Springfield News-Sun

More student loan cancellati­ons announced

- By Collin Binkley

WASHINGTON — The Biden administra­tion is canceling student loans for another 206,000 borrowers as part of a new repayment plan that offers a faster route to forgivenes­s.

The Education Department announced the latest round of cancellati­ons Friday in an update on the progress of its SAVE Plan. More people are becoming eligible for student loan cancellati­on as they hit 10 years of payments, a new finish line for some loans that’s a decade sooner than what borrowers faced in the past.

Casting a shadow over the cancellati­ons, however, are two new lawsuits challengin­g the plan’s legality. Two groups of Republican-led states, fronted by Kansas and Missouri, recently filed federal suits arguing that the Biden administra­tion oversteppe­d its authority in creating the repayment option.

“From day one of my Administra­tion, I promised to fight to ensure higher education is a ticket to the middle class, not a barrier to opportunit­y,” President Joe Biden said in a statement. “I will never stop working to cancel student debt — no matter how many times Republican elected officials try to stop us.”

With the latest action, the Education Department has now approved cancellati­on for about 360,000 borrowers through the new repayment plan, totaling $4.8 billion.

The SAVE Plan is an updated version of a federal repayment plan that has been offered for decades, but with more generous terms.

Congress created the first income-driven repayment option in the 1990s for people struggling to afford payments on standard plans. It capped monthly payments to a percentage of their incomes and canceled any unpaid debt after 25 years. Similar plans were added later, offering cancellati­on in as little as 20 years.

Arguing that today’s borrowers need even more help, the Biden administra­tion merged most of those plans into a single repayment option with more lenient terms.

The SAVE (Saving on a Valuable Education) Plan allows more borrowers to pay nothing until their income rise above certain limits. It also lowers payments more than past plans, eliminates interest growth and cancels unpaid debt in as little as 10 years.

Biden announced the plan in 2022 alongside his broader proposal for a one-time cancellati­on of up to $20,000 for more than 40 million people. While the one-time cancellati­on was struck down by the Supreme Court, the SAVE Plan moved forward and initially escaped legal scrutiny.

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