What is Chapter 13 Bankruptcy?
January 4th, 2010Chapter 13, or Wage Earners Plan, occurs when you have a steady income but have just fallen behind in your bills due to unforeseen circumstances. (more…)
Chapter 13, or Wage Earners Plan, occurs when you have a steady income but have just fallen behind in your bills due to unforeseen circumstances. (more…)
Chapter 7 Bankruptcy, also called Straight Bankruptcy, occurs when you owe more money than you can reasonably be expected to pay back. (more…)
The primary reason for making a will or establishing a trust is to leave your property to those you love. If you plan properly and have your plan reviewed periodically, you may lower or eliminate your tax burden and leave more to your beneficiaries. (more…)
Buying or selling a home may be the most important business transaction you make in your lifetime. The selection of an attorney is as equally important as selecting a real estate broker or mortgage lender. Each of the professionals that you hire, while each having a distinct job, will work together to bring about a successful closing. (more…)
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WASHINGTON ? The direction the courts will take with other cases related to religious employment is far from clear, but the Supreme Court's Jan. 11 ruling opens a whole track of possibilities. The decision in Hosanna-Tabor v. EEOC held that fired teacher Cheryl Perich could not sue under federal disability discrimination laws, because the Michigan Lutheran school where she worked considered her a "called" minister. Writing for a unanimous court, Chief Justice John Roberts said the government cannot require a church to retain an unwanted minister because doing so "intrudes upon more than a mere employment decision. Such action interferes with the internal governance of the church, depriving the church of control over the selection of those who will personify its beliefs."
A $25 billion settlement by major banks and U.S. states over questionable foreclosure practices in the housing crisis is nearing completion.
While Gov. Christie is pitching tax cuts for all in 2012, Assembly Speaker Sheila Oliver (D., Essex) wants to give a boost to the 40,000 New Jerseyans who make the $7.25 hourly minimum wage. Oliver wants to bump the minimum rate to $8.50 and tie it to the consumer price index, which measures the cost of living. "At a time when some presidential candidates are saying poor people should be demanding jobs and not welfare, this proposal is about livable wages for the lowest-income earners," she said during the Assembly's reorganization in Trenton this week. "Quite simply, we should all support economic stimulus, increased consumer spending."