Many people who file for bankruptcy in New York have fears about other people getting to know that they have file for bankruptcy. They hide this fact from friends and members of their family. This is because the perception here among some people is that it is shameful to file for bankruptcy though I have had to explain over and over that there is nothing shameful about filing for bankruptcy. Others get so scared that their employers would find out that they filed for bankruptcy. They get afraid that their employers might fire them from their jobs if they ever get to know. They try as much as possible to hide their filing for bankruptcy because of this sense of insecurity.
Here is news for you. Federal law prohibits your employer from discriminating against you or from terminating your employment solely because you filed for bankruptcy. The reality now is that a great number of people in New York City and possibly someone near you in the Bronx, Queens, Brooklyn and Manhattan have filed or are filing for bankruptcy. Businesses cannot help it but have a good percentage of that number in their companies. It’s a reality that everyone is facing and so companies would rather not do anything that would appear to be discriminating against their employees.
Besides, you’ve got the law on your side. Your employers would rather have you working than you suing them for huge sums for discrimination.
Not all debts can be discharged in a bankruptcy proceeding. If you owe taxes, those taxes cannot be discharged in a bankruptcy proceeding. Similarly, if the IRS has a lien on your property because of taxes that you owe to the IRS, those liens cannot be discharged via bankruptcy. Another type of debt that is not discharged through bankruptcy is student loans and other government loans.
Filing for bankruptcy will not discharge you from fulfilling your obligations under a court declared child support or child maintenance order or alimony payments. If there is a court order against you to pay certain individuals or businesses some amount owed, those amounts will not be discharged through bankruptcy. That is one reason why you should speak to your bankruptcy attorney before your debtors file their claims against you in court. Once those claims are filed before you file for bankruptcy, you cannot discharge any amount that the court will order you to pay to your creditors through a bankruptcy proceeding.
Debts incurred through a court order to pay damages for willful and malicious injury and judgments in wrongful death or personal injury cases arising from your intoxication will not be discharged via bankruptcy. Debts incurred through fraud cannot also be discharged in a bankruptcy proceeding. You cannot clear these non-dischargeable debts with your credit card and later file for bankruptcy. The bankruptcy court will find out and you may end up in trouble. Just speak to your bankruptcy attorney as soon as you are behind on your payments and you feel you cannot keep up with the payments. We recommend using a professional and experienced NYC bankruptcy attorney at the first sign of debt trouble.