Central.com is not licenced to help visitors from NY at this time. Please visit American Debt Consolidation Resources for more information on their NY office.
When working with the counselors with Debt-Central.com, Pamplico SC residents will find that every decision is left up to them. You will not feel pressured in to a decision you are not comfortable with - the counselors are simply there to guide you along.
There are several reasons that can cause a person to be in debt - and it is not always careless spending. Things that may cause debt problems include extensive student loans, injury at work, loss of job, and even death in the family. Whatever your situation may be, you deserve to be debt free.
For more information of Debt-Central's credit counseling services, simply fill out the form on the bottom of the page for your free consultation.
AP - Mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac said Thursday they will extend the suspension of foreclosure sales and evictions from single-family homes through the end of January.
Reuters - Finance company GMAC LLC expressed support for its money-losing Residential Capital LLC mortgage unit on Thursday but stopped short of a commitment to keep the big home loan provider in business.
Reuters - Citigroup Inc is leading other lenders in advanced talks with key U.S. senators on legislation that would allow judges to set new repayment terms for millions of mortgage holders who wind up in bankruptcy court, the Wall Street Journal said, citing people involved in the talks.
AP - Nancy Killefer, the management consultant chosen by President-elect Barack Obama to make federal agencies work better for the public, has a lot of experience trying to improve the agency taxpayers love to hate, the Internal Revenue Service.
AP - Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson on Wednesday said the best option for the future of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac could be for the mortgage giants to be run like public utilities.
AP - A group of private investors including former executives of Countrywide Financial Corp. has purchased $558 million in home mortgages from the government in a deal involving assets of the failed First National Bank of Nevada, the investors announced Wednesday.