1.11.2009

Daily credit repair news

Daily credit repair news

Shape up your credit report for 2009 - Fort Worth Star Telegram

Posted:

In fact, FTC spokesman Steve Baker said he's never seen a legitimate credit-repair operation. A typical scam goes something like this: In exchange for ...

Consumers expected to look to cut costs in 2009 - Chicago Tribune

Posted:

It might be a home repair, car repair or a medical bill. If you don't have cash on hand, you'll probably charge it and start making payments. ...

Prime examples Keeping a credit score high takes work and planning - Wooster Daily Record

Posted:

A credit score of 620 or below is considered poor, Ross said, and the only sure was to raise it is to repair it. "Reversing the causes is the best way to ...

Shape up your credit report for 2009 (Fort Worth Star-Telegram)

Posted: 11 Jan 2009 12:15 AM CST

Resolution for 2009: Shape up your credit report, but watch out for fraudsters.

Shape up your credit report (The State)

Posted: 10 Jan 2009 11:15 PM CST

Getting your credit report in shape is a sound idea after the money-spending holiday season. Just make sure you're not reeled into any scams. With a deepening recession leaving more people in financial distress, fraudulent services promising to scrub credit reports of negative information are rampant. Just this year, the Federal Trade Commission saw a 50 percent spike in complaints about such ...

Economists warm to government spending but debate its form (Seattle Times)

Posted: 11 Jan 2009 02:38 AM CST

The nation's mainstream economists — even those who have long resisted a significant government role in a market system — are now embracing public spending to repair the damaged economy.

Director guides landscaping, cemetery repair (The Scranton Times-Tribune)

Posted: 11 Jan 2009 03:23 AM CST

ATLANTA — "I fix things that are broken," said Kevin Kuharic of his job as director of restoration and landscapes at Atlanta's historic Oakland Cemetery.

Business lobby battens down (Tacoma News Tribune)

Posted: 11 Jan 2009 02:33 AM CST

If businesses stood helpless while credit markets imploded, housing prices collapsed and retail sales and stock markets fell steeply last fall, they don't intend to remain paralyzed this winter when the Washington Legislature ponders how to balance a state budget projected to be nearly $6 billion in the red.

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