Small towns bribing grads to move there by paying off student debt

Would you move to a rural/rust belt town in exchange for loan relief?


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downtown

Crafternoon Delight
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Would you move to some crappy place like Niagara Falls, or rural Kansas? What if they offered to pay off some of your debt?

Apparently, some towns are using that as a plan to recruit young professionals.

the news said:
Here and there around the U.S.—from rural Kansas to Detroit—communities concerned over shrinking, aging populations are attempting novel experiments to attract the young and zippy. If they're not offering to pay off student loans, they're dangling other incentives aimed at budding professionals.

Niagara Falls' population 50 years ago teetered at 100,000. Then it began to fall and today it's half of what it was. If by the time of the next census it's under 50,000, leaders fear the city will risk the loss of some forms of federal assistance.

"We've lost a lot of talent, a lot of brain power," admits Piccirillo. "For 50 years we've been asking ourselves: how do we keep our young people?" The city, he says, never really had a plan. Now it does: It will attract them from elsewhere by offering to pay their student loans.


The city is putting an initial $200,000 behind the idea. The first applications should arrive in the next couple of months, says Piccirillo, but "The graduating class of 2013 will be our first real swing at it."

He says he got the idea by reading news headlines. "College debt is at the forefront of so many stories you see now," he says. "The New York Times just reported that student debt has topped $1 trillion; 94 percent of students now have some amount of debt." At the same time, he says, Niagara needs those very same graduates. "We need to grow our population base. Having young professionals is the key to a modern economy." The solution seemed obvious: Offer debt relief to attract graduates.

Under Niagara Falls' plan, graduates who have earned a 2- or 4-year degree in the past two years can apply for up to $3,500 a year (for two years) towards repayment of their student loans. The same deal would be offered to graduate students. Graduates of Niagara University and Niagara County Community College will be targeted at first, though the city hopes eventually to recruit graduates from other parts of the country.

To qualify, applicants will have to rent an apartment or buy a home within a designated downtown area. "We're not talking city-wide. We're taking acres," explains Piccirillo. "There's no doubt in my mind that getting even 100 to 150 people could revitalize the neighborhood."

In rural Kansas, a similar experiment is underway.

Fifty counties in the state have established Rural Opportunity Zones (ROZs) authorized to offer one or both of the following financial incentives to new full-time residents: Kansas income tax waivers for up to five years and/or student loan repayments up to $15,000.

To be eligible for loan repayments, applicants must hold an associate's, bachelor's or post-graduate degree; must have an outstanding student loan balance; and must establish residency in a ROZ county
http://abcnews.go.com/Business/towns-paying-off-student-loan-debts/story?id=16543649#.T9dTL8_endV

So, do you think this would work? More importantly, would you move somewhere like that for a loan break? I'm a city boy at heart, but if I was able to secure gainfully employment, and a small town offered me 5 grand a year to live there, I would do it.
 
This has been going on for decades, at least.
Small towns used to pay for a guy/girl to go through Med School, with the understanding they would do X amount of years as the town doctor after that.
 
It is no different to giving tax breaks, building infrastructure etc to encourage business to move to or stay in a town.

I see no reason why it should not work but it is just another factor to consider in your employment/place of residence package.
 
Interesting.

And a bit depressing that this economic necessity exists (from both the POV of the student and the town)

But is this any different to a town that encourages an area of upmarket bars, restaurants, shops etc to encourage graduates etc which is done in good times as well as bad.

From the students point of view this is no different to the town improving itself (as above) so that they will accept lower pay in that town.
 
The area where I grew up has had similar programs in place at least since I was in highschool and paying attention.

Never particularly interested me, as they generally required multi-year contracts with repayment penalties if you break the contract. Median income where I've moved to is double where I grew up, and taxes are lower; $5k in bonus government money still wouldn't make the rural job economically attractive.

Also, I don't really like the idea of having the government money tied to loan repayment, that really lowers flexibility to grads with debt, and is useless to grads without debt; they should offer the money in scholarships, tax credits, salary topups, or whatever, instead.

I'm a city boy at heart, but if I was able to secure gainfully employment, and a small town offered me 5 grand a year to live there, I would do it.

What if you hadn't yet met your wife?
 
What if you hadn't yet met your wife?

Yeah, I still think I would have done it. You can't really plan for meeting a future spouse...but having all my debt paid off would have have really helped everything else in my life (it certainly would have made planning a wedding easier).

I'd still do it. The tricky thing, I think, would be finding a real job in the middle of nowhere, kansas. I wouldn't get my loans paid off to be a clerk at a check-cashing place or something.
 
So Niagra Falls is willing to pay you up to $3500 a year (which probably means far less) for two years in pseudo money to live in a bad neighborhood in hopes it improves? Wouldn't it be a lot easier to find a job that paid slightly more or live in a decent neighborhood where the rent was a bit cheaper?
 
What if you hadn't yet met your wife?

This just in....small towns across america actually have.....*gasp* single women!!!

I see absolutely nothing wrong with re-locating for fiscal incentive. In fact, I think its quite American do to so.
 
This just in....small towns across america actually have.....*gasp* single women!!!
.

Yeah, but they typically dont have the kind of women I was interested in dating. When I had to live in rural areas for work, I didnt date.
 
Yeah, but they typically dont have the kind of women I was interested in dating. When I had to live in rural areas for work, I didnt date.

What do you mean? How do small towns not have women you might be interested in? If you're that intent on being Seinfeld-esq in pickiness over women, prepare to die a bachelor.
Maybe. But the good ones either marry straight out of highschool, or leave town.

Cutless thats just silly.
 
Eh... I think I'd probably have to pass. I'm at pretty much my limit on small cities, and if it weren't for the beach, I'd probably be miserable.
 
That's the great thing about small towns. If you don't grab a woman right away right out of high school, you might as well wait for them to break up with their first husbands.

Or if you can't be with the one you love, love the one your mom finds at K-Mart.
 
What do you mean? How do small towns not have women you might be interested in? If you're that intent on being Seinfeld-esq in pickiness over women, prepare to die a bachelor..

Well, I'm a married man, so I don't really worry about that. Dating an educated, fairly worldly person was something thats important to me...if you're under 23 and living in a place under 10,000 people, chances are, you either didn't go to college, or just graduated but haven't done many interesting things yet. It's not like rural america outside of Utah is crawling with Mormons anyway.
 
Im a little confused on why here people think that small towns are necessarily crappy.
 
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