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Loma Linda

Coverage of Loma Linda in the Nexus archive.

Earliest in view: Apr 30 · 04:21 UTCMost recent: Jul 3 · 13:10 UTC
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Recent coverage
  • BUSINESSJul 3 · 13:10 UTCWAFB BATON ROUGE
    New analysis ranks U.S. cities where student loan debt is hardest to manage

    A new WalletHub analysis ranks U.S. cities where student loan debt is hardest to manage, showing that cities like Ashtabula, Ohio; Orangeburg, South Carolina; and Loma Linda, California have the highest debt-to-income ratios. The analysis found total student loan debt in the U.S. is nearly $1.7 trillion, averaging $39,600 per borrower.

  • BUSINESSJul 3 · 13:10 UTCWBTV CHARLOTTE
    New analysis ranks U.S. cities where student loan debt is hardest to manage

    A WalletHub analysis ranks U.S. cities where student loan debt is hardest to manage by comparing median student loan balances with median earnings for adults with bachelor’s degrees. Cities like Ashtabula, Ohio; Orangeburg, South Carolina; and Loma Linda, California have the highest debt-to-income ratios. The report advises borrowers to use loan calculators and monitor credit reports to manage repayment.

  • BUSINESSJul 3 · 13:10 UTCWSMV4 NASHVILLE
    New analysis ranks U.S. cities where student loan debt is hardest to manage

    A WalletHub analysis ranks U.S. cities where student loan debt is hardest to manage, finding that student loans total nearly $1.7 trillion nationally, averaging $39,600 per borrower. The study compared median student loan balances with median earnings for adults with bachelor’s degrees across 2,500 cities, identifying Ashtabula, Ohio; Orangeburg, South Carolina; and Loma Linda, California as having the highest debt-to-income ratios. The analysis also recommends using loan calculators and checking credit reports to manage repayment.

  • SCIENCEApr 30 · 04:21 UTCKTLA 5
    M3.4 earthquake shakes San Bernardino County

    A magnitude 3.4 earthquake struck San Bernardino County at 8:48 p.m. on Wednesday, with its epicenter near Loma Linda and Redlands. The U.S. Geological Survey reported the quake occurred at a depth of nearly 10 miles, following a smaller magnitude 2.8 tremor.