San Francisco Chronicle

Student loan chief resigns in protest

- By Ken Sweet Ken Sweet is an Associated Press writer.

The government’s top official overseeing the $1.5 trillion student loan market resigned in protest on Monday, citing what he says is the White House’s open hostility toward protecting the nation’s millions of student loan borrowers.

Seth Frotman will be stepping down from his position as student loan ombudsman at the end of the week, according to his resignatio­n letter, which was obtained by the Associated Press. He has held the position since 2016.

Frotman is the latest high-level departure from the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau since Mick Mulvaney, President Trump’s budget director who has been also acting director of the bureau, took over in late November. But Frotman’s departure is notable, since his office is one of the few parts of the U.S. government that specifical­ly is tasked with handling student loan issues.

“You have used the bureau to serve the wishes of the most powerful financial companies in America,” Frotman wrote, addressing his letter directly to Mulvaney.

Congress created the student loan ombudsman office when it created the CFPB, citing a need for there to be a specific go-to person to handle student loan complaints nationwide.

The position is powerful, able to work with the bureau’s enforcemen­t staff to target bad behavior in the student loan market as well as act as a voice inside the government on behalf of student loan borrowers. The office has returned $750 million to harmed borrowers since its creation.

Frotman’s office was central to processing tens of thousands of complaints from student loan borrowers against their servicers. It also was the office at the center of lawsuits against for-profit colleges like Corinthian Colleges and is currently heading up a lawsuit between the CFPB and Navient.

Under Mulvaney, the bureau has scaled back its enforcemen­t work and has proposed revising or rescinding all of the rules and regulation­s it put into place under the Obama administra­tion.

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