Teen stepdad won’t pay for college

Anonymous
Why did mom marry a man with immigration issues who doesn't love her daughter enough to be an actual father?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:What does she want to be?? Due to AI many current majors will be useless. The military would be a great choice to get the GI bill!


Have you been enlisted military? Not a great choice. Hard life.


It is a great life for 4 years for a teenager and college aged kid.
Anonymous
That’s a really huge cost to ask your child to pay for your marriage.

I think any parent who remarries and ruins their child’s chance of receiving financial aid is a terrible human being. The mom is okay asking her daughter to pay tens of thousands because of her marriage. Yet, the mom isn’t okay with asking her husband to pay anything to offset the cost of their marriage on their stepkid.

Disgusting priorities.

I would completely lose respect for the mom or rather egg donor in this situation.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:We know a teen whose mom and stepdad seem to have an agreement that the stepdad is not responsible for paying for any of the teen’s college. So it is up to the mom, I don’t think she makes tons of money, but they won’t get as much aid if they have to include the stepdad’s salary.
Is there any way around this? I feel so sorry for this teen. She deserves to go to college.


She can go where she can get merit scholarships. There is always the path to work part time and attend community college for two years to save money. If she is an adult and filing as an independent for two years, she can qualify for better financial aid on her own. Where is her biological dad? May be he can help.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:My understanding is that all the parents' income and assets will be considered for aid at private universities. That includes stepdad and dad.


That is true for many private schools that use CSS. A lot of schools use the FAFSA rules and if Dad is out of the picture and not paying any money, she might be able to just put down mom and stepdad’s assets.

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Why should stepdad pay for it when mom has a high income? Thats a bizzare expctation.


Where did you read that mom has a high in income?
This is OP. Neither of the parents makes a high income, especially for this area.


Then why are you assuming she can’t get aid? What is their yearly HHI? Assets?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I went through a similar situation. My widowed mom remarried when I was in 5th grade. It shocked me then and now that colleges counted his higher income in the expected family contribution eve though he was not my biological father and he did not adopt me as his daughter and thus had no legal obligation to provide for me. He was just my mom’s husband. No legal or biological relationship existed beyond that between him and me.


I’m the would be step parent who posted on the first page who isn’t getting married till the kids are out of college. I agree with you. None of my friends believe me when I tell them this.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Take a gap year or two, work, become independent, then apply & seek need-based financial aid.

Or attend local community college for two years.


One reason I want to help this teen is that I don’t think she feels fully safe and secure in the home with her mom and stepdad. It would be best if she could get away from that.


Can they afford two years of community college then guaranteed transfer to UMD or whatever the state college is? If she works part-time, she could pull it off with a little help from her mother.

And about feeling safe... come on. Is this going to turn into an anti-immigrant screed, OP? Are you saying he's a pedo? A violent drunk? If she really wants to make this work, she needs to save money and live at home while going to college.



This has nothing to do with their national origin. If you can’t imagine a scenario where a teen would feel less than secure and happy in a home where she is, at minimum, treated like an unwanted extra by the stepdad, then you must live a pretty charmed life.


Why should the stepdad take on this financial burden? He may have spousal support to a prior wife or kids of his own (and those college obligations by court order).


She's not asking him to pay. But his income will count against her when she applies for financial aid. Period. Imagine if it didn't count just because he didn't want to pay? Everyone would claim they refuse to pay so the kids can get more aid. What makes him special that his refusal should have no consequences?

Also, if he has spousal support and court ordered college obligations, that goes in the aid application and will be used to lower the "parents' expected contribution." Note: expected, not required.


Because he is a step parent, not a parent
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand why there is a presumption of parental contribution from the stepdad. He is not the student’s father and since he did not adopt her he is not her father. The college’s presumption that an adult without any type of legal parental relationship needs to contribute is outrageous.


Well, write your congressman and tell them to change the FAFSA rules
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand why there is a presumption of parental contribution from the stepdad. He is not the student’s father and since he did not adopt her he is not her father. The college’s presumption that an adult without any type of legal parental relationship needs to contribute is outrageous.


The stepfather contributes to the HHI, that's why. Mom lived with the kid as a single parent and now she has another adult to help pay the bills. She should have some savings because of it.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand why there is a presumption of parental contribution from the stepdad. He is not the student’s father and since he did not adopt her he is not her father. The college’s presumption that an adult without any type of legal parental relationship needs to contribute is outrageous.


Well, write your congressman and tell them to change the FAFSA rules


That is unfair.
Anonymous
This seems like a myob situation.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Why should stepdad pay for it when mom has a high income? Thats a bizzare expctation.


Where did you read that mom has a high in income?
This is OP. Neither of the parents makes a high income, especially for this area.



Then why are you assuming she can’t get aid? What is their yearly HHI? Assets?


Ever heart of the donut hole?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand why there is a presumption of parental contribution from the stepdad. He is not the student’s father and since he did not adopt her he is not her father. The college’s presumption that an adult without any type of legal parental relationship needs to contribute is outrageous.


The stepfather contributes to the HHI, that's why. Mom lived with the kid as a single parent and now she has another adult to help pay the bills. She should have some savings because of it.


It depends on the college. My husband's ex has a live in partner (now husband) and I am sure she didn't declare him as she tried to lie to the court about him when she filed for more child support (he is the AP she moved in with after leaving my husband and been together many years). She also lied to colleges as she refused allow my husband in on the process but demanded he just send a check to her without giving him the school name, financial information or anything else. We think the kids got a full ride (except one choose not to live in the dorm and took out loans to support him and his girlfriend, which she wanted us to fund and we refused as if the kid wanted to live a married life, he can fund his own lifestyle.

Stepparents should not be obligated to pay.
Anonymous
Op, you seem to be in no position to help her.
Not every person deserves to go to college or should go to college. Don't put that into her head.
She may be better off taking a break from school and just work. Once she has some money and is ready to go back to school, she should attend community college.
My kid got 30 credits transferred to Nova from high school and should be able to attend George Mason later. He will be independent from parents as we want that for him and we live in another state.
Two years working in a restaurant for 40 hours a week would allow her to mature, become independent, and save up at minimum $24k.
Restaurants also hire without much experience. We have 16-17 year olds working right now. You said absolutely nothing about this child having work experience. She needs a job and perhaps has some maturing to do before she knows what she wants to study.
I put myself through college paying international rates and working 40 hours at the same time. I worked 45 hours a week for a year right after graduating, then applied for college.
She can work part time and attend community college, not a 4-year school.
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