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.
The counselors with Debt Central can help you to get out of debt which has plagued the majority of Long Beach IN residents. The truth is that most Americans have been conditioned to believe that debt is a normal part of life. We're not talking about the debt of having a mortgage, but the credit card debt which so many people are trapped in. Since the 1960's credit cards have been very aggressively marketed. Now, the average American household has 14 credit cards - all carrying a balance. There is a solution - It's called debt management.
For a free consultation on how debt management can help you, simply fill out the form at the bottom of the page and a counselor will be in contact within 24 hours.
Here is some interesting news for Long Beach Indiana residents...
AP - President Barack Obama says a $25 billion settlement between mortgage lenders and states over foreclosure abuses "will begin to turn the page on an era of recklessness that has left so much damage in its wake."
AP - On Thursday, 49 states reached a $25 billion deal with the nation's biggest mortgage lenders over foreclosure abuses that occurred after the housing bubble burst.
Reuters - U.S. banking regulators are using the agreement announced on Thursday between large U.S. banks and state and federal agencies over foreclosure abuses as a vehicle for levying their own fines on banks for problems in their mortgage servicing businesses.
Reuters - Two Democratic lawmakers on Wednesday accused the regulator of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac from blocking the firms from reducing principal on the mortgages they back for reasons of "ideology."
The Motley Fool - In this period of "exceptional uncertainty" (to quote Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke), where can investors turn for a considered perspective on the current environment? Produced to feed the beast of the 24-hour news cycle, the bulk of financial journalism and commentary today isn't worth the servers it is stored on. One notable exception to that rule is Buttonwood, the financial markets column of The Economist. Philip Coggan is the columnist -- arguably the most influential position in financial journalism (along with the head of Lex at the Financial Times).