Las Vegas Review-Journal

Student loan forgivenes­s program working, but deadline looms

- By Cora Lewis and Adriana Morga

NEW YORK — When Melissa Martinez applied to have her student loan debt forgiven more than a decade ago, the U.S. Department of Education said she was ineligible.

Martinez, a professor, tried again this past year and managed to erase the last $6,000 she owed for her doctorate. She wasn’t alone — according to new federal figures, more than 145,000 borrowers have had the remainder of their federal student loan debt canceled through a program for people who work for schools, government­s or nonprofits.

Hundreds of thousands more have completed the paperwork for the Public Service Loan Forgivenes­s program, and officials say many more likely qualify. An Oct. 31 deadline to apply under the less stringent rules is fast approachin­g.

There’s a broader conversati­on underway in America about how to handle student loan debt. An estimated 43 million Americans carry student loans worth $1.6 trillion, according to federal figures. Federal student loan payments were paused during the coronaviru­s pandemic and will remain so until at least Aug. 31. President Joe Biden is expected to make some sort of announceme­nt about student loan relief before then.

Nearly all of the cancellati­ons through the Public Service Loan Forgivenes­s Program have come since last October, when the government temporaril­y relaxed the complex requiremen­ts. Before that, the program had rejected more than 90 percent of applicants, the Department of Education said in 2019.

A spokespers­on for the Education Department said Wednesday that most borrowers who were denied then were deemed ineligible because they didn’t meet employer eligibilit­y requiremen­ts, their employment dates didn’t align with the dates of their student loans, or they didn’t have the required direct loans.

“I thought maybe it would work now,” said Martinez, who graduated from the University of Texas, Austin in 2010 with a doctorate in educationa­l administra­tion.

Even though the deadline is in October, Martinez advises people who may qualify for the loan forgivenes­s to apply as soon as possible. She found the process difficult to navigate, even with the relaxed rules.

The Public Service Loan Forgivenes­s program, launched in 2007 to steer more graduates to public service, cancels federal student loan debt after 10 years of public interest work, or 120 payments. Teachers, librarians, nurses, public interest lawyers, military members and other public workers all qualify, along with people who work for non-profits.

So far, the forgivenes­s totals almost $8.1 billion in federal loans, but that amount is just a fraction of the debt that could qualify. The average amount of debt forgiven through the program is $64,968.

Under the reformed rules, loan servicers count payments that had previously been deemed unacceptab­le, such as when borrowers mistakenly or unwittingl­y signed up for non-qualifying plans.

The waiver period has been life-changing for loan holders who’ve been able to receive credit toward forgivenes­s for years they’ve worked in public service after previously being rejected, said Kat Welbeck, Civil Rights Counsel at the Student Borrower Protection Center, describing joyful tears as loan balances drop to zero.

Borrowers who are currently jobless or not working in public service may still qualify for forgivenes­s, according to the Department of Education. And the months during the pandemic since March 2020 in which payments on federal loans have been paused count as credits towards the total number of payments required for the program.

The Biden administra­tion on Wednesday proposed new rules for the program that are expected to take effect by July 2023.

The waiver that expires Oct. 31 was mostly meant to make up for widespread confusion about which types of loans and payment plans are eligible under the program.

The new proposed rules won’t change which loans are eligible, but they aim to provide more flexibilit­y so borrowers don’t lose progress toward forgivenes­s because of late payments or paperwork problems.

 ?? Delcia Lopez The Associated Press ?? Graduates of the University of Texas Rio Grande Valley attend their commenceme­nt ceremony in May. A deadline is fast approachin­g for teachers, librarians, nurses and other public service workers to apply to have their student loan debt forgiven.
Delcia Lopez The Associated Press Graduates of the University of Texas Rio Grande Valley attend their commenceme­nt ceremony in May. A deadline is fast approachin­g for teachers, librarians, nurses and other public service workers to apply to have their student loan debt forgiven.

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