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 .

Supreme Court’s student loan ruling raises questions about future of standing doctrine​

‘I think there’s no question that at least some lower courts will pick this up and run with it, especially here in Texas,’ says UT Law professor Stephen Vladeck.

What’s the difference between a technicality and an important point of law? Well, according to the old joke, the main difference is whether you won or lost.

But there’s an important point buried in there. Sometimes major cases and outcomes are decided not on the merits or the big issues at play, but on whether the case was properly brought to the court in the first place.

For instance, those who say they have a case typically first have to show how they’ve been harmed or are in imminent danger of being harmed. It’s a threshold for making a complaint called standing: Does the plaintiff have enough of a special interest in a particular matter to stand before the court to request legal intervention?

Now, this would be an academic question – and often is in law school – except that the outcome can have dramatic real-world implications, as it did in the recent Supreme Court case involving student loan forgiveness. And as UT constitutional law professor Stephen Vladeck writes for his One First blog on Substack, the way the high court handled the issue of standing in the student loan forgiveness case raises profound questions for the court going forward.

Vladeck joined the Texas Standard for a conversation about the importance of these recent decisions, and their implications on future standing.

The following transcript has been lightly edited for clarity:

Texas Standard: Remind us first why a majority of justices determined Missouri had standing in this case involving student loans despite dismissing other challenges for lack of standing.

Stephen Vladeck:
So, there are two different cases the Supreme Court heard this term about the student loan program. One was actually from Texas, where two individuals had tried to challenge the program. And the court said those plaintiffs didn’t have standing because they couldn’t show how the program was actually hurting them.

The other case involved six red states, including Missouri. And the court basically said, without deciding whether these other five states were injured, Missouri was injured entirely because a loan servicer created by Missouri – basically a state-created corporation – was injured.

And part of why that’s so surprising is because even though the state of Missouri created the servicer, it created it as an independent corporation with the capacity to sue and be sued on its own to basically break the link between the state and this loan servicer known as Mohela, the Missouri Higher Education Loan Authority.


So normally you wouldn’t be able to bring a case against a state – sovereign immunity, I guess, would be the principle invoked there?

That’s part of the issue here, is that Missouri actually created Mohela the way it did so that it could withstand being held liable, right? So it stands alone.

You know, I am an employee of the University of Texas; it’s much like Texas trying to sue the federal government because something the federal government has done has injured me. I’m a state actor; I am an employee of the state. But no one would confuse me with the state of Texas when it comes to legal responsibility.


So why is that so important here? I mean, why is the issue of standing, as you see it, threatening to the justice system more broadly?

So this is where we get into sort of the technical but important part, right, which is: Standing doctrine is not just a procedural nicety. It’s actually something the Supreme Court has for generations insisted as a constitutional limit on the power of federal courts.

The whole idea being that we give these unelected federal judges such enormous power to have the final say over questions of federal law in exchange for them exercising that power only in proper cases and controversies. We don’t ask the Supreme Court hypothetical questions. We don’t take cases that are made up to the Supreme Court.

And so when the Supreme Court bends standing doctrine, when it finds new exceptions to standing doctrine, when it subverts prior precedents for standing doctrine, what it’s literally doing is expanding its power at the expense of the political branches.

Could you explain how the Supreme Court expanded its power at the expense of other political branches in this case?

So, you know, here we have a policy – and folks are going to disagree about the wisdom of this policy; folks are probably even going to disagree about the legality of this policy – but the critical point is that the policy was not directly harming anyone. It was the federal government spending a whole lot of taxpayer money.

But the Supreme Court has long suggested that taxpayers can’t sue by themselves because they don’t suffer what the Supreme Court calls a particularized injury. Rather, that kind of generalized grievance – basically that we’re all mad at the government – is what the political process is for. If we really don’t like President Biden’s policies, the remedy is to vote him out of office.

And the problem when the Supreme Court is expanding its standing doctrine is instead of saying that unpopular policies have political remedies, now you have judges – who are, as we know, unelected – inserting themselves into these political debates. And in the student loan case specifically doing so in order to strike down a policy that otherwise I think can and should have been left to the political process.

You’re saying that this current court, as you read it, appears to have shown itself willing to expand its power to reach issues that arguably should be left to the democratic process?

That’s exactly the concern. And the problem is that it’s one thing when that expansion has, you know, principled justifications and obvious stopping points. The problem is that the logic that Chief Justice Roberts’ majority opinion uses in the student loan case called Biden v. Nebraska is not by any stretch a logical extension of standing doctrine, and it doesn’t have a logical stopping point.

I mean, by that understanding, any state can now sue the federal government any time any federal policy harms any state actor within the state. What that’s going to do is it’s going to give federal courts just that much more ability to insert themselves into challenges to policies we may like or dislike, but policies that have historically been litigated not in the judiciary but in the courts of public opinion.

Well, it seems to me pretty clear that other scholars will and have picked up on this issue. And I’m curious, do you see smaller courts running with this doctrine as it appears to have been expanded here in this case? Or is this largely a technical issue that’s going to be refined through other cases?

I think there’s no question that at least some lower courts will pick this up and run with it, especially here in Texas. I mean, we’ve seen over the last decade, both district courts and the Fifth Circuit, our federal appeals court, take an even more expansive approach to when Texas – specifically the state of Texas – can challenge federal policies.

It’s a big part of why, you know, our successive state attorneys general, from Greg Abbott to Ken Paxton, have been so successful in being able to sue the Biden administration and the Obama administration. They’ve been able to basically say any time there’s a federal policy that harms anybody, we, the state of Texas, are a proper plaintiff to challenge that policy.

I think with this new decision from the Supreme Court, we’re only going to see more of that here in Texas and around the country. And, folks might be okay with that when it’s Texas challenging the Biden administration. But when it’s California challenging the next Republican president, you know, I think we might actually also realize that this is a problem that’s not just a partisan dispute.
 
I have not met one person outside of the internet who have gotten their loans forgiven.

I know plenty of them including my sister in law since we all work in the not for profit field for companies that serve disabled individuals.

Unfortunately for me a few years back my position was separated from the others resulting in my company becoming a for profit and excluding me.

But the important thing about this is that field has a lot of black people in it (especially sisters) who will benefit greatly from this :yes:
 
Part 2 of my student loan story. I go to the mailbox yesterday to check my mail seeing what bill is coming in. I see an envelope from the treasury dept. Inside is a check for $9k refund for loans.

Hell Fuck Yeah!!!!!!!

Damn bro you really made my day...Long stressful day at work (doesn't happened often, but this is our busy time of the year), but that shit really did it..

Man I am fucking happy for bros using this information to get out of the student loan BS....
 
Part 2 of my student loan story. I go to the mailbox yesterday to check my mail seeing what bill is coming in. I see an envelope from the treasury dept. Inside is a check for $9k refund for loans.

Congrats, brother.

Even though I may not get mines forgiven it still brings a smile to my face when I hear one of you do.









melania-trump.gif
 
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







 

Biden administration is moving toward a narrower student loan relief targeting groups of borrowers​

FILE - President Joe Biden speaks on student loan debt forgiveness, in the Roosevelt Room of the White House, Oct. 4, 2023, in Washington. Biden's second attempt at student loan cancellation is moving forward as a group of negotiators meets Oct. 10 to debate what a new proposal might look like(AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

FILE - President Joe Biden speaks on student loan debt forgiveness, in the Roosevelt Room of the White House, Oct. 4, 2023, in Washington. Biden’s second attempt at student loan cancellation is moving forward as a group of negotiators meets Oct. 10 to debate what a new proposal might look like(AP Photo/Evan Vucci)
BY SEUNG MIN KIM AND COLLIN BINKLEY
Updated 6:30 PM EDT, October 30, 2023
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WASHINGTON (AP) — The Biden administration is moving toward a narrower student loan relief plan that would target specific groups of borrowers — those with soaring interest, for example — rather than a sweeping plan like the one the Supreme Court rejected in June.
The Education Department on Monday released a draft of new federal rules paving the way for a second attempt at student loan relief. The proposal targets groups that are seen as especially vulnerable, focusing on those who owe so much, or make so little income, that they otherwise may never repay their loans.
Though full details are likely months away, the department says it wants to cancel some or all student debt for: borrowers whose balances exceed what they originally owed; those who have loans that entered repayment 25 or more years ago; those who used loans to attend career-training programs that led to “unreasonable” debt loads or insufficient earnings; those who are eligible for other loan forgiveness programs but did not apply.
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A fifth group is also being discussed — “those who are experiencing financial hardship that the current student loan system does not currently adequately address.”
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FILE - President Joe Biden speaks on student loan debt forgiveness, in the Roosevelt Room of the White House, Oct. 4, 2023, in Washington. Biden's second attempt at student loan cancellation is moving forward as a group of negotiators meets Oct. 10 to debate what a new proposal might look like(AP Photo/Evan Vucci)
Biden’s second try at student loan cancellation moves forward with debate over the plan’s details
“President Biden and I are committed to helping borrowers who’ve been failed by our country’s broken and unaffordable student loan system,” Education Secretary Miguel Cardona said in a statement. “We are fighting to ensure that student debt does not stand in the way of opportunity or prevent borrowers from realizing the benefits of their higher education.”


President Joe Biden’s initial plan was broader. It would have canceled up to $20,000 in federal student loans for those with annual incomes below $125,000 or couples below $250,000. But after that was rejected by the court’s conservative majority, he called on the Education Department to try again using a different legal basis.
The new proposal aims to tackle issues that are seen as some of the biggest culprits behind skyrocketing debt.
It would help counter interest that snowballs beyond borrowers’ original balances. It would offer relief to borrowers who attended for-profit college programs with poor outcomes. It would also help older borrowers who took out loans decades ago and struggle to make payments.
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The department says it will continue to refine the proposal as it goes through a federal rulemaking process. The public will be able to provide written feedback next year.
The draft proposal would give the department authority to wipe away federal student loans entirely for borrowers in some categories.
For those who started repaying loans more than 25 years ago, the proposal says that “the secretary may waive the outstanding balance of a loan” — amounting to total cancellation. It’s the same for borrowers who are eligible for other cancellation programs but haven’t applied.
Loans used to attend low-value college programs would also be wiped away. Borrowers would fall into that category if they attended a program that fails new standards outlined in a separate federal rule known as gainful employment.
For those with snowballing interest, the proposal would reset their loans back to the original balance, effectively canceling unpaid interest.
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Even a more limited plan for relief is sure to draw fierce opposition from Republicans, who see cancellation as an unfair burden on taxpayers.
The latest attempt rests on the Higher Education Act of 1965, a wide-reaching law that gives the education secretary power to “compromise, waive or release” certain debts. But the law is unclear on how the secretary can wield that authority, creating a legal gray area that has been the subject of debate since Biden took office.
The proposal aims to settle the dispute by creating new federal rules detailing cases that merit cancellation. Before the rules can be enacted, they must be weighed by a committee of government outsiders in a process known as negotiated rulemaking. The new draft will be taken up when the committee meets next week.
The committee is made up of negotiators who represent a range of viewpoints on student loans. It includes students and officials from a range of colleges, along with loan servicers, state officials and advocates including the NAACP.
Meetings began earlier this month and are scheduled to continue into December.
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At the end of the process, negotiators will vote on a proposed rule. If they reach consensus, the department will move forward with it. If they don’t, the agency will propose its own plan, which can be finalized after a public comment period.
Biden called for a plan to help “as many borrowers as possible,” but his administration seems to be moving away from the type of mass cancellation that he promised in August 2022.
That plan was estimated to cost $400 billion. It’s unclear how much the second proposal will cost.
In a separate action on Monday, the Education Department moved to correct errors by a student loan servicer that failed to send billing statements on time.
The department is withholding $7.2 million in payment to the loan servicer MOHELA after finding that it failed to send timely billing statements to 2.5 million borrowers recently. In some cases, borrowers received their bills within seven days of their due date. As a result, the department said, 800,000 borrowers were delinquent on their payments.
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The department ordered MOHELA to put all affected borrowers into forbearance — a temporary hold on payments — until the issue is resolved.
Federal student loan payments resumed in October for the first time since the start of the pandemic. Some in the industry have warned of potential problems as understaffed loan servicers bring millions of borrowers back into repayment at the same time.

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The Associated Press education team receives support from the Carnegie Corporation of New York. The AP is solely responsible for all content.
 

Education Department withholding payment to student loan servicer after billing statement errors​

BY LEXI LONAS - 10/30/23 11:39 AM ET
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Education Secretary Miguel Cardona
AP Photo/Evan Vucci
Education Secretary Miguel Cardona is pictured in the Roosevelt Room of the White House on Aug. 24, 2022.
The Department of Education announced Monday that it is withholding millions of dollars in payment to the student loan servicer Missouri Higher Education Loan Authority (MOHELA) over billing statement errors it made.
The department said MOHELA “failed to meet its basic obligation” of getting the statements out in a reasonable timeframe, resulting in 2.5 million borrowers getting late statements. Some of the borrowers only got their bill days before their payment was due.

As a result, more than 800,000 borrowers got put into delinquency status under MOHELA.
The department is withholding $7.2 million in its October payment to MOHELA due to the error and told the student loan servicer to put all borrowers affected by this issue in forbearance until it is resolved. Any borrower on an income-driven repayment plan won’t have the months counted against them.
“The Biden-Harris Administration is looking out for borrowers at every step throughout their return to repayment.  Our oversight efforts have uncovered errors from loan servicers that will not be tolerated. We took immediate actions to protect borrowers from the fallout of this error and hold the responsible servicers accountable, including by withholding $7.2 million in payment from one servicer,” Education Secretary Miguel Cardona said.

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“The actions we’ve taken send a strong message to all student loan servicers that we will not allow borrowers to suffer the consequences of gross servicing failures. We are committed to fixing our country’s broken student loan system, and that includes strengthening oversight and accountability and taking every step possible to improve outcomes for borrowers,” he added.
Additionally, the department found “a small number of borrowers” received billing statements with incorrect payment amounts, and people on the Borrower Defense program were incorrectly put back on repayments. Those borrowers have also been placed on forbearance until the issue is corrected.
 
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