UPDATE: Donald Trump Takes Office as the 47th US President

Already a stated part of their plan.




So let’s get this straight: we’re raising prices on American families now… to bring back factories that will be staffed by robots?That’s not a plan for jobs. It’s not a path to prosperity. It’s a recipe for higher costs, fewer opportunities, and false hope.The future they’re selling doesn’t include you





 

Department Of Education Takes Big Step To Change Student Loan Forgiveness And Repayment Plan Rules​

ByAdam S. Minsky,

Senior Contributor.
Adam Minsky is an attorney and writer focusing on student loans.

Follow Author
Apr 03, 2025, 11:56am EDT
Share
SaveComment1
Education Secretary Linda McMahon student loan forgiveness

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - MARCH 07: United States Secretary of Education Linda McMahon visits "Fox & ... More

Getty Images
The U.S. Department of Education took a key step on Thursday to initiate a process that could result in major changes to several federal student loan forgiveness and repayment programs.


The department issued a formal notice of its intent to initiate negotiated rulemaking, a process under federal law that allows officials to update or change regulations governing various federal student loan programs. According to the notice, the department will focus specifically on Public Service Loan Forgiveness, Income-Contingent Repayment, and Pay As You Earn — popular programs that offer student loan forgiveness to borrowers after years in repayment.



“This process will focus on how the Department can rightsize Title IV regulations that have driven up the cost of college and hindered innovation,” said Acting Under Secretary James Bergeron in a statement on Thursday. “Not only will this rulemaking serve as an opportunity to identify and cut unnecessary red tape, but it will allow key stakeholders to offer suggestions to streamline and improve federal student aid programs.”


Here’s what borrowers should know about the Department of Education’s rulemaking notice, and what it may mean for critical student loan forgiveness and repayment programs.


Department Of Education Initiates Process To Change Rules For Student Loan Forgiveness And Repayment​

Negotiated rulemaking is a complicated process mandated by federal law that requires the Department of Education to take a series of steps to update or change federal regulations. The first step in the process is to issue a formal notice to commence negotiated rulemaking, which is what the department did on Thursday. Department officials will then form a committee of stakeholders and hold a series of public hearings to discuss proposed changes. The process culminates in the publication of final regulations.

PROMOTED

“The U.S. Department of Education’s Office of Postsecondary Education today announced its intention to commence negotiated rulemaking on various programs authorized under Title IV of the Higher Education Act of 1965,” said the department’s statement on Thursday. The department indicated it is seeking “ideas to improve the Public Service Loan Forgiveness Program, the Pay As You Earn (PAYE) Repayment plan, and the Income-Contingent Repayment (ICR) plan.”

The department’s formal notice of intent to commence negotiated rulemaking confirmed that the focus would be on PSLF, PAYE, and ICR. The department seeks “public feedback, especially addressing topics which may include Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF), Pay As You Earn (PAYE), Income Contingent Repayment (ICR), or other topics that would streamline current federal student financial assistance programs," reads the notice.

MORE FOR YOU

NYT Mini Crossword Hints, Clues And Answers For Friday, April 4


Trump Shares Claim He’s Crashing Stock Market ‘On Purpose’ As He Lobbies For Emergency Rate Cuts


China Triggers Sudden Bitcoin Price ‘Crisis Scenario’ Fear



How Student Loan Forgiveness Under PSLF Could Be Targeted Through Rulemaking​

The PSLF program offers student loan forgiveness to borrowers who make payments on their loans for at least 10 years while maintaining employment at qualifying nonprofit or government organizations. The department indicated in its notice of intent to commence negotiated rulemaking that it is looking at “Refining definitions of a qualifying employer for the purposes of determining eligibility for the Public Service Loan Forgiveness program."

Forbes Daily: Join over 1 million Forbes Daily subscribers and get our best stories, exclusive reporting and essential analysis of the day’s news in your inbox every weekday.


Sign Up


By signing up, you agree to receive this newsletter, other updates about Forbes and its affiliates’ offerings, our Terms of Service (including resolving disputes on an individual basis via arbitration), and you acknowledge our Privacy Statement. Forbes is protected by reCAPTCHA, and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
This appears to be a direct reference to President Donald Trump’s executive order issued in March to limit student loan forgiveness eligibility under the PSLF program. The order instructed the Department of Education to “propose revisions” to the regulations governing PSLF to exclude from the definition of “qualifying employment” organizations that “engage in activities that have a substantial illegal purpose.” The order suggests that such organizations could include those that facilitate the violation of federal immigration laws, advocate for or provide gender affirming healthcare for transgender youth, or engage in “illegal discrimination" (which could be a reference to DEI initiatives).






Legal observers and student loan borrower advocacy groups have argued that the somewhat vague definition of “illegal purpose” could effectively ensnare nearly any organization that engages in activities the Trump administration opposes. Such groups have further argued that neither President Trump nor the Department of Education have any authority to narrow the definition of a qualifying employer for PSLF without congressional authorization, and that penalizing organizations based on their mission or activities could run afoul of the U.S. constitution.

“This action is unconstitutional and illegal," said Kristin McGuire, executive director of Young Invincibles, in a statement last month. “Trump can not make major modifications to a program that was written into law by Congress.” McGuire accused Trump of “abusing his power to punish borrowers for ideological reasons and blocking necessary relief that has been mandated for all 501c3 employees by law since 2007,” which is when PSLF was first created.

How Key Student Loan Forgiveness Under ICR And PAYE Could Be Targeted Through Rulemaking​

The Department of Education’s notice is less clear on how Trump administration officials may want to change the ICR and PAYE plans. All the notice says is that “proposed topics for negotiation would include” the ICR and PAYE plans. ICR and PAYE are two income-driven repayment plans that allow borrowers to make affordable payments tied to their income. Borrowers can receive student loan forgiveness of any remaining balance after 20 or 25 years in repayment under those plans.

However, as part of an ongoing legal challenge brought by a group of Republican-led states over the SAVE plan — another income-driven repayment program — the future of student loan forgiveness under ICR and PAYE has already been thrown into doubt. The 8th Circuit Court of Appeals issued a ruling in February that questioned whether Congress intended for there to be loan forgiveness at the end of 20 or 25 years under PAYE and ICR, respectively, despite more than 30 years of regulations, loan contract language, and public assurances made to borrowers by loan servicers and the federal government. It is quite possible that the Department of Education will seek to end student loan forgiveness under these programs, citing the 8th Circuit’s recent decision as the rationale.

Income-Based Repayment, or IBR, is not currently subject to any legal challenge and was established separately by Congress. The department’s notice of intent to commence rulemaking does not reference IBR. Payments made under PAYE and ICR can count toward student loan forgiveness under IBR, so borrowers who wind up getting impacted by changes to program rules can potentially switch plans. However, payments could be more expensive under IBR, and not all borrowers would be eligible to change their repayment plan. And the Trump administration halted all processing for all four income-driven plans in the wake of the 8th Circuit’s recent ruling, leading to a new legal challenge.

What’s Next For Student Loan Forgiveness Rule Changes​

The Department of Education’s issuance of the notice of intent to commence negotiated rulemaking is just the first step in what will be a lengthy process that will likely take more than a year. The next step is the creation of a rulemaking committee comprised of key stakeholders, which will then hold a series of public hearings.

“The Department will also host two public hearings — an in-person meeting on Tuesday, April 29, 2025 and a virtual hearing on Thursday, May 1, 2025,” said the department in its statement on Thursday.

Borrowers who are on track for student loan forgiveness through PSLF, ICR, or PAYE and are concerned about the Department of Education making adverse changes to program rules can submit formal comments through the Federal eRulemaking Portal at Regulations.gov. “The deadline for public comment is 30 days after publication in the Federal Register,” says the department’s statement.
 


Its going up like a Powerball jackpot…

Billionaire bloodbath: World’s richest brace for nearly $900 billion in losses in just 48 hours of market mayhem, triggers historic wealth wipeout among global elite​


Between Thursday's opening of markets and Friday's close, the collective fortune of the top 500 billionaires fell by $536 billion, taking the total losses to $887 billion over the 48-hour span, according to Finacial Review.
 







If ya'll have not seen this video that I posted before
***** Take a close look at what she says at the 12:00 mark *****
And now take a look at what @DC_Dude just posted

I don't know exactly what the future brings, & I don't want to scare ya'll
But just want ya'll just to prepared.....just in case
I would hate to lose any of ya'll ninjas, luv all of ya'll ninjas :cool:
@jawnswoop @Dr. Truth @blackman80 @Bumpee
@largebillsonlyplease @AwwSchitt @Soul On Ice
Make sure to do your own research of course.....
"Follow the bread crumbs, but of course do your own research as well, before its too late"






And also my post that breaksdown that video I just posted above
"https://www.bgol.us/forum/threads/m...d-beneath-the-pyramids-of-giza.1260479/page-3"
 
Last edited:
If ya'll have not seen this video that I posted before
***** Take a close look at what she says at the 12:00 mark *****
And now take a look at what @DC_Dude just posted

I don't know exactly what the future brings, & I don't want to scare ya'll
But just want ya'll just to prepared.....just in case
I would hate to lose any of ya'll ninjas, luv all of ya'll ninjas :cool:
@jawnswoop @Dr. Truth @blackman80 @Bumpee
@largebillsonlyplease @AwwSchitt @Soul On Ice
Make sure to do your own research of course.....
"Follow the bread crumbs, but of course do your own research as well, before its too late"






And also my post that breaksdown that video I just posted above
"https://www.bgol.us/forum/threads/m...d-beneath-the-pyramids-of-giza.1260479/page-3"


Interesting esp with the stock market...
 
If ya'll have not seen this video that I posted before
***** Take a close look at what she says at the 12:00 mark *****
And now take a look at what @DC_Dude just posted

I don't know exactly what the future brings, & I don't want to scare ya'll
But just want ya'll just to prepared.....just in case
I would hate to lose any of ya'll ninjas, luv all of ya'll ninjas :cool:
@jawnswoop @Dr. Truth @blackman80 @Bumpee
@largebillsonlyplease @AwwSchitt @Soul On Ice
Make sure to do your own research of course.....
"Follow the bread crumbs, but of course do your own research as well, before its too late"






And also my post that breaksdown that video I just posted above
"https://www.bgol.us/forum/threads/m...d-beneath-the-pyramids-of-giza.1260479/page-3"

I can't with the ufos
 
If ya'll have not seen this video that I posted before
***** Take a close look at what she says at the 12:00 mark *****
And now take a look at what @DC_Dude just posted

I don't know exactly what the future brings, & I don't want to scare ya'll
But just want ya'll just to prepared.....just in case
I would hate to lose any of ya'll ninjas, luv all of ya'll ninjas :cool:
@jawnswoop @Dr. Truth @blackman80 @Bumpee
@largebillsonlyplease @AwwSchitt @Soul On Ice
Make sure to do your own research of course.....
"Follow the bread crumbs, but of course do your own research as well, before its too late"






And also my post that breaksdown that video I just posted above
"https://www.bgol.us/forum/threads/m...d-beneath-the-pyramids-of-giza.1260479/page-3"

This is interesting, but I refuse to live in fear about what could or won't happen.

But as always, it's good to be prepared for what's to come.

I'm sure a lot of us knew this shit was gonna get worse as soon as trump became president.

Thanks for the youtube link of that video, I'll watch it when I have some time.
 
Back
Top