Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Program has forgiven 70K student loans

Biden’s revamped standards are making it easier for public service workers to qualify

- Chris Quintana

The overhaul of a controvers­ial loan forgivenes­s program was projected to erase the debt of 22,000 student loan borrowers in the effort’s first weeks. Three months in, more than triple that figure have had their debts wiped out.

The U.S. Department of Education released the Public Service Forgivenes­s Loan figures Thursday, a year into President Joe Biden’s term as president.

The loan forgivenes­s initiative, which was rolled out in 2007, was designed to entice people to work as teachers, police officers, firefighters or in other public jobs. After 10 years working in those jobs and making payments, their college debt would be erased. In practice, the federal government forgave almost no one’s debt.

When the Biden administra­tion loosened standards in October, the agency estimated more than 22,000 borrowers would benefit immediatel­y, and 27,000 would qualify as soon as they proved they worked in an eligible job.

Data from the department shows roughly 70,000 borrowers have qualified for nearly $5 billion in relief.

The Biden administra­tion estimates as many as 550,000 borrowers could benefit from the changes to the program.

Those who have worked for a decade in public service should be able to rely on the Public Service Loan Forgivenes­s program, but until October, the system hadn’t delivered on its promise, said James Kvaal, undersecre­tary of the Department of Education.

“Teachers, nurses, first responders, service members and so many public service workers have had our back, especially amid the challenges of the pandemic,” Kvaal said. “One year in, the Biden administra­tion continues to demonstrat­e that we have their backs, too.”

Biden faces calls to use his executive authority to forgive student loan debt for more of the 43 million federal borrowers. The president campaigned on forgiving up to $10,000 per borrower but said it’s Congress’ job to issue student loan forgivenes­s. He was asked about canceling student loan debt near the end of a news conference Wednesday but ended the conference without answering.

The Biden administra­tion extended the pandemic pause on federal student loan payments through May 1 to give struggling borrowers more time to prepare for the restart.

Tisa Silver Canady has seen borrowers obtain loan forgivenes­s through her work as the director of the Maryland Center for Collegiate Financial Wellness, an organizati­on that helps students and families pay for college.

When she heard about the changes to the program in October, she dug up her old clients who had encountere­d an issue navigating it. Some were excited, but others were wary after they said they’d been burned by the Education Department. Interest has grown steadily, she said, as borrowers see others obtain forgivenes­s.

“My basic advice to anyone who thinks they might qualify even for one month is: Do not cancel yourself,” she said. “If you cancel yourself, you’ll never know how close you are or if you’re already there.”

Though forgivenes­s hasn’t been widespread, the Department of Education

has forgiven the debt of 675,000 borrowers to the tune of $15 billion since Biden came into office. That forgivenes­s has come through expansions of debt forgivenes­s programs, such as those for borrowers who have permanent disabiliti­es or were defrauded by their schools. The changes to the Public Service Loan Forgivenes­s program are part of that trend. The debt forgivenes­s program is simple in concept but complicate­d in practice. The idea was to offer an incentive to college graduates to forgo lucrative private-sector wages to work for the public instead. In exchange, the federal government would forgive these graduates’ debts after 10 years of payments.

The program came with rigorous requiremen­ts that prevented most borrowers from qualifying for forgivenes­s. Many had the wrong type of loan, or they weren’t enrolled in the correct income-based repayment program. Borrowers often didn’t realize they had made an error until after applying for forgivenes­s after 10 years of repayment. Many had to restart their payment clock. When the government announced the revamp, 16,000 had received debt forgivenes­s out of the 1.3 million trying to wipe out their loans through the program.

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