For 33-year-old Tasha Rincon, a mother of three, relief from her government loans for Corinthian cannot come soon enough. Deeply in debt, Rincon says she can't even afford to buy groceries and is working three hours a day in a school cafeteria about an hour away from her home in Lake Elsinore, California. "It's just not fair," said Rincon, who graduated in 2012 from Corinthian's Everest College with an associate's degree in criminal justice and a bachelor's degree in business management. She's earning nowhere close to the $45,000 that recruiters had promised her. "If it had helped me get a better job, I could do more for my kids," Rincon said in an interview. She owes more than $43,000 in student loans and is waiting to hear from the Education Department whether her loans will be erased.