Tag: relief

  • Biden to wipe out $10,000 in student loan debt for many borrowers

    Biden to wipe out $10,000 in student loan debt for many borrowers

    BY: ARIANA FIGUEROA – Ohio Capital Journal

    WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden announced Wednesday that he will cancel up to $20,000 in federal student loan debt for Pell Grant borrowers and up to $10,000 for all other borrowers with an income of less than $125,000 for an individual and $250,000 for a household.

    Biden also announced his administration is extending a pause on student loan repayments until Dec. 31. The decision comes one week before the expiration of a pause of student loan repayments put in place at the beginning of the coronavirus pandemic.

    “Here’s the deal, the cost of education beyond high school has gone up exponentially,” Biden said at the White House.

    Biden stressed that the people who would benefit the most are low-income and middle class families and individuals.

    “No high income household, will benefit from this action, period,” Biden said.

    Biden said that many Americans with student loan debt have put off starting families because of the cost and have been unable to qualify for mortgages to buy a home because of the student loan debt they carry.

    “All this means is an entire generation is now saddled with unsustainable debt,” Biden said.

    Despite numerous reports in recent weeks that Biden would take action on student loans, the White House had remained silent, but on Wednesday the president tweeted out his decision, prior to his remarks.

    “In keeping with my campaign promise, my Administration is announcing a plan to give working and middle class families breathing room as they prepare to resume federal student loan payments in January 2023,” Biden wrote on Twitter.

    Following the announcement, the Department of Education said it will release an application in the weeks ahead that will allow millions of borrowers to claim this new relief.

    “[S]tudent loan debt has hindered their ability to achieve their dreams — including buying a home, starting a business, or providing for their family,” U.S. Secretary of Education Miguel Cardona said in a statement. “Getting an education should set us free; not strap us down!”

    The cancellation of student debt will only apply to current borrowers, not future ones, and income levels for the 2020 and 2021 tax years will be considered, a senior administration official said during a Wednesday call with reporters.

    The Department of Education estimates that about 8 million borrowers will automatically receive relief because the agency already has those borrowers’ income information on file. That means those borrowers do not have to submit applications.

    Borrowers who received Pell Grants, who will benefit from the most relief, are among the students who had the lowest household incomes while in college. They will also be subject to the $125,000 and $250,000 income caps.

    New rule on loans

    The Biden administration is also directing the Department of Education to propose a rule to help current and future borrowers with their loan repayments.

    The rule would eliminate monthly interest  payments on loans, “so that unlike other existing income-driven repayment plans, no borrower’s loan balance will grow as long as they make their monthly payments — even when that monthly payment is $0 because their income is low,” according to the department website.

    The proposed rule would also forgive loan balances “after 10 years of payments, instead of 20 years, for borrowers with loan balances of $12,000 or less.” It would also require “borrowers to pay no more than 5% of their discretionary income monthly on undergraduate loans.”

    “Middle class borrowers struggle with high monthly payments and ballooning balances that make it harder for them to build wealth,” a senior administration official said.

    While many Democrats and progressive advocates were pleased with the announcement, it falls short of the student debt relief campaign platform that Biden ran on.

    In a Medium post during the 2020 presidential election, Biden said under his administration he would “forgive all undergraduate tuition-related federal student debt from two- and four-year public colleges and universities for debt-holders earning up to $125,000, with appropriate phase-outs to avoid a cliff.”

    He also promised he would “immediately cancel a minimum of $10,000 of student debt per person,” but this recent student debt announcement comes two years into his administration and only after continual pressure from congressional Democrats and advocates.

    Some congressional Democrats have urged the White House to cancel up to $50,000 worth of student loans, arguing that because about 92%  of that debt is held by the Department of Education, the administration has the authority to cancel those loans through executive action.

    More than 43 million Americans have student loan debt, and the Federal Reserve estimates that the total U.S. student loan debt is more than $1.75 trillion.

    A Penn Wharton budget model released Tuesday found that a one-time loan forgiveness of $10,000 would mostly benefit borrowers in the four lowest quintiles of incomes.

    Earlier this month, more than 100 Senate and House Democrats urged the Biden administration to extend the pause on repayment of student loans beyond the Aug. 31 deadline. The lawmakers argued that due to inflation and the ongoing coronavirus pandemic, student loan borrowers should get an extension on pausing their loan payments. They did not give another deadline for repayments to begin in their letter to the president.

    Democrats praise Biden

    Democrats did welcome the President’s announcement.

    “By delivering historic targeted student debt relief to millions of borrowers, more working families will be able to meet their kitchen table needs as they continue to recover from the challenges of the pandemic,” House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said in a statement. “Importantly, this action will help those most in need, easing a financial burden disproportionately harming women and people of color.”

    She has previously said that the president does not have the authority to cancel student loans and that the process needs to be done through Congress. She did not mention her previous comments in the statement.

    Biden also had said earlier, while in the White House, that he would only cancel up to $10,000 in student loan debt, and only if Congress passes legislation to do so. Administration officials did not address the shift in policy.

    While the Democrat-controlled House likely could pass legislation canceling some portion of student loan debt, the evenly divided Senate would need all 50 Democrats on board along with an additional 10 Republicans to get a bill to the president’s desk.

    House Education and Labor Committee Chairman Bobby Scott, a Virginia Democrat, said that while the student loan cancellation will provide relief for borrowers, it doesn’t solve the “underlying problems that caused the student debt crisis in the first place,” such as high tuition costs.

    “Without reversing the chronic underinvestment in higher education that has driven up tuition costs, and without fixing our student loan system that has made student loans more expensive to take out and harder to pay off, students will continue to take on more debt and borrowers will continue to face rising debt levels,” Scott said.

    Republicans critical

    GOP lawmakers sharply criticized the cancellation move.

    “At a time of skyrocketing inflation, declining wages, and a national recession, Washington has again turned its back on hardworking Americans in Iowa and across this country,” Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds, a Republican, said in a statement. “President Biden isn’t canceling student debt, he’s shifting the costs to the taxpayer and to those who worked to pay off their loans in full.”

    Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, a Kentucky Republican, said in a statement the move was a “slap in the face to every family who sacrificed to save for college, every graduate who paid their debt, and every American who chose a certain career path or volunteered to serve in our Armed Forces in order to avoid taking on debt.”

    Overall in Kentucky, there are about 600,000 student loan borrowers who have an average balance for federal and private student loans of $30,794.  

    In March 2020, President Donald Trump issued an emergency pause on student loan repayments, which has now been extended several times by both administrations. The pandemic is still ongoing, and the U.S. has surpassed 1 million COVID-19 deaths.

  • Additional CARES Act funding available for Ohio Cultural Nonprofits

    Additional CARES Act funding available for Ohio Cultural Nonprofits

     

    Available to assist nonprofit organizations that serve the public by offering programs in history, literature, philosophy, or other humanities topics.

    Columbus, Ohio – Ohio Humanities announced the availability of additional OH CARES funding to help cultural nonprofit organizations affected by COVID-19 health crisis.  According to Pat Williamsen, Ohio Humanities executive director, up to $60,000 is available to assist nonprofit organizations that serve the public by offering programs in history, literature, philosophy, or other humanities topics.  Grants of up to $5,000 will be awarded through a competitive application process.

    Funded by the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act (CARES Act), the grants will help Ohio’s cultural community maintain staffing and provide programming for audiences affected by continuing pandemic restrictions. OH CARES grants may be used for digital programming, humanities education staff, and supplies to maintain the safety of employees and patrons. Organizations that received OH CARES grants in the first round of funding are ineligible.

    Do you belong to or support a Loveland organization that may be eligible?

    Applications for OH CARES II grants will be available beginning on Friday, July 31; the deadline for submission will be Friday, August 14.  A webinar about this funding initiative will be held on July 29 at 10 a.m. To register for the webinar, go to ohiohumanities.org/CARES.

    The CARES Act, passed by Congress on March 27, included $75 million of emergency funding for the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH). Forty percent of that amount was distributed to the 56 state and territorial humanities councils to support local relief efforts. In late March, NEH reported that the anchors of the creative economy such as museums and historical societies were reporting losses of $1 billion every month as facilities were closed and educational programs were canceled.

    Art museums, local historical societies, preservation societies, and other organizations that preserve and promote Ohio history, heritage, and culture.

    Announcing the emergency appropriations available through the CARES Act, NEH Chairman Jon Parrish Peede observed, “To the extent that healing is to come during and after this pandemic, it will be through humanities fields from philosophy to literature to history to religious studies—through the act of documenting, preserving, sharing, and reflecting— that our communities will move toward a greater sense of wholeness.”

    In its first call for OH CARES grants, Ohio Humanities awarded $690,000 to 91 organizations throughout Ohio. Recipients included art museums, local historical societies, preservation societies, and other organizations that preserve and promote Ohio history, heritage, and culture.

    Ohio Humanities staff are available by email to help applicants navigate the application process to access emergency funding. Ohio Humanities will continue accepting grant applications for regular projects at deadlines listed at http://www.ohiohumanities.org/grants-2/.

    Additional information about OH CARES funding can be found at ohiohumanities.org/CARES.

  • Here are ways your neighbors are responding to Hurricane Harvey

    Here are ways your neighbors are responding to Hurricane Harvey

    Texas National Guard soldiers conduct rescue operations in flooded areas around Houston, Texas 27 August, 2017. (Photos by 1Lt. Zachary West, 100th MPAD

     

    Loveland, Ohio – Loveland Magazine asked readers to send us information about ways our community can support relief efforts for Hurricane Harvey. Here are the responses.


    From Susan Grosse:

    Red Cross plays a huge role in rescue and relief for disasters. The Cincinnati/Ohio Valley Chapter has many staff and volunteers with a high level of expertise. 19 from our region have already been deployed.

    Monetary donations on the Red Cross website are preferred, are invaluable and go directly toward the relief effort budget.  Red Cross does not take in miscellaneous items from the public.  They use the power of the monetary donations to buy the absolute right items needed for the current disaster.  The monetary donations go a lot further because Red Cross can take advantage of reduced cost as they will buy in bulk.
     
    for questions, call the local office (513) 579-3000


    From Donna Bednar and Prince of Peace Lutheran Church:
     

    Prince of Peace Lutheran Church will only be collecting monetary donations. Checks can be made to Prince of Peace Lutheran Church, 101 S. Lebanon Road, Loveland,OH  45140 referencing Lutheran Disaster Response: Hurricane Response, U.S. We then will send 100% of the donation to the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America where 100% of the donations go to the victims. Please also read this message from our Pastor. Pastor Jonathan Eilert: Reminders that you might want to share with your readers about disaster response


    From Tim Canada

    Bond Furniture in conjunction with Loveland Hardware will be collection points for relief items for the victims of Hurricane Harvey. Deliveries of donated items will be taken to Mathew 25 Ministries multiple times over the next 30 days. Cash donations will be collected at both locations and checks made out to Matthew 25 Ministries.

    Bond Furniture and Mattress Galleries is at 113 Karl Brown Way. (513-683-2233)

    Store Hours:Monday and Thursday 10am-8pm, Tuesday, Wednesday and Friday 10am-6pm, Saturday 10am-5pm, and closed on Sunday.

    Loveland Hardware is at 131 Broadway.

    Store Hours: Monday – Thursday 8am-6pm, Friday – Saturday 8am-5pm, and closed on Sunday.

    Accepting slightly used and new clothes, toiletries, shoes, blankets, pillows, canned foods with tear off tops, water, ready to eat meals (non frozen), boxed diapers, baby wipes, and Checks made out to Mathew 25 Ministries.


    From Rev. Dr. Deborah Uchtman at Bethel Murdoch Presbyterian Church
     
    Bethel Murdoch Presbyterian Church wants to help bring hope and healing to the Texas families who have been affected by Hurricane Harvey. The way in which we will help is that we will contribute funds to Presbyterian Disaster Assistance (PDA) who will deploy their National Response Team members to the Texas area as soon as is humanly possible. PDA is known for their rapid response in tragic situations and is a part of the Mission Agency of the Presbyterian Church (USA). If anyone would like to support PDA’s emergency response and recovery efforts they may donate by check, gifts can be designated to DR000169-Harvey. You may send it to: Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.), PO Box 643700, Pittsburgh, PA, 15264-3700. Let us be generous as we share our love and support with those struggling in Texas.
     

    From Keara Gibbs and Mosaic Church:

    We are working with Ray Nevers from Mosaic, who will be going to Houston, TX on Friday with a Uhaul to take Canned food, Bottled Water, Clothes, Personal hygiene items, Bedding, Inflatable Mattress, Pet Food, Etc and will return by Monday. PLEASE BRING DONATIONS TO CHURCH TOMORROW OR THURSDAY BETWEEN 9-5. **ALSO WE WOULD YOU CONSIDER GIVING FINANICALLY TO THIS IMPORTANT EFFORT. YOU CAN TEXT TO GIVE USING THE NUMBER (513)259-2133, TYPE THE AMOUNT YOU WOULD LIKE TO GIVE AND TYPE HURRICANE RELIEF…OR YOU CAN USE OUR MOSAIC CINCINNATI APP. 100% OF ALL MONEY WILL GO DIRECTLY TO HOUSTON ON FRIDAY FOR RELIEF EFFORTS. ****WE NEED ONE ADDITIONAL MAN TO GO, WHO CAN ASSIST IN THE DRIVE, AND BE A BLESSING. ALL YOUR EXPENSES WILL BE COVERED BY CHURCH. IF YOU ARE ABLE TO GO… EMAIL- MANDY@MOSAICCINCINNATI.COM Thank you for in advance for helping us help others. Pastor Shayne


    Matthew 25: Ministries is responding to Hurricane Harvey. Our Disaster Response Team departed at noon on Tuesday, August 29 with our full fleet of specialized vehicles. The trucks were loaded with an initial load of supplies, including personal care kits, cleaning products, first aid and safety kits, diapers, paper products, and tarps. Initial plans are to head towards Rockport and Aransas Pass and then follow along Harvey’s path of destruction.

    DISASTER RELIEF DONATIONS

    Our volunteer and donation drop-off hours have been extended for Hurricane Harvey relief. We are open for donations Monday – Thursday from 9 AM – 7 PM, Friday 9 AM – 4 PM, Saturday from 9 AM – 3 PM and Monday (Labor Day) from 9 AM – 4 PM.

    We will accept the following for disaster relief:

    • Monetary Donations*: Donate online or mail checks to Matthew 25: Ministries, 11060 Kenwood Road, Cincinnati, OH 45242.
    • Non-Perishable Food: PULL TOP canned vegetables, fruits etc.; ready to eat dry goods such as nuts, peanut butter, dried fruits, granola and trail mixes, jerky, ready to eat snacks; bottled water; ready- to-eat meals or MREs etc.
    • Personal Care Products: Antibacterial soap, hand sanitizer, toothpaste, toothbrushes, shampoo, body wash, deodorant, lotion etc.
    • Cleaning supplies: Laundry detergents, general cleaner, sponges, bleach (powdered form is preferred), mops, scrub brushes, buckets, rubber gloves etc.
    • Paper products: Toilet paper, paper towels etc.
    • Baby and infant supplies: Diapers, wipes, diaper rash ointment, baby wash, baby shampoo, baby lotion etc.
    • First-Aid items: Bandages, gauze, pads, first aid tape, antiseptic creams, hydrogen peroxide, alcohol, latex gloves, instant cold packs etc.

    *Donors who would like to designate their financial gifts for Hurricane Relief may do so by writing “Hurricane Relief” in the memo line of their check or by typing it in the “in honor of” field of our online giving form. Please mail checks to Matthew 25: Ministries, 11060 Kenwood Road, Cincinnati, OH 45242. 100% of donated funds designated for Hurricane Relief will be used for the purpose intended.


     REMOTE DONATION DROP-OFF LOCATIONS

    LOCATION:Advantage Resourcing
    2337 Buttermilk Crossing
    Crescent Springs, KY 41017
    DROP OFF TIMES:August 28 – September 16
    Monday—  Friday 8 AM —4:30 PM
    CONTACT:Tonya Hensley | 859-578-3300
    northernkentucky@advantageresourcing.com
    LOCATION:Fairfield West Baptist Church
    5345 Muskopf Road
    Fairfield, OH 45014
    DROP OFF TIMES:Friday, Sept 1 – 10 AM to 6 PM
    Saturday, Sept 2  9 AM to 6 PM
    Sunday, Sept 3   12 PM – 4 PM
    Monday, Sept 4    10 AM – 2 PM
    CONTACT:Angie Kenworthy | 513-509-0465
    angiekenworthy@gmail.com

     

    LOCATION:Goshen Township
    1849 Rt 28
    Goshen OH 45122
     DROP OFF TIMES:August 28 – September 24
    Monday—Friday 24/7
     CONTACT:Steve Pegram, Chief |  513-722-3500
    Steve.pegram@goshen-oh.gov
    LOCATION:St. Bernard-Elmwood Place City Schools
    Bethel-Tate
    Roger Bacon Stadium
    35 E. Mitchell Avenue
    Cincinnati, Ohio 45217
    DROP OFF TIMES:Thursday Aug. 31st ONLY
    5:30 PM—8 PM

     

    CONTACT:Matthew Koenig | 513-582-4050

     

     

     

     

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