Obama's 'Student Aid Bill of Rights makes student loans more manageable, affordable
buzzz worthy. . .
·
Building Tools and Resources to Support Federal Student Loan Borrowers:
Since
2012, the Department of Education has developed a suite of tools and
resources to help federal student loan borrowers, including a financial
aid counseling tool that helps borrowers
make good education financing decisions, understand their options for
paying back their loans, and accurately compare and select repayment
options customized to their individual circumstances.
As part of his vision to make college more affordable, the President will sign a Presidential
Memorandum directing the Department of Education and other federal
agencies to work across the federal government to do more to help
borrowers afford their monthly loan payments including:
(1) a state-of-the-art complaint system to ensure quality service and
accountability for the Department of Education, its contractors, and
colleges, (2) a series of steps to help students responsibly repay their
loans including help setting affordable monthly
payments, and (3) new steps to analyze student debt trends and
recommend legislative and regulatory changes.
In addition, the Administration is releasing state by state
data
that shows the outstanding federal student loan balance and total number
of federal student loan borrowers who stand to benefit from these
actions.
A Student Aid Bill of Rights: Taking Action to Ensure Strong Consumer Protections for Student Loan Borrowers
Higher
education continues to be the single most important investment students
can make in their own futures. Five years ago this
month, President Obama signed student loan reform into law, redirecting
tens of billions of dollars in bank subsidies into student aid. His
historic investments
in college affordability include
increasing the maximum Pell Grant by $1,000, creating the American
Opportunity Tax Credit worth up to $10,000 over four years of college,
and letting borrowers cap their student loan payments at 10 percent of
income. He has also promoted innovation and competition
to help colleges reduce costs and improve quality and completion,
including a First in the World fund. While these investments have helped
millions of students afford college, student loans continue to grow.
A Student Aid Bill of Rights
I. Every student deserves access to a quality, affordable education at a college that’s cutting costs
and increasing learning.
II. Every student should be able to access the resources needed to pay for college.
III. Every borrower has the right to an affordable repayment plan.
IV. And every borrower has the right to quality customer service, reliable information, and fair treatment,
even if they struggle to repay their loans.
Today’s Actions to Promote Affordable Loan Payments
Americans are increasingly reliant on student
loans to help pay for college. Today, more than 70 percent of those
earning a bachelor’s degree graduate with debt, which averages $28,400
at public and
non-profit colleges. Today’s actions will help borrowers responsibly
manage their debt, improve federal student loan servicing, and protect
taxpayers’ investments in the student aid program:
·
Create a Responsive Student Feedback System:
The Secretary of Education will create
a new web site by July 1, 2016, to give students and borrowers a simple
and straightforward way to file complaints and provide feedback about
federal student loan lenders, servicers, collections agencies, and
institutions of higher education. Students and
borrowers will be able to ensure that their complaints will be directed
to the right party for timely resolution, and the Department of
Education will be able to more quickly respond to issues and strengthen
its efforts to protect the integrity of the student
financial aid programs. In addition, the President will direct the
Department of Education to study how other complaints about colleges and
universities, such as poor educational quality or misleading claims,
should be collected and resolved and to strengthen
the process for referring possible violations of laws and regulations
to other enforcement agencies. These actions will help ensure more
borrowers get fair treatment throughout the federal student loan
process.
·
Help Borrowers Afford Their Monthly Payments:
The President will announce a series
of steps to improve customer services and help borrowers repay their
direct student loans, which are made with federal capital and
administered by the Department of Education through performance-based
contracts. High-quality, borrower-focused servicing helps
more borrowers successfully repay their federal student loans.
Building on the stronger performance incentives put in place
last year, the
Department will now raise the bar by:
o
Requiring enhanced
disclosures and stronger consumer protections throughout the repayment
process, including when federal student loans are transferred from one
servicer
to another, when borrowers fall behind in their payments, and when
borrowers begin but do not complete applications to change repayment
plans. These steps will better protect borrowers from falling behind in
their payments and ensure consistency across loan
servicers.
o
Ensuring that its
contractors apply prepayments first to loans with the highest interest
rates unless the borrower requests a different allocation.
o
Establishing a
centralized point of access for all federal student loan borrowers in
repayment to access account and payment processing information for all
Federal student
loan servicing contractors.
o
Ensuring fair treatment
for struggling and distressed borrowers by raising standards for student
loan debt collectors to ensure that they charge borrowers reasonable
fees and help them return to good standing; clarifying the rights of
Federal student loan borrowers in bankruptcy; working with the
Department of Treasury to simplify the process to verify income and keep
borrowers enrolled in income-driven repayment plans;
and working with the Social Security Administration to ensure that
disability insurance recipients who can discharge their student loans
are not instead seeing their disability payments garnished to repay
defaulted loans.
·
Prioritize Further Steps to Meet the Needs of Student Borrowers:
The federal government has a
responsibility to ensure that students who borrow federal loans have
every opportunity to repay those loans through fair, affordable monthly
payments. To
continue to improve the information and customer service offered those
borrowers, the President will direct the Department of Education to:
o
Work with the White
House Office of Science and Technology Policy to find the most
innovative and effective ways to communicate with borrowers, leverage
the latest research
identifying key factors that influence borrower repayment and keep
actual borrower behavior in mind, so they stay in repayment and avoid
default.
o
Work with the Office of
Management and Budget to regularly monitor key trends in the student
loan portfolio, improving loan servicing and budgeting and considering
possible
policy changes.
o
Invite expertise from
across the government to review best practices for performance-based
contracting that could further improve outcomes for borrowers.
In
addition, new requirements may be appropriate for private and federally
guaranteed student loans so that all of the more than 40
million Americans with student loans have additional basic rights and
protections. The President is directing his Cabinet and White House
advisers, working with the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, to
study whether consumer protections recently applied
to mortgages and credit cards, such as notice and grace periods after
loans are transferred among lenders and a requirement that lenders
confirm balances to allow borrowers to pay off the loan, should also be
afforded to student loan borrowers and improve
the quality of servicing for all types of student loans. The agencies
will develop recommendations for regulatory and legislative changes for
all student loan borrowers, including possible changes to the treatment
of loans in bankruptcy proceedings and when
they were borrowed under fraudulent circumstances.
Making Progress on A Student Aid Bill of Rights
Together,
we can continue our work toward ensuring that all Americans have
meaningful opportunities for a high-quality, affordable
postsecondary education without the threat of unmanageable debt. The
President’s vision laid out in the Student Aid Bill of Rights
incorporates the progress we’ve made, his existing proposals, and the
new actions announced today.
I.
Every student
should have access to a quality, affordable education at a college
seeking new ways to lower costs and increase learning.
·
America’s College Promise:
In
January of 2015, the President released a bold new proposal to make two
years of community college free for responsible students, letting
students earn the first half of a bachelor’s
degree and earn skills needed in the workforce at no cost, benefiting
nearly 9 million students, and ensuring states and community colleges do
their part to help students succeed.
·
First in the World Grants:
In September, the Department of Education awarded $75 million to
colleges and universities across the country under the new First in the
World (FITW) grant program to encourage colleges to adopt cutting-edge
innovations and proven strategies that expand college opportunity,
improve student learning, and reduce costs. This
year, the President has proposed increasing FITW to $200 million.
·
Call to Action on College Opportunity:
Last December, the President, Vice President,
and First Lady joined college presidents, K-12 superintendents,
non-profit, foundations, and businesses to announce over 600 new
commitments to help more
students prepare for and graduate from college.
·
College Ratings:
The Department of Education continues its work to develop a college
ratings
system by the 2015-2016 school year that will help students and
families compare the value offered by colleges and encourage colleges to
improve by highlighting institutions that successfully educate students
from all backgrounds; maintain affordability; and
help students gain a degree or certificate of value.
II.
Every student should be able to access the resources needed to pay for college.
·
Dramatically Increasing Investment in Pell Grants:
The President raised the maximum Pell Grant
award to $5,730 for the 2014-15 award year — a nearly $1,000 increase
since 2008, helping more than 8 million Americans a year afford college.
This year, the President has proposed new investments to ensure the
maximum Pell grant keeps up with the cost of
inflation.
·
Simplifying the Process to Apply for Federal Student Aid:
The Department of Education has
helped students and their families fill out the Free Application for
Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) in a fraction of the time it used to take—20
minutes from over an hour—through a redesigned tool that asks less
questions and helps filers get their income data
directly from the Internal Revenue Service. This year, the President
has proposed eliminating more questions from the FAFSA.
·
Simplifying and Improving Education Tax Benefits:
The President created the American Opportunity
Tax Credit (AOTC) to provide families with up to $10,000 over four
years of college. This year, the President has proposed simplifying and
improving education tax benefits for more than 25 million families,
including making AOTC available for up to five years
and eliminating taxes on student loan debt forgiveness under
income-driven repayment plans.
III.
Every borrower has the right to an affordable repayment plan.
·
Pay-As-You-Earn Loans:
Under
the President’s Pay As You Earn plan, recent student borrowers can cap
federal loan payments at 10 percent of their income. Last June, the
President directed the Department
of Education to amend its regulations to make the plan available to all
direct loan borrowers, helping nearly 5 million additional borrowers by
December 2015. This year, the President has proposed reforms to the
program that will streamline and better target
all income-driven repayment plans to safeguard the program for the
future.
IV.
And
every borrower has the right to quality customer service, reliable
information, and fair treatment, even if they struggle to repay their
loans.
·
Transitioning to a Student-Centered Direct Loan Program:
In
2010, the Administration took action to make federal student loans more
reliable and efficient by eliminating subsidies to banks and
successfully transitioning all new originations to the
Direct Loan program. New performance-based contracts that were created
by the Department incented servicers to find new and innovative ways to
best serve students and taxpayers and this June, the contracts were
strengthened to improve the way servicers are
compensated to help borrowers repay their loans on time and ensure
high-quality servicing.
·
Simplifying Income-Driven Repayment Plans and Improving Borrower Outreach:
In
2012, in partnership with the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) the
Department of Education made it easier for borrowers to enroll in an
income-driven repayment plan by creating an online
application that lets borrowers get their required income information
directly from IRS. Along with outreach efforts spanning targeted email
campaigns, social media, and partnerships with outside organizations,
more than 2.4 million borrowers are able to manage
their debt through and income-driven repayment plan.