Houston Chronicle

$10 billion in student debt erased; calls grow for more

- By Stacy Cowley

Nearly $10 billion in student loan debt has been wiped away since President Joe Biden took office, the most sweeping attempt to fix badly broken parts of the federal student loan system in at least a decade.

The beneficiar­ies include permanentl­y disabled people, those who were defrauded by failed forprofit schools, and soldiers deployed to war zones. More than 500,000 borrowers had their loans erased this year, largely through aid programs that all but stopped functionin­g during the Trump administra­tion.

While Biden has so far fended off calls for the kind of blanket debt cancellati­on that is a top priority of many progressiv­e lawmakers, a parade of relatively modest eligibilit­y and relief enhancemen­ts adds up to a significan­t expansion of support for beleaguere­d borrowers. And more may be coming: The Department of Education said it was planning regulatory changes to programs aimed at helping public servants and those on income-driven repayment plans.

“We’re at an inflection point,” said Seth Frotman, a former student loan ombudsman for the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau who now runs the nonprofit Student Borrower Protection Center. “If we continue to see progress and the Biden administra­tion builds on this, the government can actually fulfill its promises to borrowers and ensure that payment plans don’t become long-term debt traps.”

Alicia Bradford is one of the recent beneficiar­ies. A letter last month informed her that the $23,564 she owed for her associate degree in informatio­n technology at ITT Technical Institutes, a problem-plagued chain that abruptly closed its doors in 2016, had been forgiven.

“It took years and years to get to this point,” said Bradford, whose degree and training from two ITT campuses turned out to be worthless to recruiters in the job market. “Finally having those loans gone — seeing a $0 balance — means the world to me.”

Bradford was among hundreds of thousands of students who filed forgivenes­s claims under a program known as borrower defense to repayment, which grants relief to those who were significan­tly misled by schools that broke consumer protection laws. But former President Donald Trump’s education secretary, Betsy DeVos — who denounced the initiative as a “free money” giveaway — stymied the program, which has been tied up in years of litigation over her efforts to gut it.

Clearing the red tape

After Biden’s pick, Miguel Cardona, took over the department in March, he quickly approved thousands of applicatio­ns that had languished and pledged to fully eliminate the debts of 72,000 defrauded borrowers who had previously been granted only fractional relief. He also cleared bureaucrat­ic obstacles to relief for disabled debtors and military personnel.

There is plenty of incentive for the federal government — the primary lender for Americans who borrow for college, holding $1.4 trillion in debt owed by 43 million borrowers — to fix faltering relief programs soon.

Since the pandemic took hold in March 2020, virtually all of those loans have been on an interest-free pause, which is scheduled to end Jan. 31. And every loan discharged is one fewer for the agency to service.

“Our overall goal is permanent change,” said Kelly Leon, a Department of Education spokespers­on. “We are building a student loan system that works for borrowers and provides them the relief authorized by Congress that has proven elusive for far too long.”

Persis Yu, director of the National Consumer Law Center’s Student Loan Borrower Assistance Project, said she was pleased to see the Department of Education moving more quickly to approve claims but would like to see the administra­tion go further: a blanket cancellati­on of $10,000 or more in debt for all federal borrowers. “Even with all the programs we have, we’re not getting relief to all of the people who need it,” she said. Barely 1 percent of federal loan borrowers have benefited from this year’s discharges, she added.

While the department’s actions so far have generated little controvers­y — few oppose giving military personnel, disabled borrowers and scammed students the relief to which they are legally entitled — the idea of more broadly canceling student debt is a lightning rod. Republican­s dislike the idea of saddling taxpayers with the cost, and its critics on the left see it as a subsidy for those with expensive profession­al degrees.

Blanket debt forgivenes­s “creates a moral hazard for current and future student borrowers and is poorly targeted,” Sen. Bill Cassidy, R-La., a member of the Senate’s Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, wrote in an opinion piece.

Biden endorsed large-scale debt cancellati­on on the campaign trail but said he wanted it done legislativ­ely. Congressio­nal backers, however, acknowledg­e that they do not have the votes; the proposal did not make it into the $3.5 trillion budget social policy bill that Democrats are now scrambling to pass.

‘The flick of his pen’

Two Democratic senators, Chuck Schumer of New York and Elizabeth Warren of Massachuse­tts, have pressed the Department of Education to use a novel legal maneuver to cancel a chunk of federal student debt without congressio­nal action.

“President Biden can do it on his own, with the flick of his pen,” said Schumer, the majority leader.

The Biden administra­tion is reviewing its legal authority to do that but has offered no update on the review or timeline for a decision. The tactic would inevitably face legal challenges, but proponents say it is worth trying to ensure relief arrives.

“People always fall through the cracks” of piecemeal relief efforts, said Thomas Gokey, a founder of Debt Collective, a member-led advocacy group.

Notices, and confusion

The department appeared to have notified thousands of people about their loan relief Tuesday, Gokey said.

But confusion remains: Multiple people received notificati­ons with inaccurate informatio­n. One borrower who attended ITT, for example, got a letter saying his loans for studying at the Marinello School of Beauty would be eliminated.

The push for widespread debt cancellati­on has overshadow­ed calls to mend these and other glaring administra­tive problems that urgently need to be addressed, advocates say — ideally before January, when borrowers will start getting bills again.

“The next few weeks and months will be incredibly consequent­ial,” Frotman said.

He and others said the Biden administra­tion should prioritize long-standing struggles with the Public Service Loan Forgivenes­s program, which is supposed to eliminate the debts of people who work in government or nonprofit jobs for a decade while making payments on their loans.

And a new debacle is looming: FedLoan, the servicer in charge of guiding borrowers through it, recently said it would end its contract with the Department of Education. Its 9 million clients will need to be moved to other servicers, a process that has in the past been riddled with mistakes.

Leon said the agency planned to take up broad rule-making negotiatio­ns “in the coming months” that would address regulatory issues for the public service program and others, but she did not offer any specifics.

 ?? Karen E. Segrave / New York Times ?? Alicia Bradford of Little Rock, Ark., applied for loan relief in 2018. Last month she got relieved of her $23,564 in student loans she took out while at the now defunct ITT Technical Institute.
Karen E. Segrave / New York Times Alicia Bradford of Little Rock, Ark., applied for loan relief in 2018. Last month she got relieved of her $23,564 in student loans she took out while at the now defunct ITT Technical Institute.

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