The Spectrum & Daily News

Biden team fumbles college aid, leaving millions in financial limbo

- Ingrid Jacques Columnist USA TODAY

Add this blunder to President Joe Biden’s long list of missteps: The Biden administra­tion has been so focused on wiping out student loans that it’s forgotten about one of its core jobs – helping students secure the financial aid needed to pay for college in the first place.

The past three years, Biden and his Department of Education have had plenty of time to implement an overhaul to federal financial aid and the headachein­ducing form college applicants must fill out to receive assistance: the Free Applicatio­n for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA).

In late 2020, Congress passed bipartisan legislatio­n (signed by former President Donald Trump) that required the changes to simplify the complex FAFSA form. Unfortunat­ely, Biden’s rollout of this “simpler” process has been a disaster.

Glitches in the FAFSA website and in processing the forms have led to significan­t delays in families receiving their financial aid packages, which are a combinatio­n of loans and grants. This is leading to much anxiety for millions of students and parents as colleges typically set a deadline of May 1 to commit to their institutio­ns.

Students obviously don’t want to make that decision before they know how affordable (or unaffordab­le) it will be. College administra­tors are similarly in a tough position. And it’s not clear how soon all this will be fixed.

‘Students and colleges in limbo’

The Biden administra­tion’s bungling has led the Government Accountabi­lity Office to open an investigat­ion into what’s gone wrong. Congressio­nal Republican­s and Democrats alike have voiced their displeasur­e with the new FAFSA rollout.

Senate Democrats have said that “operationa­l glitches and delays in the rollout of this new version of the FAFSA form has left students and colleges in limbo and locked many families out of the process altogether.”

Another huge concern: Students of color and those from low-income families are facing the largest obstacles created by the Biden administra­tion’s blunder.

“I think that’s probably the implicatio­n that I’m most concerned about – the marginal students who will be discourage­d from enrolling,” Beth Akers, senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute (AEI), told me. “And it can change their life trajectory in a pretty big way.”

Biden’s too focused on campaign ploys

Perhaps Biden should have spent less time the past few years obsessed with student loan cancellati­on (which was never sanctioned by Congress) and more time putting in place the new financial aid and FAFSA changes (that did come from Congress).

During his term, Biden has plowed ahead to fulfill campaign promises of debt “forgivenes­s” that he knew he didn’t have the authority to achieve.

Remember that student debt doesn’t magically disappear – it becomes the responsibi­lity of all taxpayers. Biden’s first big loan cancellati­on program was ruled unconstitu­tional by the U.S. Supreme Court last year. That didn’t stop him, however. He has continued to do essentiall­y the same thing but through different means that will be harder to challenge in court. Yet, Biden’s new tactics are just as legally dubious. Just this week, Biden announced another round of early debt cancellati­on for more than 150,000 borrowers, totaling $1.2 billion.

Biden made sure the emails that went out to borrowers looked like they came from him, too. It’s a blatant campaign ploy to buy votes in an election year where the president is struggling mightily in the polls. As AEI’s Akers says, “Nobody is voting based on FAFSA implementa­tion, but they may be voting based on whether they perceive that Biden followed through on his promise to deliver student loan cancellati­on.”

These misplaced priorities have now left millions of families in the lurch about whether they can afford to send their children to college. Some may forgo enrolling altogether.

And they should hold Biden accountabl­e for their children’s lost dreams and less-prosperous future.

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