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.
Debt-Cental.com offers credit card debt counseling services for Ballinger Texas residents. The Counselors will help you to pay down your debt rather than only paying the minimum amount. In the process of doing this you can actually rebuild your credit and re-establish your credit report. The Counselors will help Ballinger residents to create a budget which still allows them to maintain a normal every day to day life style while they are paying down debts. Debts which can be consolidated include credit card debt, student loan debt, and other regular monthly bills (such as telephone bill). The credit counseling program can help you in avoiding bankruptcy, lowering interest rates, and no more harassing mail or telephone calls from creditors or collection agencies.
To find out how our Counselors can help you, simply fill out the form on the bottom of the page for your free consultation now!
AP - President-elect Barack Obama's choice to shape up federal agencies is a longtime senior partner at a leading consulting firm who also tried to modernize the IRS and push the tax agency to more aggressively pursue corporate and high-income tax cheats.
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.
Reuters - Democratic President-elect Barack Obama intends to retain Federal Deposit Insurance Corp head Sheila Bair, who has pushed for fast mortgage modifications, according to a report on Wednesday.
Reuters - U.S. banks will have to raise fresh capital in 2009, and a sharp increase in credit-rating downgrades on mortgage-related securities will lead to further stresses on the companies' capital, according to prominent banking analyst Meredith Whitney.