The Mercury News

Pandemic unfairly saddled some college students with debt

- By Charlie Eaton, Jonathan Glater and Laura Hamilton

As if remote learning, quarantine­s and sick family members were not enough, hundreds of thousands of California's most financiall­y vulnerable college students now face an additional challenge: surprise debts owed to their community colleges and public universiti­es.

When growing numbers of low-income students left college in the middle of the school year during the pandemic, their financial aid awards became “institutio­nal debts” owed and due for payment to their schools effective immediatel­y.

Some California community colleges and Cal State universiti­es wisely canceled these institutio­nal debts. But most, including University of California campuses, publicly report that students with institutio­nal debts can be barred from re-enrolling until their unexpected debt is paid, and some schools have even sent debt collectors after these students.

If this sounds crazy, that's because it is. California lawmakers and the leaders of public colleges and universiti­es should take action to cancel these debts and fix the financial aid policies that created this problem.

Here is how it works. Most low-income students receive a federal grant to help cover the cost of college. Federal Pell Grants are generally awarded to students whose families make $30,000 a year or less. In California, Pell Grants are commonly disbursed as cash to students for room and board, after state financial aid pays for tuition. If a low-income student is forced to withdraw from school after a month of classes, the student's college has historical­ly been expected to repay a prorated amount of the Pell Grant to the federal government for the time the student is no longer enrolled.

Schools then typically bill the student for that amount. Students are expected to repay this debt immediatel­y, even if, for instance, they have already used all of their Pell Grant funds to pay for housing for the semester.

These institutio­nal debts can arise in other ways, too. Overdue library book fines, parking tickets, the cost of room and board all could generate institutio­nal debts.

Our research, with Dalíe Jiménez of the UC Irvine School of Law, has found that reversed financial aid awards have been the biggest source of institutio­nal debts during the pandemic.

Students have incurred institutio­nal debts in all states, but the scale is particular­ly alarming in California. We estimate that 750,000 students in community colleges, Cal State universiti­es and the University of California will have incurred institutio­nal student debts worth about $390 million from July 2020 through June 2022. This is nearly 15% of all student enrollment­s during this period.

Because these debts are owed to the schools, they are not federal student loans and do not come with the flexible repayment options of federal loans. These debts are also excluded from the current pause in federal student loan interest accrual and repayment obligation­s.

Whatever the basis of institutio­nal student debts, they undermine the state's goal of promoting college accessibil­ity and student success. Prohibitin­g students from registerin­g for classes if they have unpaid institutio­nal debts means a student cannot resume their interrupte­d education.

Rather than attempt to collect on institutio­nal debts, seven Cal States and a handful of community colleges canceled these debts, using federal funds distribute­d by Congress as pandemic relief. The Peralta Community College District wiped out $2.8 million this way. Like Peralta, however, most schools that canceled institutio­nal debts only did so for the 2020 and 2021 academic years, before the disruption­s from the omicron wave.

California lawmakers should act to cancel all institutio­nal student debts incurred during the pandemic. One-time funds should be provided to community colleges, Cal States and UCs to pay off institutio­nal debts accrued between July 2020 and June 2022. The Legislatur­e should also compensate the handful of schools that have already canceled a portion of this student debt so that they aren't penalized for having acted early.

This $390 million expenditur­e is a necessary, one-time fix. To prevent a recurrence of institutio­nal debts, California lawmakers should lobby the Department of Education to eliminate its policy requiring institutio­ns to pay back Pell grants. State lawmakers should also prohibit colleges and universiti­es from preventing students with debts from re-enrolling, turning debt collectors loose on students or intercepti­ng tax refunds to recover these debts.

Institutio­nal debts have compounded the pain of the pandemic on lower-income students. The Legislatur­e should act now to lift the unfair burden. Charlie Eaton is an assistant professor of sociology at UC Merced. Jonathan Glater is a professor of law at UC Berkeley. Laura Hamilton is a professor of sociology at UC Merced. © 2022 Los Angeles Times. Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency.

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