-Zarije Asani

Future college students are threatened with the non-renewal of half prices shifting to full price interest charge in the very distant future. Illinois students would face $380 billion dollars of debt per year.

Loyola Student’s may be facing a potential threat if Congress does not renew the law of 2007 that allowed student’s to pay only half of the interest of the federal subsidized Stafford loan.

This law expires July of this year, doubling college interest loans from 3.4 percent to 6.8 percent.  This would especially effect’s student all over Illinois.

The rest of the story can be found on the Huff Post:

Congratulations! Now what?

CHICAGO — If Congress fails to renew a 2007 law that halved the interest rates on federally subsidized Stafford loans, Illinois students will be staring down $380 million per year in debt.

The law that expires this July would double interest rates on college loans from 3.4 to 6.8 percent. Data released by the Illinois Public Interest Research Group (PIRG) Thursday shows that that increase could be particularly damaging for college students in Illinois.

The timing couldn’t be worse: Illinois’ unemployment is currently just over 9 percent, higher than the 8.2 percent national average. Illinois PIRG predicts that 67 percent of jobs in the state will require a college degree by 2020, though currently only 43 percent of the population has completed secondary education.

For current Illinois students who face the possibility of a doubled interest rate when they graduate, having to choose between substantial loan debt or abandoning post-secondary education is already posing dilemmas.

“I hope to join the Peace Corps or Teach For America right after I graduate, but I have to make plans based on all of this debt I have, because if a program won’t defer the interest payments on my debt, then I probably can’t do that program,” said Kathryn Pantell, a freshman math and psychology student at Loyola University Chicago who hopes to become a teacher.

Pantell said she received a full tuition scholarship to Loyola, but still had to take on some Stafford loans to cover additional costs of food, housing and school supplies. She holds two part-time work-study jobs and lives at home so she can work during the summers, and still she worries that won’t be enough to ensure her financial stability after graduation.

Her concerns are likely familiar to the 62 percent of Illinois college graduates, who carry an average loan debt of $23,885, according to Illinois PIRG.

Even at Northeastern Illinois University, which according to U.S. News and World Report had the lowest national percentage of students who graduated with loan debt in 2010, the 16 percent of indebted graduates owe on average about $12,000, said Maureen Amos, a financial aid officer at the university.

Amos said even smaller debt burdens can be a major setback for young people who are trying to break into a shaky job market.

“Student debt can change the shape of a young person’s life,” Amos said. “When students graduate with high levels of student debt, it can force them to postpone major life events like marriage, parenthood and home ownership. It’s important to minimize that debt, including keeping interest rates low, in order to reduce the impact it has on the lives of our graduates.”

U.S. Department of Education data suggests that 365,416 Illinois student borrowers would be affected by a one-year extension of the lower interest rate, saving an average of $1,061 per student, or $387,706,376 statewide.

Democratic Illinois Sen. Dick Durbin cosponsored legislation that would extend the rate. Republican Sen. Mark Kirk has yet to take a position on the issue.

 

Mt. Kilimanjaro

Two students from Loyola University Chicago are embarking on a post grad journey to raise $6,000 for Partners in Health, before they climb Mount Kilimanjaro in August.

Seniors Megan Drissell and Charlie Treinen originally planned to just climb the Mountain but added the capstone of raising money for Partners in Health; a nonprofit organization that helps provide global healthcare for some of the poorest regions in the world. 

The two currently have $3,000 but aspire to reach the $6,000 goal in six months. 

Here’s a portion from Inside Loyola :

Most students’ post-graduation plans include applying for jobs or heading to grad school.

Seniors Megan Drissell and Charlie Treinen?  Climbing Mt. Kilimanjaro in August.

The duo is embarking on this atypical post-grad journey in order to raise $6,000 for Partners in Health, a non-profit that seeks to provide sustainable medical care in some of the poorest regions of the world.

It all started with a happenstance conversation the two had after Drissell won the John F. Grant award for Bioethics in Fall of 2011 (which Treinen had encouraged her to apply for) and was trying to figure out what to do with her $3,000 award.  Drissell, an active outdoors adventurer, mentioned she had always joked about climbing Mt. Kilamanjaro, but had never had the time or resources to do it.  Treinen, whose family climbs, says he had been talking about climbing Mt. Kilamanjaro with a friend, but plans had fallen through.  The two seniors, both headed toward medical school, decided this was their opportunity to finally conquer the mountain, and put a capstone on their careers at Loyola.

Aside from both being pre-med, both students are passionate about the social justice side of medicine, with a focus on global healthcare. Because of this, the two decided to add another aspect to their capstone climb: fundraising money for the non-profit Partners in Health.

“Just kind of fell into place,” says Drissel. “We wanted to do something bigger with it, since we are both very passionate about global health. It was a a perfect way to tie everything together.”

Treinen adds that Partners in Health fell in line perfectly with the mission of the trip.

“Not a lot of people in medicine know about Partners In Health,” he points out. “It concerns things that not everybody wants to care about, [in] that they work to really solve the root of the problems as well as providing great healthcare.”

“That is a great thing,” he adds.

The two originally became friends during their semester abroad at the John Felice Rome Center, which is where Treinen says their awareness of global issues began to take root.

“We really learned to value the rest of the world,” he says. “It is hard when you’re in America, it can be a struggle to value other cultures.  Studying abroad, I think, gave both of us an international focus.”

-Zarije Asani

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