San Diego Union-Tribune

RELIEF RESTORED TO MISLED STUDENTS

$1B owed by 72,000 defrauded borrowers has been eliminated

-

Tens of thousands of borrowers who attended forprofit schools like Corinthian Colleges and ITT Technical Institute that defrauded students will have their student loan debts eliminated after the Education Department rescinded some changes made during the Trump administra­tion that gutted a relief program.

“Borrowers deserve a simplified and fair path to relief when they have been harmed by their institutio­n’s misconduct,” said Miguel Cardona, the education secretary. “We will grant them a fresh start from their debt.”

The change will eliminate around $1 billion in student loan debt owed by around 72,000 borrowers, the department said. Most of them attended ITT and Corinthian, institutio­ns that abruptly shut down years ago.

The relief program, known as borrower defense, allows those who can demonstrat­e that they were substantia­lly misled by their school to have their federal student loans forgiven. Once little-used, the system was flooded with claims during the Obama administra­tion after a series of large forprofit chains collapsed following a government crackdown on schools that saddled their students with high debts for a low-quality education.

For a time, the department granted any borrower with an approved claim a full discharge of their debts.

But that changed under Betsy DeVos, the previous education secretary, who described the program as a

“free money” giveaway.

In 2019, DeVos imposed a complicate­d new methodolog­y that led to only partial relief for many successful applicants.

Some whose claims were approved were told they would get $0 in relief.

Cardona said the department will abandon DeVos’ methodolog­y and retroactiv­ely give those with approved claims a full discharge.

“I’m in a state of shock right now,” said Albert Paul Cruz, who earned an associate degree in computer networking systems in 2010 but never worked in that field. Last year, he received a letter from the Education Department telling him that his borrower defense claim had been approved but that none of his debts would be eliminated.

Cruz has around $60,000 in student loan debt; his late and missed payments on it have harmed his credit score and made it challengin­g to obtain a car loan. The debt was “nerve wracking” and kept him up at night — and the prospect of finally being free from it was amazing, he said.

“If this does wipe all the negatives off my profile, I just may finally get a piece of the American dream,” Cruz said.

 ?? ANDREW HARNIK AP ?? “Borrowers deserve a simplified and fair path to relief when they have been harmed by their institutio­n’s misconduct,” Education Secretary Miguel Cardona said. “We will grant them a fresh start from their debt.”
ANDREW HARNIK AP “Borrowers deserve a simplified and fair path to relief when they have been harmed by their institutio­n’s misconduct,” Education Secretary Miguel Cardona said. “We will grant them a fresh start from their debt.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States