USA Today - 13.11.2019

(Brent) #1

2B z WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2019 z USA TODAY MONEY


An intense cold snap is threatening
to smash record lows across much of the
nationthrough Thursday.
With temperatures sliding and win-
ter fast approaching, many car owners
are asking: How often should I start my
car to warm it up?
Turns out, the answer doesn’t lie in
frequency.
Experts at AAA, a federation of motor
clubs, say it’s not a good idea to warm
your car up to keep it from freezing.
“Ninety-five percent of the cars on
the road today don’t use carburetors, so
you no longer need to warm them up on
cold days,” said Mike Calkins, manager
of technical services at AAA.
Instead of repeatedly starting up
your car to keep it warm, drivers who are
concerned about their engines freezing
could have a block heater installed for
less than $100, Calkins said. A block
heater, which plugs into standard elec-
trical outlets, will keep the engine from
getting cold so the car starts easier the
next morning.
If a driver were to start their engine in
extremely cold weather without a block
heater,they would need to get it up to
full operating temperature, which is
best accomplished through driving the
car around.
Even after some driving, however, it


takes only a couple of hours for the en-
gine to cool down from full operating
temperature, Calkins says. Moreover, he
says, repeatedly starting a car without
running it long enough to recharge the
battery can lower the battery’s capacity
over time.
Antifreeze protection also is a good
alternative to starting up cars often.
Antifreeze prevents the coolant mix-
ture from freezing. When water or any
liquid freezes, it expands, which Calkins
says can create pressure that can crack

engine blocks.
Calkins says cars typically use a 50-
50 mix of antifreeze and water, which
provides protection for minus-30 to
minus-35-degreeweather. But if tem-
peratures drop, car owners should
have a higher concentration of anti-
freeze, up to 70%.
If a driver isn’t sure what the anti-
freeze protection level is in their car,
Calkins recommends they find out
soon to protect against possible dam-
age.

Warming up the car in the


cold is a thing of the past


A woman wipes the snow off her car in Chicago on Tuesday.GRACE HAUK/USA TODAY

Dalvin Brown and Ben Tobin
USA TODAY


Decide what you won’t
compromise on

“With the market what it is, buyers
will undoubtedly have to settle,” says
Greg Buchanan, president-elect of the
Lexington-Bluegrass Association of
Realtors in Kentucky. “Buyers have to
figure out what their nonnegotiables
are.”
For instance, some house hunters
may insist on buying a property in a
specific school district, an issue that’s
top of mind for many families with
children.
Take Stephanie Loomis Pappas, 38,
a freelance writer in Beachwood, Ohio.
She and her husband recently moved
about one mile from their previous res-
idence in order to enroll their son in
kindergarten in the new home’s school
district.
Ironically, she adds, her new home
is on the same busy street as the previ-
ous one. But she says she and her hus-
band realized there are advantages to
the location, such as being able to walk
to stores and coffee shops. In her eyes,
she was also able to get a better deal on
a home on a busy street. She recalls
they were considering another house
on a quieter street that was listed for
the same price – $439,000 –but it
hadn’t been updated in 50 years.
The home they ended up purchas-
ing “was completely redone in Janu-
ary: a new HVAC system, a new kitch-
en, new walls,” she says. “It is very
clear we were able to get a much nicer
home.”

Be realistic about repair costs

Some house hunters have trouble
looking beyond aesthetic handicaps
like garish paint colors, but many of
those issues can be fixed at a reason-
able cost. Other maintenance issues,
such as a new roof or furnace, might
represent a bigger investment and
should be calculated in the offer, says
Danielle Parent, a Redfin real estate
agent.
“When I take a buyer through a
home, I say, ‘It needs windows, it
needs a roof and it needs a furnace,’
and then we put that into our offer,”
Parent says. “We factor that in and
hope for a better price to offset the de-
ferred maintenance cost.”
It’s also a good idea to walk through
the house with a contractor to get a
rough estimate for fixing problems,
says Realtor.com’s Dutton.
“Keep an eye out for homes with
cosmetic flaws versus serious funda-
mental flaws with the foundation or
the roof, which will cost a bundle,”
Dutton advises. “If it’s ugly wallpaper
or a poor paint job, those are easy
fixed.”

Think like a seller

At some point, you’ll be on the op-
posite end of the transaction. That’s
why it’s important to think like a seller,
Dutton says.
“Even if the busy road doesn’t both-
er you, keep in mind it could bother
other people,” she says.
An undesirable school district is the
top drag on a home’s potential selling
price, depressing values by about 22%,
according to an analysis of home sales
in the top 100 metropolitan areas by
Realtor.com. Homes next to strip clubs
have a roughly 15% lower value, while
houses in areas with a high concentra-
tion of renters are depressed by about
14%, they found.
House hunters can find out about
the quality of local schools through
such sites as GreatSchools.org or Red-
fin and Zillow, which both link to
GreatSchools.org data.
Says Buchanan: “Just like when you
are buying a car, do a lot of research
online” before buying.

Catch

Continued from Page 1B

Stephanie Loomis Pappas and her son,
Dylan, at the end of their driveway.
STEPHANIE LOOMIS PAPPAS

loan is transferred from the student
loan servicer – a private contractor re-
sponsible for collecting payments on
behalf of the federal government – to
the Debt Management Collections Sys-
tem. Borrowers then have 60 days to
come to a repayment arrangement with
the Education Department. If no agree-
ment is reached, the loan is transferred
to a student loan debt collector.”
Defaulting on a student loan is seri-
ous business because it triggers hefty
collection fees, garnishing of your
wages, the possibility of the federal gov-
ernment taking your tax refund to cover
past-due student loans, and even ineli-
gibility for some other programs, such
as help with home ownership.
But taking the wrong road to avoid
default also can end up harming some
students.
Texas borrowers tend to lean more
heavily on student loans to pay for col-
lege than students nationwide. Borrow-
ers in this group entered repayment
during and shortly after the Great Re-
cession when jobs were tough to find
and starting salaries were low. Even so,
the experience of this group has some
takeaways.


Those first payments
can foreshadow trouble


About a quarter of borrowers default-
ed within five years of starting to repay
their student loans, based on the Texas
data. Most had tried to deal with their
overload of debt by suspending pay-
ments through deferment and forbear-
ance. Many, of course, are told that
stopping or reducing their payments
could help avoid default. It didn’t help in
the long run in many cases.
Sarah Sattelmeyer, manager of Pew’s
project on student borrower success,
said borrowers who repeatedly used de-
ferment and forbearance to deal with
debt that they couldn’t afford ended up
with student loan balances that grew
over time.
For some, a better option could be
dealing with longer-term challenges by
trying to lower monthly payments
through an income-driven repayment
plan.
The Pew study showed that many of
those who suspended their payments
had showed signs of potential distress
almost immediately.
“When you’re earliest in your career,
it’s often when your income is the low-
est over the course of your career,” said
Will Sealy, co-founder and CEO of Sum-
mer, a New York-based startup that of-
fers software to help borrowers keep
track of their student loans.
The Summer online platform guides
borrowers through their repayment op-
tions, helping them enroll into the best
savings plans digitally.
College grads can sign up for free at
http://www.meetsummer.org.
Sealy, who previously worked with


the Consumer Financial Protection Bu-
reau on student debt issues, said the
federal government provides income-
driven repayment plans, which are in-
tended to help people.
But it can be difficult for people to
navigate the best option for their situa-
tion.
Yet it’s important that they spend
time investigating the overall costs and
options of such plans, he said, in order
to avoid future missed payments and
default.
“You can fall very quickly in a very
unforgiving direction,” Sealy said.

Your student loan debt
can easily go higher

After five years of repayment, about
21% of borrowers ended up owing more
than their original balances, according
to the Texas data. Debt grew as borrow-
ers paused payments repeatedly for
several years.
“Among borrowers who owed more
after five years in repayment, a third had
balances of 125% or more of their initial
principal,” according to Pew’s research.
So if you started out owing $30,
in student loans, you could soon owe
$37,500 after five years in repayment.

Not all borrowers
face the same risk

Borrowers who owe less than
$10,000 but didn’t complete a degree
default at higher rates. Borrowers of col-
or, particularly African Americans and
first-generation students, face default
at higher rates than their peers.
To be sure, there are good reasons for
seeking a deferment. Most borrowers
who use deferments do so while en-
rolled in school, unemployed or facing
financial hardship.
The U.S. Department of Education
has made a new deferment program
available to those undergoing cancer
treatment, for example.
Borrowers who qualify for a defer-
ment or forbearance typically can post-
pone payments for up to a year at a time.
One of the big red flags for trouble,
though, is trying to address longer-term
issues with what should be a short-term
option.
Many times, borrowers aren’t getting
much guidance about their repayment
options before struggling to make pay-
ments. Some aren’t aware of longer-
term repayment options, such as in-
come-driven repayment plans, which
could help them stay on a better track.
And some may be getting bad infor-

mation.
“According to federal law, schools
may lose their ability to participate in
federal student aid programs if a sig-
nificant percentage of their borrowers
default on their student loans within
the first three years of repayment,” ac-
cording to a 2018 report on default
rates by the U.S. Government Ac-
countability Office.
“To manage these three-year de-
fault rates, some schools hired con-
sultants that encouraged borrowers
with past-due payments to put their
loans in forbearance, an option that al-
lows borrowers to temporarily post-
pone payments,” the GAO report stat-
ed.
“While forbearance can help bor-
rowers avoid default in the short-term,
it increases their costs over time.”

Some grads need
to make decisions now

College graduates receive a six-
month grace period before they have to
start paying down their federal stu-
dent loans. Most private loans offer a
six-month or nine-month grace peri-
od. Getting a diploma in May means
many will begin to repay those loans in
November.
The U.S. Department of Education
outlines a variety of repayment op-
tions – and has a repayment estimator


  • at StudentAid.gov/repay. You have to
    enroll in these plans to take advantage
    of them, and you have to pick the right
    one to fit your circumstances.
    Sealy maintains that the Summer
    calculations at http://www.meetsummer.org
    offer a more accurate look at estimat-
    ing the total costs of any repayment
    program based on wage growth expec-
    tations.
    Income-driven plans offer lower
    monthly payments that reduce the
    likelihood of missing payments, he
    said.
    At the same time, he said, an in-
    come-driven plan can free up much-
    needed money to help someone cover
    medical costs, invest in retirement
    savings and start saving to maybe one
    day have children and buy a home.
    Based on the latest data, the stu-
    dent loan default rate nationwide was
    10.1% for fiscal year 2016. The Depart-
    ment of Education calculates a cohort
    default rate – the percentage of bor-
    rowers who enter repayment in a given
    fiscal year who then default within a
    three-year period – for each school to
    hold them accountable for high default
    rates.
    The U.S. Department of Education
    released borrower default rates by
    state in August. The borrower default
    rate in Michigan was 11.5%. States with
    higher rates included Nevada (18.1%),
    West Virginia (14.6%), Mississippi
    (14.9%) and Indiana (14.2%).
    States with lower rates included
    Massachusetts (5.8%), Vermont
    (6.1%), Rhode Island (6.2%) and North
    Dakota (6.2%).
    Contact Susan Tompor at
    [email protected].


Student loans


Continued from Page 1B


Abetter option could be

dealing with longer-term

challenges by trying to

lower monthly payments

through an income-driven

repayment plan.
Free download pdf