Thursday Oct 16, 2025

Student Loans, Storytelling and Second Chances: NC Bankruptcy Attorney Ed Boltz

In this episode of The Pivot Playbook, Salene talks with Ed Bolts, a North Carolina–based consumer bankruptcy attorney who has helped thousands of families reset through Chapter 7 and 13. Ed shares why seeing a lawyer sooner changes everything, how he helped shape the 2022 DOJ/Department of Education student-loan discharge guidelines, and why boundaries and compassion both matter when clients are under stress. They also swap stories about travel, family, and the power of storytelling in advocacy.

🧾 Show Notes

Guest: Ed Boltz
Location: Durham, North Carolina (statewide practice)
Role: Consumer bankruptcy attorney (debtors in Ch. 7 & 13); large NC consumer firm (~12 lawyers, ~70 staff)
Credentials & Service:

  • Board Certified bankruptcy specialist since 2004 (legacy; transitioned to ABC in 2007)

  • ABC Board member; Standards/Recertification committee experience

  • Student-loan expertise: Contributed to DOJ/Dept. of Education adversary-proceeding guidelines (2022); alt. member, DOE negotiating rulemaking committee

  • Active with NACBA and related consumer practice groups

What we cover

  • Ed’s path from Michigan → North Carolina and into consumer bankruptcy (no classes in law school—learned by doing!)

  • Running a high-volume consumer practice: why paralegal ops matter and how the work is equal parts law + social work

  • Student loans in/around bankruptcy: how the 2022 DOJ/DOE guidance opened doors, and coordinating non-BK and BK options

  • Boundaries & burnout: being compassionate without carrying every client’s entire life home

  • The stigma of bankruptcy and why clients should talk to counsel earlier (before making avoidable mistakes)

  • A favorite moment: a car-wash selfie with a young man whose family kept their home through a Chapter 13—the “why” behind the work

  • Storytelling, community, and purpose: Ed’s local storytelling nonprofit (The Monti) and why narrative skills make better lawyers

Key takeaways

  • Don’t wait. Most consumers would be better off meeting a bankruptcy lawyer sooner, not after doing “fixes” that cause clawbacks/delays.

  • Student-loan relief is evolving. With the 2022 DOJ/DOE framework, undue hardship cases are more navigable—if you know the playbook.

  • Compassion + boundaries = sustainable advocacy. Hold empathy, set limits, serve the next client well.

  • Consumer practice is retail law: systems, staffing, and consistent communication are everything.

Notable quotes

“Most people would have been better off if they came to see a bankruptcy attorney sooner.”
“Our clients can drain the emotional well—compassion needs boundaries so we can help the next person.”
“I love finding a Chapter 11 idea and translating it to Chapter 13—if it’s good for the goose, it’s good for the gander.”
“Bankruptcy law can feel like a magic wand when used well—homes and futures get saved.”

Rapid-fire highlights

  • Law school: George Washington (GW Law)

  • Undergrad: Washington University in St. Louis

  • Streaming: Ozark; currently Hightown

  • Movies: The Lord of the Rings (also loves classic comedy Blazing Saddles)

  • Recent trip: A week in Barcelona with his daughters

  • Dessert: Anything chocolate + peanut butter; signature strawberry-rhubarb pie

  • Best gift: Great-grandfather’s pocket watch (family heirloom)

  • Last song:I’m Broke” — Black Joe Lewis & the Honeybears

  • Podcast pick: Swindled

  • Pet:Nessie,” a sweet Carolina dog

  • Favorite city visited: Istanbul

Guest links

Host: Salene Mazur Kraemer
Podcast: The Pivot Playbook — Fresh starts, turnarounds, and real-life resilience.
CTA: Subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and YouTube. Share this episode with a friend who’s navigating debt or a big life pivot.

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