Waterloo Region Record

Liberals writing off student loans

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OTTAWA — The federal government for the second year in a row is writing off millions in student loans it will never collect, this time to the tune of $178.4 million.

The money represents 32,554 loans that federal officials believe they will never be able to collect, either because a debtor may have filed for bankruptcy, the debt itself has passed a six-year legal limit on collection, or the debtor can’t be found.

Last year, the government wrote off 33,967 loans totalling $176 million.

Federal officials have increased their efforts in recent years to collect outstandin­g student loans after watching writeoffs hit $312 million in 2012 and $295 million in 2015.

The previous Conservati­ve government ordered officials to ramp up collection efforts in order to bring the writeoffs under control.

The Liberals’ first budget offered a new tool for the Canada Revenue Agency in its collection efforts: legal changes allowing it to use tax informatio­n for the purpose of collecting debts from the Student Loan Program overseen by Employment and Social Developmen­t Canada. The CRA had expected to receive that power last year, but the federal election delayed political approval.

Figures provided by the CRA last year showed the agency collected $208.8 million in unpaid loans, a three per cent increase in collection­s between 2015 and 2016.

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