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Tag: Eileen Connor

Delayed Obama-Era Rule on Student Debt Relief Is to Take Effect

Via The New York Times 

 

Source: Flickr.com

By: Stacy Cowley

A long-delayed federal rule intended to protect student loan borrowers who were defrauded by their schools went into effect on Tuesday, after a judge rejected an industry challenge and the Education Department ended efforts to stall it any longer.

The new rule, finalized in the last few months of President Barack Obama’s administration, is intended to strengthen a system called borrower defense that allows forgiveness of federal student loans for borrowers who were cheated by schools that lied about their job placement rates or otherwise broke state consumer protection laws.

The new rule could expedite the claims of more than 100,000 borrowers, many of whom attended for-profit schools, including ITT and Corinthian, that went out of business in recent years.

“We’re really gratified,” said Eileen Connor, the director of litigation at Harvard Law School’s Project on Predatory Student Lending, which represented several student borrowers who challenged the department’s delay. “These regulations have a lot of critical protections in them for student borrowers and taxpayers.”

The new rule requires the Education Department to create a “clear, fair, and transparent” process for handling borrowers’ loan discharge requests, many of which have sat for years in the department’s backlog. It also orders the department to automatically forgive the loans of some students at schools that closed, without requiring borrowers to apply for that relief.

The rule was supposed to take effect in July 2017. Shortly before that deadline, the Education secretary, Betsy DeVos, suspended the rule and announced plans to rewrite it. But federal agencies must follow a specific process for adopting or changing rules, and Judge Randolph D. Moss, a federal judge in Washington, ruled last month that the Education Department had failed to meet that standard. The department’s decision to delay the rule was “arbitrary and capricious,” he wrote.

Judge Moss ordered the rule to take effect but suspended his ruling until he could hear arguments in a lawsuit brought by the California Association of Private Postsecondary Schools, an industry group whose members include for-profit colleges.

On Tuesday, Judge Moss rejected the group’s request for an injunction. That removed the last obstacle blocking the rule and put it into immediate effect.

A spokeswoman for the California trade group declined to comment on Judge Moss’s ruling.

Liz Hill, a spokeswoman for the Education Department, said that Ms. DeVos “respects the role of the court and accepts the court’s decision.” However, Ms. DeVos still hopes to rewrite the rule.

“The secretary continues to believe the rule promulgated by the previous administration is bad policy, and the department will continue the work of finalizing a rule that protects both borrowers and taxpayers,” Ms. Hill said.

The soonest any new rule written by Ms. DeVos’s department could take effect is July 2020, which leaves the Obama-era rule in place until then. Ms. Hill said the department would provide more information “soon” on how it would be carried out.

Of the 166,000 forgiveness claims that had been received as of June 30, nearly 106,000 were still pending, according to department data. The department rejected 9,000 applications and approved almost 48,000, discharging $535 million in student loan debt. Taxpayers absorb that loss.

The new rule tries to cushion the blow to taxpayers by requiring schools that are at risk of generating fraud claims to provide financial collateral. That part of the rule has been fiercely opposed by industry groups.

Legal fights about the rule’s nuances are likely to continue. In his ruling on Tuesday, Judge Moss wrote that his decision was “not the first (and presumably not the last) chapter” in the fight.

California, New York and 6 Other States Side with Scammed Students in Battle with DeVos

Via MarketWatch 


Source: Flickr.com 

By: Jillian Berman

Several states are throwing their support behind scammed student-loan borrowers hoping for relief.

Led by Xavier Becerra, the attorney general of California, eight states including, Massachusetts, New York and Illinois, filed an amicus brief [last] Wednesday in a closely-watched class-action lawsuit challenging Betsy DeVos-led Department of Education’s approach to calculating relief for federal student-loan borrowers who say they’ve been scammed by their schools.

An amicus brief, also known as a friend-of-the-court brief, allows entities with an interest in the litigation to weigh in with what they believe to be relevant information about the case.

At issue in the case is whether the agency can legally provide only a partial discharge of federal student-loans a group of borrowers acquired to attend Corinthian Colleges, a for-profit college chain that collapsed in 2015 amid claims the school misled students about job placement and graduation rates. During the Obama administration these borrowers received a full discharge of their loans.

In the brief, the states’ attorneys general argue that these borrowers are entitled to full relief under the law, known as borrower defense, which aims to make federal student-loan borrowers whole who have been defrauded by their schools.

“Amici States have a strong interest in safeguarding the economic well-being of their residents who the Department has already determined are qualified for complete cancellation of their federal student loans because they were defrauded into attending various educational programs offered by Corinthian,” the state attorneys general write in the brief.

. . .

Other states, including Massachusetts and Illinois, provided the Department with thousands of pages of evidence that Corinthian violated the law in their state, according to the brief. What’s more, state attorneys general offices took pains to find residents who might be eligible for relief.

The states hired a company to the tune of at least $290,000 to coordinate contacting borrowers, according to the brief. They also created their own bespoke outreach efforts. For example, in Massachusetts, the attorney general’s office held 19 workshops across the state to help students fill out the claim form. They also called, emailed and mailed letters to borrowers who were likely qualified for relief.

The states “spent significant resources trying to ensure that people who were eligible for loan cancellation because of Corinthian fraud would get it,” said Eileen Connor, the director of Harvard Law School’s Project on Predatory Student Lending, one of the organizations representing the borrowers. “It’s just really outrageous that the Department really capriciously turned away from that.”

The policy being challenged in the suit would allow for borrowers determined by the Department to have received some benefit from their education — based on whether the average earnings of their Corinthian program is 50% or more of the earnings of a typical graduate in a comparable program — to receive only a partial discharge of their loans.

Read the full article here.