Texarkana Gazette

Student loan forgivenes­s program rejects almost everyone, again

- By Alexa Diaz

WASHINGTON — Americans who spend at least a decade in public service jobs and faithfully make their federal student loan payments shouldn’t owe any more. That’s the idea behind a student debt forgivenes­s program the Education Department launched under President George W. Bush.

The first batch of teachers, nurses, military personnel and other public servants got to start applying for forgivenes­s two years ago, and the department — led by President Trump’s appointee Betsy DeVos — rejected nearly 99% of them. The department said more than half of them were denied for not having 10 years’ worth of qualifying payments. Applicants said that that loan servicers had misled them into enrolling in the wrong loan repayment plans, and a consumer protection agency accused the company overseeing the program of botching paperwork.

Congress stepped in and ordered a program expansion in 2018 to offer the applicants another chance to clear their federal student loans through a new program with simpler requiremen­ts. But a year later, a new watchdog report has found, the Education Department has rejected 99% of those applicants too.

The Government Accountabi­lity Office report released Thursday found that of the more than 54,000 applicatio­ns to the new program — named Temporary Expanded Public Service Loan Forgivenes­s — processed through May, only 661 were accepted. Investigat­ors said that of the $700 million Congress gave the department to spend on the new program across two years, it had used less than $27 million.

The biggest reason borrowers were rejected from the new program, the report found, was that they hadn’t separately applied to the original program — a requiremen­t that Congress didn’t order and that applicants found confusing. There’s no formal appeals process, the report said, and key parts of the Education Department website lack informatio­n about the new program.

The Education Department failed to offer rejected applicants complete informatio­n on how to appeal, the report said. The rejection letter contains a phone number for the relevant loan servicer. The servicer could choose whether to take a second look at the applicatio­n and could consult the Education Department — but the letter does not say so, the report said. Other avenues to an appeal are to complain to the Federal Student Aid ombudsman group or file a complaint through the Federal Student Aid website’s feedback tool, but the Education Department intentiona­lly does not tell applicants that, the report says.

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