Buffalo Bills’ Josh Allen helps Americans clear $10M of consumer debt

Some hardworking Americans will have part or all of their debts paid off by year’s end thanks to a charitable partnership between Buffalo Bills quarterback Josh Allen and ForgiveCo.

ForgiveCo is a public benefit corporation focused on creating impactful marketing moments for brands through debt forgiveness. Brands come to the company “to create a life-changing experience in the communities they serve,” CEO Craig Antico told FOX Business. 

Allen wanted to do just that. In December, the fifth-year Bill’s player teamed up with the corporation with a commitment to absolve over $10 million worth of debt for hardworking people in Buffalo, Wyoming, and central California — all of whom supported him at home, in college and during his time playing professional football.

Allen was born near Firebaugh, Calif., and played college football at the Reedley College, a junior college in Reedley, Calif., before moving on to the University of Wyoming.

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This $10 million of consumer debt being forgiven, which marks the launch of ForgiveCo, translates into an average of $3,847 for 2,600 people. 

By the end of the year, those 2,600 individuals will get a letter in the mail, stamped with Josh Allen’s and ForgiveCo’s logo, saying their debts have been taken care of. 

“The beauty of this debt forgiveness model is that the debt is purchased in the same manner that debt collectors use — buying debt at cents on the dollar,” Antico said. “The difference is that rather collecting on the debt, Josh Allen and ForgiveCo are forgiving the debt — removing the burden of these individuals needing to pay the debt themselves.”

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Antico created the company with his son, Erik, in 2021 to help hardworking Americans struggling with debt. It’s a stark contrast from the beginning of Antico’s career when he worked at a collection agency, making a profit off of collecting delinquent debts for a creditor

“Around 10 years ago, I just said, ‘What am I doing? I don’t like doing this,'” Antico said. 

In 2012, he joined a company that focused on helping people clear their medical debt. 

“It turns out that medical debt and medical illnesses turn into other debt, and you can’t pay your credit cards … can’t pay your utilities and your student loans,” he said. 

After two years and helping countless individuals, the company shut down. However, Antico had no plans of stopping. 

“My partner and I said, we can’t let this happen,” he added. 

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In 2014, he founded RIP Medical Debt, which is a nonprofit which bought medical debt for pennies on the dollar and abolished the debt for those in need. The nonprofit has helped more than 4.2 million people relieve over $7.3 million in medical debt.

However, Antico realized that he could help even more individuals with a public benefit corporation than a charity. So created ForgiveCo, which instead of working on behalf of donors, works with brand partners.

“My experience over the last ten years made me realize that running a non-profit/charity comes with legal limitations – based on income and other regulations — that limit the amount of people that a charity can help,” he said. 

The issue is that “everyday Americans, that do not meet a charity’s criteria (their charitable class) that have gone into debt due to an unforeseen event and could use a helping hand, are unable to be helped in any capacity,” he added. 

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ForgiveCo was created to help significantly more people including middleclass and blue-collar families.

In return, the brands get to leave a lasting impact that no traditional advertising campaigns can’t match.

When a brand, or in this case Josh Allen, “lifts the burden of debt of someone’s shoulders, they [the recipients] now have a lasting relationship with that brand that no traditional advertising campaign could replicate,” Antico said.

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