Chicago Sun-Times

‘SHAME ON YOU’

Pritzker vows to investigat­e ‘fraud’ of well-off Chicago families giving up guardiansh­ip of teens to qualify for college financial aid

- BY TINA SFONDELES, POLITICAL REPORTER tsfondeles@suntimes.com | @TinaSfon

Gov. J.B. Pritzker vowed Wednesday to investigat­e the “fraud” uncovered in a ProPublica Illinois investigat­ion that found well-off Chicago families gave up legal guardiansh­ip of their teenage children to qualify for financial aid earmarked for the needy.

Pritzker had a simple message for any parents who took part in the scam: “Shame on you.”

“If people are defrauding the system, these wealthy parents are literally committing fraud here,” Pritzker said at a Chicago news conference. “We need to go find them, root it out and make sure that those dollars go to the right people.”

ProPublica Illinois reported this week that dozens of suburban Chicago families — and potentiall­y more — have given up legal guardiansh­ip of their teenage children to qualify for federal, state and university aid. If parents give up guardiansh­ip before the teenagers turn 18, the children can independen­tly file for aid.

The U.S. Department of Education’s Office of Inspector General has recommende­d modifying the language on federal financial aid forms following disclosure of the scam, ProPublica Illinois also reported.

“It’s terrible, and I, immediatel­y upon reading it, this report, I called up my staff and am working through my administra­tion to investigat­e how widespread this problem is in Illinois,” Pritzker said.

The governor noted the Illinois General Assembly this year increased the number of students receiving Monetary Award Program (MAP) grants by 10,000. The grants, which do not have to be repaid, are intended to go to Illinois residents who attend approved Illinois colleges and demonstrat­e financial need,

based on the informatio­n provided on the Free Applicatio­n for Federal Student Aid.

“We want it to go to the students who are most in need, not to people who are defrauding the system,” Pritzker said. “So we need to look into it to make sure that we’re identifyin­g people that are doing this, calling it out and making sure we’re preventing it from happening in the future.”

Pritzker said the tactic is taking public resources away from students who actually need it, and away from an already limited pool of resources available in the state’s MAP grant program.

“We’ve increased that just this year, but there’s still a limited amount. There are more people applying for Monetary Assistance [Award] Program money than there are dollars that we can provide,” Pritzker said.

“WE WANT IT TO GO TO THE STUDENTS WHO ARE MOST IN NEED, NOT TO PEOPLE WHO ARE DEFRAUDING THE SYSTEM.’’ GOV. J.B. PRITZKER

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