Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

$6 billion misspent in student aid

- MARIA DANILOVA

WASHINGTON — Members of Congress criticized the Education Department on Thursday over $6 billion in improper payments made as part of federal student aid programs.

Kathleen Tighe, inspector general at the Education Department, said at a House hearing that the department made $2.21 billion in improper payments as part of its Pell grants program in 2016 and $3.86 billion in improper payments as part of its Direct Loan program. Overall, the department last year awarded nearly $125 billion in financial aid to nearly 12 million students.

Improper payments are disburseme­nts that should not have been made, went to the wrong recipient, were for an incorrect amount or were not documented properly. Not all improper payments result in a liability for the federal government.

Jay Hurt, chief financial officer for the department’s Federal Student Aid office, told a House subcommitt­ee that the department will seek to correct the problem, but he added that a zero percent rate of improper payments is not feasible because fraud occurs in most organizati­ons. Hurt cited a recent study, which found that organizati­ons typically lose 5 percent of revenue to fraud.

Rep. Virginia Foxx, R-N.C., pushed back.

“I think we should strive for zero mistakes,” Fox told Hurt. “You are not dealing with your own money, you are dealing with someone else’s money, and I want people in the department to remember that.”

James Runcie, the chief operations officer for the financial aid program, had been scheduled to testify at the hearing, but he resigned abruptly Tuesday night, citing political disagreeme­nt with his bosses. Runcie was a political appointee of President Barack Obama’s administra­tion. The department said Runcie resigned so as not to have to testify.

Rep. Mark Meadows of North Carolina, chairman of the House Subcommitt­ee on Government Operations, was adamant that Runcie be held accountabl­e for the “abysmal” results and suggested he didn’t deserve the bonuses he received.

Meadows said he is considerin­g issuing a subpoena for Runcie.

“It’s a slap in the face to the millions of taxpayers who provided this gentleman with over $430,000 in bonuses since 2010,” Meadows said.

Justin Draeger, president of the National Associatio­n of Student Financial Aid Administra­tors, said it was unclear how many of the improper payments were intentiona­l and how many were accidental.

“It’s difficult for me to give an exact percentage of how much is fraud and how much is just honest mistakes,” Draeger said.

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