Los Angeles Times

Another priority shift by CFPB

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The Trump administra­tion signaled Wednesday that it intends to pull back on investigat­ing potential abuses by companies in the $1.5-trillion student loan market.

The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau will shut its student lending office, according to a bureau-wide memo written by its acting director, Mick Mulvaney. The student loan office at the CFPB had been responsibl­e for returning $750 million in relief.

Its responsibi­lities are being moved under the broad umbrella of “financial education.”

The office had been primarily responsibl­e for an investigat­ion into the troubled student lender Navient, which the CFPB sued last year alleging unfair and abusive practices. The office also investigat­ed and sued for-profit education company Corinthian Colleges.

A CFPB spokesman did not respond to multiple requests for comment on whether the bureau plans to maintain the number of its investigat­ors looking at student loans or whether it plans to move forward with the lawsuit against Navient.

This isn’t the first time Mulvaney has reshuffled the bureau to change the CFPB’s priorities. He took similar action with the bureau’s Office of Fair Lending this year, moving the entire department under the bureau’s education department. That office had been focused on discrimina­tion issues, particular­ly in the auto lending industry.

Mulvaney has said repeatedly that he planned to curtail the bureau’s operations to only what is required by law.

Consumer advocates immediatel­y denounced the change, saying the CFPB should be conducting tough oversight of the student loan industry, given the industry’s size and number of borrowers affected, particular­ly young people.

“Education alone cannot stop predatory behaviors on the part of for-profit schools and servicers, nor can it help hundreds of thousands of Americans in serious debt because of these practices,” said Whitney Barkley-Denney, senior policy counsel for the Center for Responsibl­e Lending.

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