The Day

National teachers union sues student loan servicer Navient

- By KEN SWEET AP Business Writer

New York — The American Federation of Teachers filed a lawsuit Wednesday against Navient, one of the country’s largest student loan servicing companies, alleging that it failed to guide eligible borrowers through a critical student loan forgivenes­s program.

At the center of the lawsuit, brought by nine teachers financiall­y backed by the country’s biggest teachers union, is the Public Service Loan Forgivenes­s program. Signed into law in 2007, the program allows borrowers who work 10 years in an eligible public service job and make 120 ontime loan payments to have their remaining loan balances forgiven.

The program is complex and has been plagued with problems as the first borrowers have become eligible starting last year.

A Department of Education report issued last week found only 96 applicatio­ns were approved out of 29,000, with most applicants being denied for having the wrong loan type or missing or incomplete informatio­n.

The AFT lawsuit alleges that for-profit Navient, previously known as Sallie Mae, contribute­d to the lack of approvals by steering its borrowers into repayment programs or types of forbearanc­e that do not qualify for the loan forgivenes­s program.

The Department of Education has authorized only one student loan servicing entity to handle PSLF loans: the Pennsylvan­ia Higher Education Assistance Authority, better known as FedLoan. Because Navient and other student loan servicing companies are paid per loan they service, transferri­ng accounts to the nonprofit FedLoan would have cost Navient revenue.

“Brazen, inexcusabl­e servicing breakdowns left (teachers) still under a mound of debt, unable to put anything aside for their children or their family, but now with no end in sight,” said Seth Frotman, the former student loan ombudsman for the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. Frotman, once the top government official for student loans, left the bureau in August out of frustratio­n in how the CFPB, now under the control of President Donald Trump’s appointees, has been handling of student loan issues.

“For too long, the student loan industry has not been held to account for its failures,” Frotman said. “Today is about getting them much needed justice.”

It’s not just teachers who may be impacted by this lawsuit. An estimated 32 million Americans may qualify for the program, from teachers to firefighte­rs, social workers and police officers. Lawyers for the nine teachers and the members of the AFT, represente­d by the firm Selendy & Gay PLLC, plan on pursuing class-action status in their Navient case.

“No one goes into public service to strike it rich; they do it out of a deep commitment to students, patients and the public good. But we cannot attract the best and brightest to these careers if promises of debt relief are deliberate­ly broken,” said Randi Weingarten, president of the AFT, in a statement.

Navient Corp. is also being sued by several states and the CFPB for failing to service student loans correctly. The Wilmington, Delaware-based company has vigorously denied all the allegation­s in those lawsuits.

The company also declined to comment on the AFT’s lawsuit.

Ken Sweet covers banks and consumer finance issues with The Associated Press. Follow him on Twitter at @kensweet.

 ?? WILLIAM BRETZGER/THE WILMINGTON NEWS-JOURNAL VIA AP, FILE ?? This 2014 file photo shows the headquarte­rs of student loan debt collector Navient Corporatio­n, in Wilmington, Del. The American Federation of Teachers filed a lawsuit Wednesday against Navient, one of the country’s largest student loan servicing companies, alleging that it failed to guide eligible borrowers through a critical student loan forgivenes­s program.
WILLIAM BRETZGER/THE WILMINGTON NEWS-JOURNAL VIA AP, FILE This 2014 file photo shows the headquarte­rs of student loan debt collector Navient Corporatio­n, in Wilmington, Del. The American Federation of Teachers filed a lawsuit Wednesday against Navient, one of the country’s largest student loan servicing companies, alleging that it failed to guide eligible borrowers through a critical student loan forgivenes­s program.

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