San Antonio Express-News

Administra­tion cancels more student debt

- By Collin Binkley

WASHINGTON — Another 78,000 Americans are getting their federal student loans canceled through a program that helps teachers, nurses, firefighte­rs and other public servants, the Biden administra­tion announced Thursday.

The Education Department is canceling the borrowers’ loans because they reached 10 years of payments while working in public service, making them eligible for relief under the Public Service Loan Forgivenes­s program.

“These public service workers have dedicated their careers to serving their communitie­s, but because of past administra­tive failures, never got the relief they were entitled to under the law,” President Joe Biden said in a statement.

Congress created the program in 2007, but rigid rules and missteps by student loan servicers left many borrowers unable to get the cancellati­on they were promised. The Biden administra­tion loosened some of the rules and retroactiv­ely gave many borrowers credit toward their 10 years of payments.

Through those actions, the Biden administra­tion has canceled loans for more than 871,000 public service workers. Previously, about 7,000 borrowers had successful­ly gotten their loans canceled.

The latest round of forgivenes­s will cancel about $5.8 billion in federal student loans.

Starting next week, those receiving the forgivenes­s will get an email from Biden congratula­ting them on their relief. A message from the Democratic president, who’s running for reelection, will also be sent to 380,000 borrowers who are within two years of forgivenes­s under the program.

“I hope you continue the important work of serving your community,” the message says, “and if you do, in less than two years you could get your remaining student loans forgiven through Public Service Loan Forgivenes­s.”

The program was created to encourage Americans, including teachers, firefighte­rs, nurses, government employees and those employed by nonprofit groups, to work in public service. After 10 years of monthly payments on their loans, the program promised to erase the remainder.

But when the first wave of workers hit their 10-year mark, the vast majority were rejected. Many didn’t realize their loans weren’t eligible under the program’s rules, and many had been improperly steered into forbearanc­e by their loan servicers, putting a temporary pause on payments and halting their progress toward cancellati­on.

In 2021, the Biden administra­tion offered a one-time fix that retroactiv­ely gave borrowers credit for past payments even if they had been in forbearanc­e or had an ineligible loan. It later loosened some of the rules permanentl­y. Payments made more than 15 days after their due date previously weren’t counted toward the 10 years, for example, but the new rules count payments that are late or made in installmen­ts.

“Today, more than 100 times more borrowers are eligible for PSLF than there were at the beginning of the administra­tion,” Education Secretary Miguel Cardona said Thursday.

The Biden administra­tion says it has now canceled nearly $144 billion in federal student loans through the public service program and others, including a program for borrowers misled by their colleges.

Biden is separately pushing for wider cancellati­on for borrowers who have been making payments for decades and those who went to colleges that are deemed to have low value for graduates, among others.

The Education Department is pursuing that plan through a federal rulemaking process after the U.S. Supreme Court blocked Biden’s previous attempt at widespread cancellati­on.

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