I'm in a C13 and on target to discharge in Nov of this year. I had an increase in pay in 1/16 (40K+ increase) which he amended my schedules I+J which gave me a huge DMI. I was already 100% into plan so the trustee never modded or blinked. Then in May my employer went belly up and I started consulting as self employed. I happened to get married a few months later so we amended again to include my consulting income and my wife's income. All was well.
Then in September I landed a job making about 1k more a month. Sent my paystubs to the attorney, and there was no amendment only a wage order to my new employer with my paystubs attached on the docket. I'm curious as to why he wouldn't amend if I was making an extra 1k/month. I asked him about this and he said as long as we supply the pay stubs we don't need to amend unless you have a large increase in salary and also since my plan is already at 100%.
I'm taking a second job (contract) this month which will increase my gross income by 100k, and he said we will definitely amend I+J then but my plan payment won't increase because I'm maxed out/100%.
What I'm curious about is why he didn't amend when I had a job change when I had 1k extra/month. This happened before in 2014 where he didn't amend, just supplied paystubs and updated wage order and I never heard any barking from the trustee.
I was under the impression that anytime there's a pay increase I have to amend so the trustee is in the know. It should be noted that nowhere in my confirmation of plan does it say anything about having to amend or turning in my tax returns. I've been flying right and letting my attorney handle this, but I found it odd that he wouldn't amend with the job change from september. I know I'm supposed to trust in my attorney, but I know that some trustees can be sticklers when it comes to pay increases. Apparently mine is pretty lax?
I'm assuming the attorney knows what he's doing, but being an over-cautious debtor and wanting to fly by the law this raises questions that I don't know if I should even stress about at this point.
For now I'm not losing sleep over it because the trustee never objected or sent correspondence to me or my lawyer. But was wondering what others thought of how the lawyer is handling the case. Maybe amending every time something changes is a red flag or just too much "busy work" for the courts. I don't know. Just found it odd.
Anyways, I'm interested in any insight you fine folks may have.
Then in September I landed a job making about 1k more a month. Sent my paystubs to the attorney, and there was no amendment only a wage order to my new employer with my paystubs attached on the docket. I'm curious as to why he wouldn't amend if I was making an extra 1k/month. I asked him about this and he said as long as we supply the pay stubs we don't need to amend unless you have a large increase in salary and also since my plan is already at 100%.
I'm taking a second job (contract) this month which will increase my gross income by 100k, and he said we will definitely amend I+J then but my plan payment won't increase because I'm maxed out/100%.
What I'm curious about is why he didn't amend when I had a job change when I had 1k extra/month. This happened before in 2014 where he didn't amend, just supplied paystubs and updated wage order and I never heard any barking from the trustee.
I was under the impression that anytime there's a pay increase I have to amend so the trustee is in the know. It should be noted that nowhere in my confirmation of plan does it say anything about having to amend or turning in my tax returns. I've been flying right and letting my attorney handle this, but I found it odd that he wouldn't amend with the job change from september. I know I'm supposed to trust in my attorney, but I know that some trustees can be sticklers when it comes to pay increases. Apparently mine is pretty lax?
I'm assuming the attorney knows what he's doing, but being an over-cautious debtor and wanting to fly by the law this raises questions that I don't know if I should even stress about at this point.
For now I'm not losing sleep over it because the trustee never objected or sent correspondence to me or my lawyer. But was wondering what others thought of how the lawyer is handling the case. Maybe amending every time something changes is a red flag or just too much "busy work" for the courts. I don't know. Just found it odd.
Anyways, I'm interested in any insight you fine folks may have.
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