It's a good idea to speak with your lender, your school, your employer, or a
representative of the Office of Federal Student
aid to
find out if you qualify and what steps you should take to seek loan forgiveness.
This is usually how it goes: politician wannabe gets campaign contributions from private sector guy, gets into office, legislates in favor of private sector guy, private sector guy contributes more, politician guy takes vacation in Italy (or goes for a hike on the Appalachian trail)... gets re-elected, the word gets out that he «plays,» more private sector guys contribute to his campaign, voters are pleased to see the name of their
representative in print, like the new wardrobe, the new hairstyle, believe all change is good and re-elect the politician again... politician feels the power, creates agency to watch over private sector guy, agency takes fact -
finding trip to France... raises taxes on private sector guy, writes legislation that taxes private sector guy if his plant emits CO2 while producing widgets... voters are in awe and re-elect the politician... private sector guy whines, politician makes him ambassador to Taiwan, limits how much the new private guy taking his place can earn, and taxes all widgets so new private guy will make more environmentally friendly ones... voters swoon, pay more for widgets, lose job in widget factory, hate private guy, re-elect their pol... politician buries $ 5 billion
aid to Taiwan in next appropriation bill...... kind of makes a case for term limits, doesn't it.
«aspiring lawyers from diverse backgrounds are
finding it harder than ever to forge a career in legal
aid... those from low - income families can not afford to become legal
aid lawyers and the legal
aid profession is therefore becoming less and less
representative of the people it serves: those without means».