The Day

High court to hear student loan plan

More than 40M people could have at least some of their debt forgiven

- By DANIELLE DOUGLAS-GABRIEL

The nation’s highest court is to hear two cases today challengin­g the legality of President Joe Biden’s student loan forgivenes­s plan, four months after an appellate court halted the relief program.

If the Biden administra­tion is successful, more than 40 million people could have up to $20,000 of their individual federal student loan debt canceled. Before the courts hit the brakes on the program, more than half of eligible borrowers applied, with the Education Department approving 16 million applicatio­ns.

But several lawsuits have sought to test whether the president has the authority to forgive the debt. If the challenges prevail, supporters of debt relief worry about what could happen to borrowers when loan repayments resume.

There are many moving parts to the lawsuits. Here’s a refresher.

Who is challengin­g the plan?

The first case, Biden v. Nebraska, was brought by Republican officials in Arkansas, Iowa, Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska and South Carolina. The original litigation alleges that the president is oversteppi­ng his authority and threatenin­g the revenue of state entities that profit from federal student loans with the forgivenes­s plan.

A lower court dismissed the suit, accepting the Biden administra­tion’s argument that the states lacked standing to sue. But the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 8th Circuit decided that the states had standing, at least in the case of Missouri, to bring a challenge on behalf of the Missouri Higher Education Loan Authority, a quasi-state entity that owns and services federal student loans. The lawsuit asserts that under the relief plan, MOHELA, the Missouri entity that funds state scholarshi­ps, would improperly lose the revenue it receives from servicing Direct Loans — those made and owned by the federal government.

The other lawsuit, U.S. Department of Education v. Brown, was filed by the Job Creators Network Foundation, a conservati­ve group, on behalf of student loan borrowers Alexander Taylor and Myra Brown. Under the Biden plan, Taylor is eligible for $10,000 of debt relief, according to the complaint. But he does not qualify for an additional $10,000 in forgivenes­s reserved for recipients of Pell Grants, a form of federal aid for low-income students.

Brown is ineligible for any forgivenes­s because her loans originated with the defunct Federal Family Education Loan (FFEL) program and are now held by private entities. Until late September, commercial FFEL borrowers such as Brown could consolidat­e their debt into a Direct Loan to become eligible for forgivenes­s. But the Education Department reversed that policy to try to head off legal challenges.

A federal district judge declared the forgivenes­s program unlawful. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit refused a request from the Education Department to put a hold on the ruling.

Why is Biden canceling student debt?

The Biden administra­tion says that the coronaviru­s pandemic has done financial harm to student loan borrowers and that canceling a portion of their debt is critical to avoid a surge in delinquenc­ies and defaults.

Federal student loan payments have been on pause for the vast majority of borrowers since March 2020, when then-President Donald Trump declared a national emergency because of the public health crisis. And the Education Department expects that borrowers will struggle to manage their debt when payments resume. The agency analyzed historical data about borrowers who transition­ed back to repayment after periods of forbearanc­e, including postponeme­nt tied to natural disasters, and found that many fell behind on payments.

Does the president have the authority to cancel student debt?

The answer depends on whom you ask. The Biden administra­tion insists that a 2003 law used by the Trump administra­tion to pause student loan payments during the coronaviru­s pandemic also provides the authority to cancel education debt. The Justice Department released a 25-page memo in August that says the Higher Education Relief Opportunit­ies for Students Act (HEROES Act) authorizes the education secretary “to alleviate the hardship that federal student loan recipients may suffer as a result of national emergencie­s.”

But opponents argue that the scale of loan cancellati­on, at a cost of nearly a half-trillion dollars, requires congressio­nal authorizat­ion because of the political and economic significan­ce. They say lawmakers who passed the HEROES Act in response to the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks never intended for the statute to be used in the manner that the Biden administra­tion has proposed.

How many people applied for forgivenes­s?

About 26 million people applied for debt relief before the program was shut down by the courts. The Education Department approved the applicatio­ns of 16 million of those people but has not been able to proceed to canceling their debt.

When will the Supreme Court rule?

The court will hand down a ruling before it adjourns, usually by the end of June. However, the justices are known to move a little faster on cases they take on an expedited basis. The court accepted these two cases on that basis.

 ?? PATRICK SEMANSKY/AP PHOTO ?? Student debt relief advocates gather outside the Supreme Court on Capitol Hill in Washington on Monday ahead of arguments over President Joe Biden’s student debt relief plan.
PATRICK SEMANSKY/AP PHOTO Student debt relief advocates gather outside the Supreme Court on Capitol Hill in Washington on Monday ahead of arguments over President Joe Biden’s student debt relief plan.

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