Originally posted by andy158
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Unfortunately, many attorneys aren't strong enough advocates for their clients to get them a good plan. And, in some courts, I think the trustees and judges are too anti-debtor to allow for a good plan, regardless of the efforts of the attorney. Debtors in those courts are going to have a harder time. But, they still have to figure out a way to put money away every month. It helps if you are in a state that allows you to exempt some cash so you can start out with a cash cushion.
On the topic of failure rates, keep in mind that those statistics include conversions and cases that might have been filed to give the debtor some breathing room with the intent from the beginning that they would not complete the plan. Statistics are meaningless to our individual cases. Even if 99% of Chap 13s failed, I would be confident mine won't.
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