No, but some federal benefits (like Social Security) can be offset to satisfy defaulted student loans. Some borrowers who have not yet defaulted also qualify for a deferment of their student loan payments while receiving public assistance.
12 months or one year
You can be denied private loans, and grad plus loans for late payments on your credit history. If you default on a federal student loan, you will lose eligibility for all federal financial aid (including grants).
Medicaid may deny a claim for any one of a number of reasons: submitted too late; service not covered or needs prior approval; clerical error such as procedure code doesn't match description of service, etc.When this happens, you are responsible for the bill. However, in Illinois and perhaps other states, you may ask Medicaid to review the bill. In Illinois, you are not responsible for a bill if the provider accepted you as a Medicaid patient and Medicaid denied the claim due to the provider's error(s).
That depends on why you were denied. If the reason you were denied was remedied then you can reapply.
article one section nine is about the powers denied to the federal government
article one section nine is about the powers denied to the federal government
Article I, Section 8. Powers denied to the Congress and powers denied to the states – Article I, Sections 9 and 10, respectively.
The visa can be denied if the correct procedures are followed, the credit default will show up. If student loans were a factor they will definitely show up. nothing. debt is a private matter between 2 parties and gov has nothing to do with it.
States
Article 1, section 10, lists powers denied to the several "STATES".
1.3 million
Because they haven't been paid. She should contact the provider(s), determine whether they've submitted the bills to Medicare/Medicaid (in that order) and, if so, what is the status (paid, denied, pending, etc.).