The Sentinel-Record

DeVos rules would cut $13B in student loan relief

- COLLIN BINKLEY

Students who are defrauded by their schools would have a harder time getting their federal loans erased under new rules proposed by the Trump administra­tion Wednesday.

The proposal, which aims to replace a set of Obama-era rules that were never implemente­d, drew applause from the for-profit industry but sharp criticism from advocacy groups that represent student borrowers.

Education Secretary Betsy DeVos said the proposal lays out clear rules schools must follow to avoid trouble, while also protecting students harmed by deception.

“Our commitment and our focus has been and remains on protecting students from fraud,” DeVos said.

Under the proposal, students would be eligible for loan relief if they can prove their schools knowingly misled them with statements or actions that directly led them to take out loans or enroll at the school.

That would be a higher bar than the borrower defense rules finalized under Obama in 2016 after the collapse of two for-profit schools, Corinthian Colleges and ITT Technical Institute. Those rules allowed relief in a wider range of cases dealing with breach of contract.

Education Department documents supporting DeVos’ proposal argue that, while students should be protected from fraud, they also have an obligation to do their research before picking schools.

“Postsecond­ary students are adults who can be reasonably expected to make informed decisions if they have access to relevant and reliable data about program outcomes,” the department said.

The new proposal is estimated to save nearly $13 billion over the next decade compared with spending estimates under the Obama rules, primarily by reducing the amount of loan relief awarded to students.

Department officials say they have received more than 100,000 fraud claims since 2015, and most are still under review. But the new rules would apply only to loans taken out after July 1, 2019, officials said.

Schools would gain an opportunit­y to respond to claims of fraud under the new proposal, which says schools deserve to defend themselves against accusation­s that could damage their reputation­s and revenue.

It also would allow schools to force students into arbitratio­n agreements barring them from suing the school, a practice used by some for-profit colleges that would have been banned under Obama’s rules.

Opponents blasted the proposal, saying it places schools ahead of students and discourage­s victims from pursuing financial relief.

“It encourages abusive and predatory institutio­ns to continue to rip off students with impunity, while slamming the door on the debt relief that Congress has instructed the department to provide to cheated students,” said Toby Merrill, director of the Project on Predatory Student Lending at Harvard University.

Bob Shireman, a senior fellow at the Century Foundation and a former education official under Obama, said the proposal “is perhaps the most damaging action Betsy DeVos has taken since assuming office.”

“These changes would effectivel­y strip students of their right to recourse if they believe that a college or university has misled them, making it next to impossible for defrauded students to get the relief they are entitled to,” he said.

But the changes were hailed as an improvemen­t by the for-profit college industry and some Republican­s.

Steve Gunderson, president and CEO of the trade group Career Education Colleges and Universiti­es, said previous versions of the rules allowed for “carte blanche approval” of fraud claims, to the detriment of schools and their students.

“The department has undertaken a thoughtful and deliberate approach to this rule, and we applaud their hard work on this important matter,” Gunderson said.

Sen. Lamar Alexander, a Republican from Tennessee and chairman of the Senate education committee, said DeVos’ proposal will prevent taxpayers from footing the bill for “unreasonab­le or unsubstant­iated claims of fraud.”

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