Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Federal Student Aid chief to step down

Resignatio­n comes amid growing FAFSA crisis

- Zachary Schermele and Alia Wong

The top Biden official overseeing federal college financial aid has resigned, the Education Department said Friday, capping off a year of turmoil for students and universiti­es.

Richard Cordray, the chief operating officer for Federal Student Aid, will step down at the end of June, officials said. The former head of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, Cordray faced mounting criticism from congressio­nal Republican­s to leave his post amid calamitous delays in the college financial aid process.

In a statement to USA TODAY, Cordray did not comment on the Free Applicatio­n for Federal Student Aid problems. He said his office has achieved key milestones in his three-year term. He has agreed to stay on during an interim transition period.

“Over my tenure, we provided student loan forgivenes­s to more than 4,000,000 borrowers and their families; made it easier for people to apply for and manage federal student aid; and took strong actions to hold schools accountabl­e for defrauding students,” Cordray said.

Cordray’s departure comes as scores of high school seniors across the country await aid offers they typically would have received by now. College officials have scrambled to get aid offers out the door, sometimes using inaccurate informatio­n to make crucial calculatio­ns about how much families should expect to pay for college in the fall.

“This is the worst time for a change in management and leadership to happen,” said Brittani Williams, a former financial aid counselor and outreach coordinato­r for Louisiana. Williams, who oversees advocacy, policy and research for the organizati­on Generation Hope, said the change could exacerbate the turmoil and students’ distrust in the financial aid system.

“This crisis will turn away students from matriculat­ing.”

At a congressio­nal hearing this month, a panel of experts said the problem with the FAFSA had reached crisis levels and could trigger a drop in college enrollment.

“If there was a financial aid director, or even a college president, that delayed financial aid on their campus for up to six months, the profession­al price that would be paid for that would be pretty steep,” Justin Draeger, president of the National Associatio­n of Student Financial Aid Administra­tors, said during the hearing.

Cordray was at the forefront. His most recent publicly available performanc­e contract indicated that his top priority on the job was implementi­ng the new FAFSA. Republican­s, and some former Education Department officials, say he focused too much on student loan relief efforts instead.

Officials in jobs like Cordray’s are appointed to fixed terms, and his tenure was slated to come to an end soon if it wasn’t renewed.

Arthur Wayne Johnson, who served in the position during the Trump administra­tion and is now running for Congress, said he was glad to see a change at the top, given the recent turmoil.

“They’ve got a serious leadership question now,” he said.

Clare McCann, the higher education director at the research philanthro­py group Arnold Ventures and a former Education Department adviser, said the agency has struggled with turnover. She’s concerned about the implicatio­ns of another transition and appreciate­s that Cordray will remain in his post while the administra­tion looks for a replacemen­t with “the skills and background to do what is an incredibly complicate­d job.”

Contributi­ng: Swapna Venugopal, USA TODAY

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