Biden administration to cancel student loan debt for at least 40,000 borrowers. SCOTUS strikes down Biden’s student loan relief plan

Should the Governmwnt Forgive Student Debt

  • No, it was their choice to take the loans out.

    Votes: 19 14.1%
  • Yes, help those students or dropouts.

    Votes: 103 76.3%
  • In the Middle

    Votes: 13 9.6%

  • Total voters
    135
  • Poll closed .
Yea man there was no way, even with the litigation hold up, they need more time anyway imo.

My loan servicer was (finally) JUST switched from Fedloan to Aidvantage and there has barely been any correspondence and prep. These folks don't appear to have they shit together, but I'm not complaining :lol:

..again, thanks for all the updates @DC_Dude and @OutlawR.O.C. ... hoping I hear some concrete news back soon on my application too, but I'll likely reach out to the new servicer to see whats good just to make sure these fools got cooks in the kitchen over there :barbeque:
 
Yea man there was no way, even with the litigation hold up, they need more time anyway imo.

My loan servicer was (finally) JUST switched from Fedloan to Aidvantage and there has barely been any correspondence and prep. These folks don't appear to have they shit together, but I'm not complaining :lol:

..again, thanks for all the updates @DC_Dud and @OutlawR.O.C. ... hoping I hear some concrete news back soon on my application too, but I'll likely reach out to the new servicer to see whats good just to make sure these fools got cooks in the kitchen over there :barbeque:

My loan service provider (Nelnet) hasn't said shit either aside from attempting to get me to submit my updated income information to which I replied

shannon-sharpe-shay.gif


Until June 30th I'm over here like:

shannon-sharpe.gif
 
Would you rather fuck rank pussy, or get fucked in your ass? I will let you assign the action to the political party of your choice. Those are the choices in this country.
No those are not. Neither one is a choice because neither party is doing shit for the so-called black community. The situation won’t change until more of our people change.
 
@DC_Dude is this new info?


In response to these issues, the Biden administration is rolling out the IDR Account Adjustment. “I’m incredibly proud [of] the Biden-Harris team’s temporary changes” to key federal student loan forgiveness programs to improve access, said U.S. Secretary of Education Miguel Cardona last October.

Under the initiative, the Education Department “will conduct a one-time account adjustment to borrower accounts that will count time toward IDR forgiveness,” including the following periods:

  • Any months in a repayment status, regardless of the payments made, the type of federal loan, or the specific repayment plan;
  • 12 or more months of consecutive forbearance, or 36 or more months of total forbearance;
  • Any months spent in economic hardship or military deferments after 2013;
  • Any months spent in any deferment (except for in-school deferments) prior to 2013; and
  • Any time in repayment on earlier loans prior to consolidation of those loans into a consolidation loan.

According to Education Department guidance, “Any borrower with loans that have accumulated time in repayment of at least 20 or 25 years [under the IDR Account Adjustment] will see automatic forgiveness, even if you are not currently on an IDR plan.” Another three to four million borrowers will advance their progress towards eventual student loan forgiveness by several years as a result of the one-time adjustment.
 
@DC_Dude is this new info?


Wow! This is major. Appears to be accurate since it's on the https://studentaid.gov/announcements-events/idr-account-adjustment website. I am looking on redditt and a few non profits that deal with student loans to get more information, but this is major for those who were in that program.
 
Wow! This is major. Appears to be accurate since it's on the https://studentaid.gov/announcements-events/idr-account-adjustment website. I am looking on redditt and a few non profits that deal with student loans to get more information, but this is major for those who were in that program.

Word thanks for the feedback.. I wasn't sure if it was old info that I just missed. I'm gonna have to sit down this weekend and reacquaint myself with this shit to make sure I stay on top of things.
 


Income-Driven Repayment Changes to Create ‘Student Loan Safety Net’

The Education Department is also seeking input on how to create a list of programs that provide low financial value.
Katherine Knott

January 11, 2023
Education Secretary Miguel Cardona

(Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images)
The Biden administration is moving forward on a sweeping plan to overhaul how student borrowers can repay their loans, though advocates want the Education Department to go further in its plan, while critics cite the price tag as an area of concern.
The Education Department on Tuesday unveiled the details of its planned overhaul of income-driven repayment, which could transform the financing of higher education by providing more generous student loan repayment and forgiveness terms. The proposed regulations will open for 30 days of public comment today. The plan, which was initially announced in August alongside student loan forgiveness, is moving forward despite criticisms and promises of oversight from Republican lawmakers who now control the House of Representatives.
Department officials touted the changes in a media briefing as a new promise to current and future borrowers that would permanently fix a “broken student loan system.” Education Secretary Miguel Cardona said the department would strengthen accountability of postsecondary programs in part by publishing an annual list of programs considered to provide the least financial value in the country. How that list will be built is still up in the air, and the department is seeking public input.
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“We’re changing the culture that higher education isn’t affordable in America, especially for Black and brown and other underserved students,” Cardona said. “College graduates earn about a million dollars more throughout their careers [than] those with high school diplomas alone. It’s unfair that only some people in America have that opportunity. For more Americans to realize the benefits of higher education, we must make paying student loans more affordable.”
Cardona’s team at the department has worked steadily over the last few years to forgive millions in student loans and fix several debt-relief programs that didn’t work as intended. The overhaul of income-driven payment is the culmination of those efforts and likely to be the most far-reaching and costly.
“For the first time, we’re creating a student loan safety net in this country,” said James Kvaal, under secretary for education.

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The department is planning to simplify the income-driven repayment program and make the program more fair. The program currently allows individuals to make payments that are calculated based on their discretionary income and family size for either 20 to 25 years and then see their remaining balances forgiven.
The proposed changes would cut payments in half for undergraduates, with a cap of 5 percent on a borrower’s discretionary income. Graduate student borrowers’ payments will be capped at 10 percent for their discretionary income, which is the difference between an individual’s annual income and 150 or 100 percent of the federal poverty level, depending on the specific repayment plan. The administration is proposing to protect up to 225 percent of the federal poverty level from repayment.
Borrowers who take out $12,000 or less in loans would qualify for relief in 10 years, and they likely wouldn’t have to make any payments during those 10 years. The proposed regulations would exempt the first $30,500 that a single individual with no dependents makes from the payment calculation.
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In another change, borrowers won’t see their balances grow as long as they make monthly payments, as unpaid interest will be waived—a key change praised by many advocates. Borrowers who are at least 75 days behind on their payments will be automatically enrolled in the IDR plan that offers the lowest monthly payment under the proposal. Those in default also will have access to IDR.
‘An Affordable Lifeline’
“For nearly three decades, IDR has failed to live up to its promise of an affordable lifeline for federal student loan borrowers,” said Persis Yu, deputy executive director of the Student Borrower Protection Center. “Instead, the program perpetuated an inescapable debt trap—leaving millions of borrowers vulnerable to devastating collection tools. By canceling any unpaid interest each month, reducing monthly payments, and providing access to defaulted borrowers, the Biden administration has begun to deliver on the original promise of IDR.”
Currently, borrowers can be enrolled into one of several repayment plans, but this latest proposal will phase out most of the other plans except the Revised Pay As You Earn plan and the income-contingent repayment plan, which is available to borrowers with Parent Plus loans. Those Parent Plus loans won’t be eligible for the more generous repayment plan, though advocacy groups already are calling on the administration to include them.

WANT TO ADVERTISE? CLICK HERE.
Carrying out the ambitious overhaul and other policy initiatives will be a challenge for the department after the Office of Federal Student Aid did not receive additional funding for fiscal 2023. However, senior administration officials said they plan to move forward with plans to carry out the changes this year.
Over all, the changes are expected to have a net budget impact of $137.9 billion over the next 10 years, though that estimate assumes the administration can carry out its plan to forgive up to $20,000 in student loans for eligible Americans and that the volume or quantity of loans issued won’t change under the new terms.
Preston Cooper, a senior fellow at the Foundation for Research on Equal Opportunity, a market-friendly think tank, said the department’s estimate should be considered on the low end of what the revamped IDR will eventually cost. He estimated the price tag is in the range of $300 to $400 billion.
He expects to see more borrowers switch to an IDR plan if the proposal is fully implemented and for more students to take on more debt—both of which would increase the cost of the program changes.
“The Education Department has a long history of underestimating costs of student loans,” Cooper said.
Advocacy groups generally praised the new plan while highlighting some changes they would want to see in the final rule.
“This plan is a step in the right direction that will provide a meaningful path forward for borrowers trapped in a never-ending cycle of student debt,” said Cody Hounanian, executive director of the Student Debt Crisis Center, in a statement. “At the same time, we hear and echo the voices of our two-million supporters who say this plan does not go far enough. Parents, graduate students, and those sinking in the quicksand of compounding interest will double their advocacy to ensure the administration’s reforms benefit those who need it most.”
Representative Virginia Foxx, the North Carolina Republican who chairs the House Education and Workforce Committee, said in a statement that the changes would “turn the federal loan program into an untargeted grant with complete disregard for the taxpayers that fund it.”
“Today’s announcement is a repeat of the same playbook that got us into this college affordability crisis in the first place,” said Foxx. “Because President Biden couldn’t get his radical free college agenda through Congress, he has resorted to doing it through the backdoor by executive fiat.”
After 30 days of public comment, the administration will review the feedback and then release a final rule, which officials expect to go into effect this year.
Accountability Measures
Critics of the Biden administration’s debt-relief measures, including the IDR overhaul, have said they don’t address the root causes of the ballooning student debt balance, including the cost of college and programs that leave students with high debt loads they can’t pay off.
“If we’re going to invest in affordability, we need greater accountability for colleges that leave students with unaffordable debt,” Kvaal said. “Higher education is an excellent investment, but there are so many programs that leave most of their graduates unable to afford their student loans. It’s time to name names about these programs and have a frank conversation about the root causes of unaffordable student debt.”
Over the next 30 days, the administration is seeking public input on the data and metrics that should be used to create a list of “low-financial-value postsecondary programs,” which is one prong of the Biden administration’s plan to increase accountability from colleges and universities.
Institutions on the list will have to provide the department with improvement plans, according to a department fact sheet. Students also will receive a warning before they receive federal financial aid to attend a program considered to have a low financial value. This spring, the department is expected to release new gainful-employment regulations for programs at private for-profit colleges and certificate programs at other institutions as part of another accountability measure.
Cooper said he would like stronger accountability measures accompanying the income-driven repayment changes.
“If students are unable to pay back their loans in full, maybe the programs that they attended are not something that the federal government should be funding,” he said. “The Biden administration has made a few noises about trying to increase accountability, but I would argue what they’ve offered is nowhere near sufficient to address the scale of the challenge.”
The list is better than nothing, he said.
Lanae Erickson, senior vice president for social policy, education and politics at Third Way, a center-left think tank, said in a statement that more must be done to address the causes of the student debt problem.
“To prevent the borrower protections announced today from becoming a band-aid fix that does nothing to solve the problem, or worse, even incentivizes further price hikes and unaffordable debt, federally-funded college programs must be held to basic standards of quality,” Erickson said.
Jason Altmire, president of Career Education Colleges and Universities, an organization representing for-profit institutions, said he was encouraged that the department was seeking input on how to create the list. He’s planning to form a task force of member institutions to come up with recommendations.
Any list, he said, should apply to all institutions in all sectors. He worried that such a list wouldn’t take into account “that many career schools provide valuable graduates to important occupations in society that don’t make a lot of money.”
“That’s a societal issue, not a school issue,” he added.
David Baime, senior vice president for government relations at the American Association of Community Colleges, said he would expect community colleges and other institutions of higher education to discourage the department from developing the proposed list.
“We will enthusiastically encourage them to continue to do all they can to provide detailed programmatic data on earnings, as well as on the experience of borrowers in the program and the manageability of debt for people who borrow for a given program,” he said.
Jon Fansmith, assistant vice president for government relations at the American Council on Education, said the department’s request for information makes sense and his organization supports better data and more transparency.
“We’ve said before that if you can’t justify the outcomes for students in your programs, then you need to take a really long, hard look at those programs and decide whether you should be offering them,” he said.
He added that in creating the list, it will be “fundamentally complicated” and tricky to determine financial value of programs for careers that don’t have high earning potential, such as social work.
“There are some things that have a value, beyond the return on investment, that as a society we should be investing in,” he said.
 
THE DEFINITIVE GUIDE TO STUDENT LOANS
President Biden just announced updates to student loan repayment—here’s what borrowers need to know
Published Thu, Jan 12 202312:15 PM ESTUpdated Thu, Jan 12 20234:32 PM EST
Kamaron McNair
SHAREShare Article via FacebookShare Article via TwitterShare Article via LinkedInShare Article via Email
President Joe Biden speaks about student debt relief at Central New Mexico Community College Student Resource Center in November 2022.
Getty Images | Saul Loeb
The Biden Administration released details this week on its plan to overhaul the current income-driven repayment plan known as Revised Pay As You Earn plan (REPAYE) for federal student loan borrowers.
Last August, President Joe Biden announced these changes would be coming along with student debt forgiveness of up to $20,000 for borrowers earning less than $125,000 annually, which is currently paused awaiting a Supreme Court decision.

All student borrowers with direct federal loans (not parent PLUS loans) are eligible for REPAYE repayment plans. The updates to REPAYE will be open for public comment for 30 days and may start to take effect later this year, according to an Education Department press release.
Here’s what’s slated to change.
Monthly payments reduced to 5% of discretionary income
Under the current REPAYE plan, borrowers’ monthly payments are calculated as 10% of their discretionary income, defined as any income above 150% of the poverty guideline amount for their state.
Using 150% of the federal poverty line — $20,400 — a single borrower earning $25,000 annually could be expected to pay about $38 per month on their loans, or about $460 per year.
However, under the proposed plan, payments would be capped at 5% of discretionary income and the standard of discretionary income would rise to 225% of the poverty level. Federally, that’s roughly $30,500 for single households.

$0 monthly payments for low-income borrowers
The proposal would also reduce monthly payments to $0 for single borrowers earning less than $30,500 and any borrower in a “family of four” earning less than $62,400, according to an Education Department fact sheet.
The change would also stop interest from accruing on balances while borrowers qualify for $0 monthly payments.
No interest accumulation while making regular payments
Under the current REPAYE plan, sometimes borrowers’ monthly payments are lower than the interest accrued on the loan. That means borrowers can still see balances growing even if they make full, on-time payments. The government currently subsidizes some of that interest accrual, but not all of it.
The proposed change would eliminate additional interest after a borrower’s monthly payment is applied. That means borrowers who qualify for a $0 monthly payment would not see additional interest growing on their balances.
Easier path to loan forgiveness
Borrowers on the existing REPAYE plan are eligible to have any remaining loan balances forgiven after 20 years of monthly payments for undergraduate loans or 25 years for graduate or professional study loans.
Biden’s proposal would consider the borrower’s original loan balance to determine forgiveness eligibility. Those who borrowed $12,000 or less would be eligible for loan forgiveness after 10 years of monthly payments. Every $1,000 borrowed above that amount would add one year of payments before forgiveness eligibility.
Additionally, the proposed change would allow borrowers who enter deferment for a variety of reasons, such as military service or cancer treatment, to still earn credit for payments toward forgiveness. Currently, only economic hardship deferments allow borrowers on income-driven repayment (IDR) plans to continue their progress toward forgiveness.
Borrowers may also consolidate their loans without resetting their progress toward forgiveness. Currently, borrowers on REPAYE plans who consolidate their loans lose any progress they had made toward forgiveness.
For instance, a borrower who had made 100 monthly payments (out of the required minimum 240 monthly payments before loan forgiveness) and then consolidated their loans would have to start over, according to the Federal Student Aid website.
The new plan would give borrowers a weighted average of credit for payments before consolidation, so not all their progress would be lost.
Automatic enrollment for at-risk borrowers
The Education Department acknowledges that in the past too many borrowers defaulted on their loans when they may have qualified for lower or $0 payments on a different repayment plan. The proposal aims to fix that by automatically enrolling borrowers who are at least 75 days behind on payments in an IDR plan that offers the lowest monthly payment.
Borrowers with loans in default would also gain access to IDR plans. Currently, borrowers only have the option to rehabilitate or consolidate loans in default.
Correction: This story has been updated to reflect that a borrower earning $25,000 annually would currently owe around $38 per month on their loans. An earlier version misstated this amount.
 



Income-Driven Repayment Changes to Create ‘Student Loan Safety Net’

The Education Department is also seeking input on how to create a list of programs that provide low financial value.
Katherine Knott

January 11, 2023
Education Secretary Miguel Cardona

(Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images)
The Biden administration is moving forward on a sweeping plan to overhaul how student borrowers can repay their loans, though advocates want the Education Department to go further in its plan, while critics cite the price tag as an area of concern.
The Education Department on Tuesday unveiled the details of its planned overhaul of income-driven repayment, which could transform the financing of higher education by providing more generous student loan repayment and forgiveness terms. The proposed regulations will open for 30 days of public comment today. The plan, which was initially announced in August alongside student loan forgiveness, is moving forward despite criticisms and promises of oversight from Republican lawmakers who now control the House of Representatives.
Department officials touted the changes in a media briefing as a new promise to current and future borrowers that would permanently fix a “broken student loan system.” Education Secretary Miguel Cardona said the department would strengthen accountability of postsecondary programs in part by publishing an annual list of programs considered to provide the least financial value in the country. How that list will be built is still up in the air, and the department is seeking public input.
MOST POPULAR
“We’re changing the culture that higher education isn’t affordable in America, especially for Black and brown and other underserved students,” Cardona said. “College graduates earn about a million dollars more throughout their careers [than] those with high school diplomas alone. It’s unfair that only some people in America have that opportunity. For more Americans to realize the benefits of higher education, we must make paying student loans more affordable.”
Cardona’s team at the department has worked steadily over the last few years to forgive millions in student loans and fix several debt-relief programs that didn’t work as intended. The overhaul of income-driven payment is the culmination of those efforts and likely to be the most far-reaching and costly.
“For the first time, we’re creating a student loan safety net in this country,” said James Kvaal, under secretary for education.

WANT TO ADVERTISE? CLICK HERE.
The department is planning to simplify the income-driven repayment program and make the program more fair. The program currently allows individuals to make payments that are calculated based on their discretionary income and family size for either 20 to 25 years and then see their remaining balances forgiven.
The proposed changes would cut payments in half for undergraduates, with a cap of 5 percent on a borrower’s discretionary income. Graduate student borrowers’ payments will be capped at 10 percent for their discretionary income, which is the difference between an individual’s annual income and 150 or 100 percent of the federal poverty level, depending on the specific repayment plan. The administration is proposing to protect up to 225 percent of the federal poverty level from repayment.
Borrowers who take out $12,000 or less in loans would qualify for relief in 10 years, and they likely wouldn’t have to make any payments during those 10 years. The proposed regulations would exempt the first $30,500 that a single individual with no dependents makes from the payment calculation.
RELATED STORIES
In another change, borrowers won’t see their balances grow as long as they make monthly payments, as unpaid interest will be waived—a key change praised by many advocates. Borrowers who are at least 75 days behind on their payments will be automatically enrolled in the IDR plan that offers the lowest monthly payment under the proposal. Those in default also will have access to IDR.
‘An Affordable Lifeline’
“For nearly three decades, IDR has failed to live up to its promise of an affordable lifeline for federal student loan borrowers,” said Persis Yu, deputy executive director of the Student Borrower Protection Center. “Instead, the program perpetuated an inescapable debt trap—leaving millions of borrowers vulnerable to devastating collection tools. By canceling any unpaid interest each month, reducing monthly payments, and providing access to defaulted borrowers, the Biden administration has begun to deliver on the original promise of IDR.”
Currently, borrowers can be enrolled into one of several repayment plans, but this latest proposal will phase out most of the other plans except the Revised Pay As You Earn plan and the income-contingent repayment plan, which is available to borrowers with Parent Plus loans. Those Parent Plus loans won’t be eligible for the more generous repayment plan, though advocacy groups already are calling on the administration to include them.

WANT TO ADVERTISE? CLICK HERE.
Carrying out the ambitious overhaul and other policy initiatives will be a challenge for the department after the Office of Federal Student Aid did not receive additional funding for fiscal 2023. However, senior administration officials said they plan to move forward with plans to carry out the changes this year.
Over all, the changes are expected to have a net budget impact of $137.9 billion over the next 10 years, though that estimate assumes the administration can carry out its plan to forgive up to $20,000 in student loans for eligible Americans and that the volume or quantity of loans issued won’t change under the new terms.
Preston Cooper, a senior fellow at the Foundation for Research on Equal Opportunity, a market-friendly think tank, said the department’s estimate should be considered on the low end of what the revamped IDR will eventually cost. He estimated the price tag is in the range of $300 to $400 billion.
He expects to see more borrowers switch to an IDR plan if the proposal is fully implemented and for more students to take on more debt—both of which would increase the cost of the program changes.
“The Education Department has a long history of underestimating costs of student loans,” Cooper said.
Advocacy groups generally praised the new plan while highlighting some changes they would want to see in the final rule.
“This plan is a step in the right direction that will provide a meaningful path forward for borrowers trapped in a never-ending cycle of student debt,” said Cody Hounanian, executive director of the Student Debt Crisis Center, in a statement. “At the same time, we hear and echo the voices of our two-million supporters who say this plan does not go far enough. Parents, graduate students, and those sinking in the quicksand of compounding interest will double their advocacy to ensure the administration’s reforms benefit those who need it most.”
Representative Virginia Foxx, the North Carolina Republican who chairs the House Education and Workforce Committee, said in a statement that the changes would “turn the federal loan program into an untargeted grant with complete disregard for the taxpayers that fund it.”
“Today’s announcement is a repeat of the same playbook that got us into this college affordability crisis in the first place,” said Foxx. “Because President Biden couldn’t get his radical free college agenda through Congress, he has resorted to doing it through the backdoor by executive fiat.”
After 30 days of public comment, the administration will review the feedback and then release a final rule, which officials expect to go into effect this year.
Accountability Measures
Critics of the Biden administration’s debt-relief measures, including the IDR overhaul, have said they don’t address the root causes of the ballooning student debt balance, including the cost of college and programs that leave students with high debt loads they can’t pay off.
“If we’re going to invest in affordability, we need greater accountability for colleges that leave students with unaffordable debt,” Kvaal said. “Higher education is an excellent investment, but there are so many programs that leave most of their graduates unable to afford their student loans. It’s time to name names about these programs and have a frank conversation about the root causes of unaffordable student debt.”
Over the next 30 days, the administration is seeking public input on the data and metrics that should be used to create a list of “low-financial-value postsecondary programs,” which is one prong of the Biden administration’s plan to increase accountability from colleges and universities.
Institutions on the list will have to provide the department with improvement plans, according to a department fact sheet. Students also will receive a warning before they receive federal financial aid to attend a program considered to have a low financial value. This spring, the department is expected to release new gainful-employment regulations for programs at private for-profit colleges and certificate programs at other institutions as part of another accountability measure.
Cooper said he would like stronger accountability measures accompanying the income-driven repayment changes.
“If students are unable to pay back their loans in full, maybe the programs that they attended are not something that the federal government should be funding,” he said. “The Biden administration has made a few noises about trying to increase accountability, but I would argue what they’ve offered is nowhere near sufficient to address the scale of the challenge.”
The list is better than nothing, he said.
Lanae Erickson, senior vice president for social policy, education and politics at Third Way, a center-left think tank, said in a statement that more must be done to address the causes of the student debt problem.
“To prevent the borrower protections announced today from becoming a band-aid fix that does nothing to solve the problem, or worse, even incentivizes further price hikes and unaffordable debt, federally-funded college programs must be held to basic standards of quality,” Erickson said.
Jason Altmire, president of Career Education Colleges and Universities, an organization representing for-profit institutions, said he was encouraged that the department was seeking input on how to create the list. He’s planning to form a task force of member institutions to come up with recommendations.
Any list, he said, should apply to all institutions in all sectors. He worried that such a list wouldn’t take into account “that many career schools provide valuable graduates to important occupations in society that don’t make a lot of money.”
“That’s a societal issue, not a school issue,” he added.
David Baime, senior vice president for government relations at the American Association of Community Colleges, said he would expect community colleges and other institutions of higher education to discourage the department from developing the proposed list.
“We will enthusiastically encourage them to continue to do all they can to provide detailed programmatic data on earnings, as well as on the experience of borrowers in the program and the manageability of debt for people who borrow for a given program,” he said.
Jon Fansmith, assistant vice president for government relations at the American Council on Education, said the department’s request for information makes sense and his organization supports better data and more transparency.
“We’ve said before that if you can’t justify the outcomes for students in your programs, then you need to take a really long, hard look at those programs and decide whether you should be offering them,” he said.
He added that in creating the list, it will be “fundamentally complicated” and tricky to determine financial value of programs for careers that don’t have high earning potential, such as social work.
“There are some things that have a value, beyond the return on investment, that as a society we should be investing in,” he said.

THE DEFINITIVE GUIDE TO STUDENT LOANS
President Biden just announced updates to student loan repayment—here’s what borrowers need to know
Published Thu, Jan 12 202312:15 PM ESTUpdated Thu, Jan 12 20234:32 PM EST
Kamaron McNair
SHAREShare Article via FacebookShare Article via TwitterShare Article via LinkedInShare Article via Email
President Joe Biden speaks about student debt relief at Central New Mexico Community College Student Resource Center in November 2022.
Getty Images | Saul Loeb
The Biden Administration released details this week on its plan to overhaul the current income-driven repayment plan known as Revised Pay As You Earn plan (REPAYE) for federal student loan borrowers.
Last August, President Joe Biden announced these changes would be coming along with student debt forgiveness of up to $20,000 for borrowers earning less than $125,000 annually, which is currently paused awaiting a Supreme Court decision.

All student borrowers with direct federal loans (not parent PLUS loans) are eligible for REPAYE repayment plans. The updates to REPAYE will be open for public comment for 30 days and may start to take effect later this year, according to an Education Department press release.
Here’s what’s slated to change.
Monthly payments reduced to 5% of discretionary income
Under the current REPAYE plan, borrowers’ monthly payments are calculated as 10% of their discretionary income, defined as any income above 150% of the poverty guideline amount for their state.
Using 150% of the federal poverty line — $20,400 — a single borrower earning $25,000 annually could be expected to pay about $38 per month on their loans, or about $460 per year.
However, under the proposed plan, payments would be capped at 5% of discretionary income and the standard of discretionary income would rise to 225% of the poverty level. Federally, that’s roughly $30,500 for single households.

$0 monthly payments for low-income borrowers
The proposal would also reduce monthly payments to $0 for single borrowers earning less than $30,500 and any borrower in a “family of four” earning less than $62,400, according to an Education Department fact sheet.
The change would also stop interest from accruing on balances while borrowers qualify for $0 monthly payments.
No interest accumulation while making regular payments
Under the current REPAYE plan, sometimes borrowers’ monthly payments are lower than the interest accrued on the loan. That means borrowers can still see balances growing even if they make full, on-time payments. The government currently subsidizes some of that interest accrual, but not all of it.
The proposed change would eliminate additional interest after a borrower’s monthly payment is applied. That means borrowers who qualify for a $0 monthly payment would not see additional interest growing on their balances.
Easier path to loan forgiveness
Borrowers on the existing REPAYE plan are eligible to have any remaining loan balances forgiven after 20 years of monthly payments for undergraduate loans or 25 years for graduate or professional study loans.
Biden’s proposal would consider the borrower’s original loan balance to determine forgiveness eligibility. Those who borrowed $12,000 or less would be eligible for loan forgiveness after 10 years of monthly payments. Every $1,000 borrowed above that amount would add one year of payments before forgiveness eligibility.
Additionally, the proposed change would allow borrowers who enter deferment for a variety of reasons, such as military service or cancer treatment, to still earn credit for payments toward forgiveness. Currently, only economic hardship deferments allow borrowers on income-driven repayment (IDR) plans to continue their progress toward forgiveness.
Borrowers may also consolidate their loans without resetting their progress toward forgiveness. Currently, borrowers on REPAYE plans who consolidate their loans lose any progress they had made toward forgiveness.
For instance, a borrower who had made 100 monthly payments (out of the required minimum 240 monthly payments before loan forgiveness) and then consolidated their loans would have to start over, according to the Federal Student Aid website.
The new plan would give borrowers a weighted average of credit for payments before consolidation, so not all their progress would be lost.
Automatic enrollment for at-risk borrowers
The Education Department acknowledges that in the past too many borrowers defaulted on their loans when they may have qualified for lower or $0 payments on a different repayment plan. The proposal aims to fix that by automatically enrolling borrowers who are at least 75 days behind on payments in an IDR plan that offers the lowest monthly payment.
Borrowers with loans in default would also gain access to IDR plans. Currently, borrowers only have the option to rehabilitate or consolidate loans in default.
Correction: This story has been updated to reflect that a borrower earning $25,000 annually would currently owe around $38 per month on their loans. An earlier version misstated this amount.

..gonna be another busy weekend to catch up on this.

Thanks again for the updates... also: who da FUCK is Myra Brown?
 

Interesting... the states and other parties holding things up need to get their asses kicked

Steve Vladeck, a professor at the University of Texas School of Law, said during a Wednesday press call that every case filed in a federal court has to demonstrate that the plaintiff would be injured by the policy, that the injury can be directly traced back to the defendant, and that the relief they're seeking would address those injuries.

But the harms MOHELA could suffer are unknown and "Missouri itself is not harmed directly, and... the indirect harm Missouri suffers through the harm to MOHELA is speculative at best," Vladeck said.

And, as the Justice Department wrote in its filing, four of the states — Iowa, Kansas, Nebraska, and South Carolina — said the debt relief would also hurt their tax revenues because their state tax codes chose to include debt relief as gross income, even though federal law prevents debt relief from being taxed through 2025.

"Any harm to the States' treasuries here is likewise self-inflicted," the filing said, adding that "any resulting reduction in their tax revenues is fairly traceable not to the Secretary's plan, but instead to their own choices about how to structure their tax laws."
 
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