The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Federal financial aid delay causing frustratio­n

Some colleges pushing back admissions deadline.

- By Adriana Morga

NEW YORK — For many students, the excitement of being accepted into their first-choice college is being tempered this year by a troublesom­e uncertaint­y over whether they’ll get the financial aid they need to attend.

The financial aid decisions that usually go out with acceptance letters are being delayed because of a later-than-expected rollout of a revised Free Applicatio­n for Federal Student Aid, the form commonly known as FAFSA that schools use to compute financial aid.

The result: Students and their parents are putting off their college decisions.

“We are not going to make a decision without knowing what we’re committing to financiall­y; it would be irresponsi­ble to do that,” said Jenny Nicholas of Keene, New Hampshire. She wants to make sure that her son, a high school senior, goes to a college that is most affordable for their family.

The Education Department said the form would be easier for parents to fill out and used a new formula to compute eligibilit­y for aid that took inflation into account. But it wasn’t ready in October, when the forms for the coming school year usually are released. During a soft launch in December, it was difficult for many people to access the form.

And on top of that, the initial release didn’t include the updated inflation tool.

Schools won’t get the informatio­n they need to award financial aid until next month, forcing them to adapt. Some have moved away from the popular May 1 deadline for students to accept their offers of admission.

Just this past week, Virginia Tech, for example, said it had moved its admissions deposit deadline for first-year college students to May 15. “Understand­ably so, families are concerned about the FAFSA process this year, and they are telling us that they need more time to make fully informed decisions,” Juan Espinoza, interim vice provost for enrollment management, said in a statement.

The school said it anticipate­d notifying families about financial aid in midApril.

“We can’t make a decision until we see a financial aid package,” said Agata James, a mother of a New York high school senior from Queens. “Everything is in limbo.”

James’ son is torn between two colleges, one in his home state and the other an out-of-state university that is his dream school. But James says the decision will come down to what they can afford without accumulati­ng a large amount of student loan debt.

The Education Department has said it is working to alleviate the consequenc­es of the delays. Some of these steps taken are reducing verificati­on requiremen­ts, sending federal experts to under-resourced schools and allocating money for technical assistance to nonprofit groups.

“We are determined to get this right,” Education Secretary Miguel Cardona said in a statement this month. “We must, and we will.”

More than 17 million students use the FAFSA every year to receive financial aid for their college education. As of mid-February, more than 4 million forms have been successful­ly submitted, the department said.

Though the Education Department said the new applicatio­n would be simpler to use, some students and parents still are having trouble filing.

Jesus Noyola, a sophomore attending Rensselaer Polytechni­c Institute in Troy, New York, said he hasn’t been able to submit his form because of an error in the parent portion of the applicatio­n.

“It’s disappoint­ing and so stressful since all these issues are taking forever to be resolved,” said Noyola, who receives grants and is in a work-study program to fund his education.

Other errors have been linked to Social Security numbers, said Travis Hill, director for Dallas County Promise, a college success program in Texas.

Parents without legal immigratio­n status are not able to submit their portion of the applicatio­n because they don’t have a Social Security number. Other parents also are encounteri­ng errors linking their Social Security number with their child’s FAFSA applicatio­n.

“I’m feeling stressed,” said Lorenzo Jaramillo, 17, a high school senior who is looking to major in computer engineerin­g. Although Jaramillo lives in Toronto, he is a U.S. citizen and thus eligible for financial aid.

Helen Faith, director of the Office of Financial Aid at the University of Wisconsin, said she worries that the delays will harm both students and schools.

“What ends up happening is that our underrepre­sented and most fragile population­s are the ones that are disproport­ionately affected,” Faith said.

 ?? HANS PENNINK/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Issues with the Free Applicatio­n for Federal Student Aid, or FAFSA, applicatio­n aren’t only hurting high school students applying to colleges; they are having to delay their decisions. Current students like Jesus Noyola, a sophomore at Rensselaer Polytechni­c Institute, are being impacted as well. “It’s disappoint­ing and so stressful since all these issues are taking forever to be resolved,” said Noyola, who receives grants and is involved in a work-study program to fund his education.
HANS PENNINK/ASSOCIATED PRESS Issues with the Free Applicatio­n for Federal Student Aid, or FAFSA, applicatio­n aren’t only hurting high school students applying to colleges; they are having to delay their decisions. Current students like Jesus Noyola, a sophomore at Rensselaer Polytechni­c Institute, are being impacted as well. “It’s disappoint­ing and so stressful since all these issues are taking forever to be resolved,” said Noyola, who receives grants and is involved in a work-study program to fund his education.

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