Posted on | January 6, 2010 | 4 Comments
By SARA MURRAY and CONOR DOUGHERTY
The number of Americans filing for personal bankruptcy rose by nearly a third in 2009, a surge largely driven by foreclosures and job losses.
And more people are filing for Chapter 7 bankruptcy, which liquidates assets to pay off some debts and absolves the filers of others. That is significant because a 2005 overhaul of federal bankruptcy laws aimed to encourage Chapter 13 filings, which force consumers to sign onto debt-repayment plans in exchange for keeping certain assets.
The changes were designed to make it more difficult for people to shed their debt, particularly in a Chapter 7 filling. A “means” test, for example, was introduced to separate those who could afford to repay their debt from those who couldn’t. A Chapter 7 filing is off the table if the means test determines a person is able to pay back at least a portion of the debt after it is restructured.
The worst U.S. recession in a generation is testing the effectiveness of these laws. The economic downturn also has prompted more middle-class Americans to file for bankruptcy protection.
Overall, personal bankruptcy filings hit 1.41 million last year, up 32% from 2008, according to the National Bankruptcy Research Center, which compiles and analyzes bankruptcy data. It is the highest level of consumer-bankruptcy fillings since 2005. Consumers rushed to file in 2005 before the new bankruptcy laws took effect in October of that year.
Chapter 7 filings were up more than 42% as of November 2009, compared with the same period a year earlier, according to the research center. November is the most recent month with analyzed data available. Chapter 13 filings rose by 12% and made up less than a third of 2009 filings as of November.
“That suggests it was largely ineffective,” Ronald Mann, a law professor at Columbia University, said of the 2005 overhaul. “I don’t think anybody who’s knowledgeable about the bankruptcy system thought the statute was well crafted.”
During this recession, the housing crisis and high unemployment rate have prompted more people to file for bankruptcy who may never have considered the option before, experts said. Filings from 2008 showed more people with high income and high education levels resorting to bankruptcy petitions, according to an annual survey of consumer-bankruptcy filers’ demographics by the Institute for Financial Literacy, a nonprofit that provides bankruptcy-related counseling and education services. Those demographic trends appeared to continue last year.
Mr. Mann said he believes bankruptcies reached their peak sometime last year, but bankruptcy attorneys from across the country said there was no sign that business was slowing. The 113,274 filings in December alone were a third higher than the same month a year earlier.
“I can’t see over the top of the files on my desk,” said Cathleen Moran, a bankruptcy attorney at Moran Law Group in Mountain View, Calif., likening it to the rush of clients before the revised law went into effect. In a three-month period before those rules changed in 2005, her firm filed five times as many cases as usual.
Ms. Moran’s clients in 2008 typically were people who earned between $40,000 and $80,000. That changed last year when a rash of people who earned $100,000 to $300,000 began filing as well, she said.
“Expenditures that were rational when these people were working at the peak of their salary just are no longer sustainable when they lose jobs or take jobs at a third or a half of what they were making before,” Ms. Moran said.
Craig W. Andresen, a Bloomington, Minn., bankruptcy attorney, handles between 20 and 30 cases a month, but said that in most years that slows to between five and 10 in December, as people use the holidays to divert themselves from their financial problems. This year he had a full load of cases through year’s end.
“Everyone has said, ‘Wow, I stayed busy all month.’ I’ve never heard [bankruptcy lawyers] in December say that they’re busy and don’t want to take time away from their office,” he said. “People are committed to filing because they don’t think their finances are going to turn around.”
The glut of homes and falling real-estate prices ultimately sent Kendy and Joyce Parker over the edge and to Mr. Andresen on the last day of 2009. They expect to file for bankruptcy early this year. “One way or the other we’re going to have to,” Mr. Parker said.
Three years ago the Parkers, who live in Minneapolis and have been married for 29 years, were living well off of Mr. Parker’s contracting business. They moved into a new home in 2004 and two years later, when Mr. Parker made roughly $50,000 at his contracting company, they bought an investment property in hopes of renting it out. As the housing economy cratered, Mr. Parker saw his remodeling business shrivel.
He kept the business afloat with a $70,000 line of credit and an additional $70,000 in credit cards. Two years ago, he walked away from the business for a truck-driving job. Despite the steady income from Mr. Parker’s job, bankruptcy is the only way to get out of debt. They are debating whether to file a Chapter 7 or 13 petition.
“It’s not like I want to rip anybody off. We’ve made mistakes that didn’t work and we’re starting over,” Mr. Parker said. “You can blame the government or you can blame banks, but…humans take risks and they make mistakes.”
Write to Sara Murray at sara.murray@wsj.com and Conor Dougherty at conor.dougherty@wsj.com
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29839 Sta Margarita Pkwy, 
Videography by Barbara Rosenfeld 

January 7th, 2010 @ 12:34 am
Orly:
Let’s NOT lose focus on the ONE and ONLY issue on ANY importance:
The Birth Certificate.
Lately, I’ve noticed that you are posting more non-birther issues on your blog.
STOP IT!
You must remain focused on the Birther issue!
Otherwise you risk being a laughing stock of the nation.
Stay focused!
We need to impeach!
January 7th, 2010 @ 12:39 am
Orly,
How can we even think about unemployment with this giant birther elephant in the room?
Let’s concentrate all our energy and creativity to first solve the birth certificate.
THEN, and only then can we get on with other business like:
Denying climate change and evolution.
Jesus saves.
January 7th, 2010 @ 9:05 pm
FIRST TIME IN U.S. HISTORY THAT A SITTING PRESIDENT’S ELIGIBILITY QUESTIONED BY MEMBER OF CONG – Expose Obama:
January 8th, 2010 @ 1:00 pm
If Soetoro/Obama isn’t Constitutionally eligible for the presidency, and the evidence sure points to that fact as he continues to refuse to irrefutably prove his identity, we need to continue the effort to force him out of office and prosecute him and all others who have perpetrated this scheme upon the Constitutional Republic of the USA. Fraud, obstruction of justice, abuse of power and treason are prisonable offenses, at the least. An established record exists of private and government persons who, now, continue to conspire to perpetuate the Soetoro/Obama file and other unConstitutional practices. As the pressure strengthens, we need to have our scouts and ourselves at the ready when these criminals begin to run for the hills. Announced retirements may just be the beginning of a failing house of cards.