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Changes to the Free Application for Federal Student Aid, or Fafsa, will allow people to make contributions to their 401(k) without it impacting the amount of financial aid they receive. WSJ personal-finance reporter Oyin Adedoyin joins host J.R. Whalen to discuss. PHOTO: ISTOCKWASHINGTON—Senators are taking fresh aim at legacy and donor preferences for admission to college, as advantages given to certain students and groups come under increasing scrutiny following a recent Supreme Court ruling striking down the use of race in college admissions. and Tim Kaine (D., Va.)—called the MERIT Act—would try to end legacy admissions at colleges and universities. The bipartisan legislation would add a new standard for accreditation under the Higher Education Act that would prohibit institutions from giving preferential treatment during the admissions process based on an applicant’s relationship to alumni or donors.
Persons: Oyin Adedoyin, Whalen, Todd Young, Tim Kaine, Organizations: Federal Student Aid, WASHINGTON —, Sens, Higher Locations: Ind, Va
Some Democrats want the Education Department to recoup funds from Ashford and University of Phoenix. The department previously accused those schools of fraud, granting thousands of borrowers debt relief. The lawmakers want the schools to pay up so taxpayers don't foot the bill for the relief. The Democrats referenced two recent actions to provide relief for borrowers who went to for-profit schools accused of predatory behavior: $72 million in relief for 2,300 borrowers "cheated" by Ashford University, and $37 million in relief for 1,200 borrowers "deceived" by the University of Phoenix, according to the Education Department. AdvertisementAdvertisement"This would send a strong warning signal to other predatory for-profit colleges that there are substantial financial consequences for defrauding students," the Democrats wrote.
Persons: , Joe Biden, Sen, Dick Durbin, Rosa DeLauro, — Sen, Elizabeth Warren —, Secretary Miguel Cardona, ike, hoenix, J ames Organizations: Education Department, Ashford and University of Phoenix, Service, Secretary, Ashford University, University of Phoenix Locations: Ashford, Phoenix
A shutdown could worsen the repayment challenges student-loan borrowers are experiencing. AdvertisementAdvertisementA government shutdown is once again looming, and it's threatening an already precarious return to repayment for student-loan borrowers. Thousands of federal workers would be furloughed, meaning Americans could face delays with customer service in programs like Social Security, along with student-loan repayment assistance. Even before federal student-loan payments officially resumed in October, borrowers were experiencing severe delays getting help from their student-loan servicers due to hours-long hold times and issues processing paperwork. Further limiting the number of customer service representatives available in the event of a shutdown would place a greater strain on borrowers.
Persons: , Mike Johnson, Johnson, Rosa DeLauro, Scott Buchanan Organizations: Service, Washington, Democratic, Social Security, Management, Education, Education Department, Federal, Aid, Student Loan,
And Jess expected to pay around $137 a month in October, but she was billed a $49,000 monthly payment. AdvertisementAdvertisementIncorrect monthly billsWhen servicers attempted to convert borrowers to the new SAVE income-driven repayment plan, 78,000 borrowers got inaccurate bills. Additionally, 21,000 borrowers received monthly statements with "very high and potentially incorrect amounts due," per the memo. Hundreds of borrowers received bills stating they owed over $10,000 a month, with a few borrowers having monthly bills of over $100,000. According to the memo, borrowers are spending an average of 58 minutes on hold with their servicer, call lengths are about 70% longer than 2019 because borrowers have more questions.
Persons: , Alicia, Xiong Chang, Jess, Joe Biden's, servicers, It's, MOHELA, forbearance Servicers Organizations: Federal, Aid, Service, Joe Biden's Education Department, Public, Department, Education Department, Federal Student Aid Locations: forbearance
The Education Department is strengthening oversight by withholding pay from one servicer, MOHELA. AdvertisementAdvertisementPresident Joe Biden's Education Department made one thing very clear this past week: Student-loan companies cannot get away with bad behavior. It's unclear at this point how withholding pay from a servicer would impact its operations, and whether the impact would trickle down to borrowers. AdvertisementAdvertisementWith Republicans holding a majority in the House, it's unlikely Federal Student Aid will see boosted funding in the upcoming year. Buchanan noted that he's still determining how exactly withholding pay would impact operations and added that he's "not making any excuses for the mistakes here."
Persons: , Joe Biden's, MOHELA, Scott Buchanan, Jared Bass, Bass, servicers, Buchanan, he's, It's, it'll Organizations: Education Department, Service, Joe Biden's Education Department, Department, Federal Student Aid, Student Loan, , Education, Center, American Progress, Federal, Aid
The Education Department released a memo detailing mistakes it found student-loan servicers are making with repayment. It pushed for the mistakes to be remedied for borrowers to avoid legal action. AdvertisementAdvertisementPresident Joe Biden's Education Department is concerned student-loan borrowers could turn to legal action if issues with their accounts aren't fully resolved. The Education Department said it will continue enforcing oversight over servicers to ensure borrowers are not further harmed by mistakes to no fault of their own. "We are committed to making things right for borrowers and holding our contractors accountable for errors when they do occur."
Persons: MOHELA, , Joe Biden's, Education James Kvaal, servicers, I've, it's, Richard Cordray Organizations: Education Department, Service, Joe Biden's Education Department, Wednesday, Federal Student Aid, Education, MOHELA, Department, The Education Department Locations: forbearance
The Education Department withheld pay from MOHELA over failure to deliver on-time billing statements. AdvertisementAdvertisementPresident Joe Biden's Education Department revealed that a major student-loan company made errors with millions of borrowers' accounts. The Education Department instructed MOHELA to place all affected borrowers on forbearances until the issues are resolved. Borrowers enrolled in Public Service Loan Forgiveness or an income-driven repayment plan will have any month spent in forbearance counted toward their forgiveness progress. The Education Department said that it will continue to monitor servicers' performance "and ensure they are meeting their basic contractual obligations to the Department and to borrowers.
Persons: , Joe Biden's, Miguel Cardona, MOHELA, Will, I'm, What's, servicers Organizations: Department, Service, Joe Biden's Education Department, MOHELA, Education Department, The Education Department, Federal Student, Federal Student Aid Locations: forbearance
As student loan bills restarted in October for tens of millions of Americans, the companies that service those loans made errors that potentially violate federal and state consumer protection laws. "The restart of repayment has caused pure chaos for nearly 3 million borrowers," said higher education expert Mark Kantrowitz, who reviewed the memo at CNBC's request. That plan, which was touted as the "most affordable repayment plan ever," was meant to ease the transition back to payments for borrowers. Federal student loan payments had been on pause for more than three years until they resumed last month. Yet one woman who signed up for the SAVE plan got a bill for $355, the memo says, when she was only supposed to owe $58.
Persons: Mark Kantrowitz Organizations: U.S . Department of Education's, Federal, Aid, Finance, Department, Biden, Valuable Education, SAVE
The Education Department fined for-profit Grand Canyon University $37 million over accusations of misleading behavior. It said Grand Canyon mispresented the costs of its doctoral programs, leading to high student debt. AdvertisementAdvertisementA major for-profit school just got hit with a fine over accusations of misleading thousands of its students. A senior department official told reporters on a Tuesday press call that this is the largest penalty the Education Department has ever enforced on a school. "Rather than the Department protecting students, we are being forced to protect our students from this targeted and unwarranted government overreach."
Persons: , Joe Biden's, GCU, Richard Cordray, GCU's, Aaron Ament, they'll Organizations: Education Department, Canyon University, Service, Joe Biden's Education Department, Grand Canyon University, Federal, Aid, Department, Federal Student Aid, The Education Department, University of Phoenix, Student Defense, of Education
The Education Department announced it's withholding $7.2 million in pay from student-loan company MOHELA. It's a result of MOHELA failing to deliver on-time billing statements to 2.5 million borrowers. AdvertisementAdvertisementPresident Joe Biden's Education Department just enacted its first punishment on a student-loan company for its repayment mistakes. MOHELA and the Education Department have previously expressed concerns with limited resources due to Congress failing to increase funding for Federal Student Aid in the previous fiscal year. The Education Department did not immediately respond to Insider's request for comment on whether there might be any adverse effects of withholding MOHELA's pay.
Persons: , Joe Biden's, MOHELA, Miguel Cardona, Richard Cordray, Cordray Organizations: Education Department, Service, Joe Biden's Education Department, Public, Department, Federal Student Aid, Democratic Locations: It's, forebearance
The U.S. Department of Education will penalize student loan servicer Mohela, or the Missouri Higher Education Loan Authority, for its failure to send timely billing statements to 2.5 million borrowers. As a result of Mohela's errors, more than 800,000 borrowers were delinquent on their loans, the Education Department said in a statement Monday. Higher education expert Mark Kantrowitz said he believed this was one of the first instances of the government withholding payment from a student loan servicer. "It is only fair for the loan servicer to be penalized for mailing late statements." Federal student loan payments were on pause since March 2020, due to the Covid pandemic, but resumed this month.
Persons: servicer Mohela, Rich Cordray, Mark Kantrowitz, servicer, Kantrowitz, Mohela, servicers, Sen, Elizabeth Warren, Braxton Brewington, Brewington, Biden Organizations: U.S . Department of Education, Washington , D.C, U.S . Department, Education, Missouri Higher Education Loan Authority, Education Department, Finance, Federal, Mohela, CNBC Locations: Washington ,, Missouri, forbearance
Many families struggle with giving priority to saving for college and retirement. Photo: ISTOCKFaced with the gargantuan cost of higher education, Americans often have to choose between securing their children’s future or their own. A new rule change makes it slightly easier to do both. Pretax contributions made to retirement accounts will no longer count as income in the formula that measures a family’s ability to pay for college, under changes to this year’s Free Application for Federal Student Aid, or Fafsa. The Education Department made the changes to simplify the form and ensure more aid goes to those who need it most.
Organizations: Federal Student Aid, The Education Department
A student loan is reported as an installment loan on your credit report and can affect your credit score. How to build credit with your student loanPracticing good student loan management can positively affect your credit score. Monitor your credit report — Regularly checking your credit report helps you spot inaccuracies and stay on top of your credit. Consolidate or refinance federal student loansYou can apply for student loan consolidation if you need help managing multiple federal student loans. How student loans affect credit scores frequently asked questionsHow much do student loans affect credit scores?
Persons: servicers, isn't, , you've Organizations: Federal Locations: Federal
The Education Department released new rules to protect student-loan borrowers from unaffordable debt. They also require colleges to be upfront with a student on the amount of debt they'll take on for a program. AdvertisementAdvertisementPresident Joe Biden's Education Department finalized rules to hold colleges accountable for loading student-loan borrowers up with unaffordable debt. On Tuesday, the Education Department released its final regulations to strengthen oversight over colleges and enhance protections for student-loan borrowers. "They will help prevent fly-by-night colleges from leaving students and taxpayers holding the bag for shoddy educations," he continued.
Persons: , Joe Biden's, Education James Kvaal, they're, Kelly McManus, Barack Obama's, Donald Trump, Miguel Cardona Organizations: Education Department, Service, Joe Biden's Education, Education, Arnold Ventures
New York CNN —Big money donations are booming at America’s colleges, helping fund higher education for millions of students. The biggest donors often sit on universities’ board of trustees, which governs the university and selects university leadership, priorities and direction. The donor backlash at the University of Pennsylvania and uproar at Harvard University over Israel and Palestine highlight how big donations often come with demands for changes to university policy and politics. The backlash has raised questions about the influence big donors wield and pressure donors may exert over leadership, hiring decisions and academic affairs. Restricted giftsMore donations are coming with strings attached, rather than letting schools spend their donations however they want.
Persons: , , Cliff Asness, James Finkelstein, David Callahan, George Mason, Nikole Hannah, Jones, Rob Reich, , Ann Marcus Organizations: New, New York CNN, University of Pennsylvania, Harvard University, Harvard, George Mason University, Faculty Senate Tri, Council, Advancement, , , Aid, Education, Critics, Indiana University, George, Koch Foundation, Yale University, University of North, Chapel, Michigan State, Stanford University, Universities, New York University, NYU’s Steinhardt, of Higher Locations: New York, Israel, Palestine, University of North Carolina, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Kuwait
What is the Student Aid Report?
  + stars: | 2023-10-24 | by ( Aly J. Yale | Richard Richtmyer | ) www.businessinsider.com   time to read: +14 min
The Student Aid Report summarizes the information on your Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA). See Insider's picks for the best private student loans >>What is the Student Aid Report (SAR)? The Student Aid Report is a document that, through the 2023-2024 school year, was used to summarize the data submitted on a Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA). Federal student aid eligibilityYour summary will also include your Student Aid Index — formerly called the Expected Family Contribution. Schools and aid offersThe schools you apply to don't actually receive your FAFSA Submission Summary (formerly Student Aid Report).
Persons: , Shannon Vasconcelos, Robert Kersey, you'll, Kersey, Vasconcelos, Perkins, Pell Grant, Elaine Rubin, You'll Organizations: Federal Student Aid, Service, Bright Horizons, Grants, What's, College of Charleston, Education, Department, Department of Federal Student Aid, Internal Revenue Service, SAR Locations: FAFSA.gov
The CFPB released a report analyzing complaints from private and federal student-loan borrowers. AdvertisementAdvertisementSome lenders might be discouraging private student-loan borrowers from receiving relief to which they're entitled. In that time period, 9,284 student-loan borrowers submitted complaints — 6,934 of which were related to federal loans and 2,350 of which were related to private loans. The current private student-loan portfolio in the US has about $132 billion in outstanding debt, which is 8% of the total outstanding student debt. As Insider previously reported, private student-loan borrowers are more vulnerable than federal borrowers because they do not have the same avenues for federal debt relief and repayment, and it's harder to regulate private lenders that can set their own terms.
Persons: , Robert Cameron, Federal Trade Commission's, it's, Cameron Organizations: Service, Consumer, Federal Trade
AdvertisementAdvertisementThe 2024 presidential election is quickly approaching — and there's a lot on the line for student-loan borrowers. While most federal borrowers were not required to make any payments for nearly three years of President Joe Biden's first term, they were also hopeful for broad debt relief. Now the Education Department is in the process of crafting a new plan under a different law. Here's what Republican presidential candidates are saying about the Education Department — and how it could impact millions of student-loan borrowers. And while private banks administer non-federal loans, borrowers with private debt often face higher interest rates without the option for federal relief.
Persons: , Joe Biden's, Biden, Donald Trump's, Betsy DeVos, Ron DeSantis, Education Department —, Nikki Haley, Tim Scott, Chris Christie, Vivek Ramaswamy, Ramaswamy, Thomas Massie, Massie, Pell, Ronald Reagan Organizations: Department, GOP, Education Department, Service, Republican, Federal Department of Education, of Education, Education Department —, Internal Revenue Service, Department of Commerce, Energy Department, Education, Washington, Federal Locations: Florida, Washington ,
Getty ImagesHighest-paying majors are mostly STEMPayscale's recent college salary report found that petroleum engineering is currently the highest-paying major overall. After petroleum engineering, operations research and industrial engineering majors are the next highest paid, followed by interaction design, applied economics and management, and building science. The growth in STEM jobs is expected to outpace that of non-STEM jobs in the coming years, Pew also found. 'You don't always need a degree'However, in some STEM-related fields, "you don't always need a degree," according to John Mullinix, chief growth officer at Ladders. A growing number of companies, including many in tech, are dropping degree requirements for middle-skill and even higher-skill roles.
Persons: Marc Cenedella, Greenberg, Eric Greenberg, Pew, John Mullinix Organizations: U.S . Census, Greenberg Educational, College Board, Pew Research
Federal student loan borrowers had payments due on their loans this October for the first time in over three years. "We have to take control over our student loans," Boneparth said. Here's the first step to take if you're overwhelmed by paying back your student loans, and where to go from there. Federal student loans can be confusing because you take the loan out from the government, not a specific bank or private lender. But once the loan is disbursed, you're assigned one of several federal loan servicers.
Persons: We've, Douglas Boneparth, CNBC's Frank Holland, Boneparth, you've Organizations: Bone, CNBC, servicers, Department of Education, Nelnet , Missouri Higher Education Loan Authority, Federal, Aid Locations: Nelnet , Missouri
Charlie Javice says JP Morgan is withholding thousands of documents that could help her case. Javice is facing federal charges after JP Morgan claimed she defrauded them out of $175 million. Now, the 31-year-old claims JP Morgan has failed to produce "likely thousands" of documents that could help her defense. In April, the federal prosecutors charged Javice with making false claims and submitting false data to JP Morgan after the bank acquired Frank for $175 million. AdvertisementAdvertisementProsecutors said Javice lied to JP Morgan about the number of people relying on her company.
Persons: Charlie Javice, Morgan, Javice, JP Morgan, , Frank, Slack, Damian Williams, Prosecutors, Mark Kantrowitz, Kantrowitz Organizations: Service, Department of Justice, JP, Federal Student Aid, Justice
The new SAVE income-driven repayment plan was intended to make borrowers' monthly payments cheaper. But many borrowers have faced errors with the plan and their payments are higher than what they can afford. "I do want to pay something, but I'm not able to pay that amount that they're requiring me to pay." When the Education Department officially rolled out the SAVE plan in August, it was coined as "the most affordable repayment plan yet." When she applied for the SAVE plan, she was told her monthly payment would be $125 a month, but when she got her billing statement, she was facing a $428 payment, according to documents reviewed by Insider.
Persons: , Ann Currie, Currie, Joe Biden's, I'm, servicers, she's, Joanna Arbach, hasn't, Arbach, it's, They've Organizations: Service, Education Department, SAVE, Federal Student Aid Locations: Washington
Xiong Chang made an $18,000 payment on his remaining student-loan balance in June. But it hasn't been processed yet, and his balance has grown due to interest. NEW LOOK Sign up to get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in markets, tech, and business — delivered daily. But it's been over four months since he made that payment, and it still is not reflected in his account. According to his account, his balance now stands at $19,019.44 — with $96 in accrued interest.
Persons: Xiong Chang, He's, , it's, Xiong, Joe Biden's, Education James Kvaal, I've, MOHELA Organizations: Service, Education, Consumer Financial, Education Department, Federal Student Aid, Republicans
AdvertisementAdvertisementStudent-loan payments have resumed, but not all federal borrowers should be making payments. However, it's in some borrowers' best interests to not make payments — even if their servicer has given them a billing statement. While borrowers can submit those claims individually, the Education Department has also announced relief for groups of defrauded borrowers without them needing to take any action themselves. AdvertisementAdvertisementIf borrowers received notice of relief but are still in repayment status, they can contact their servicer, or Federal Student Aid's ombudsman. However, interest will still accrue during that time, and the Education Department cannot control how credit scoring companies interpret the missed payments.
Persons: , Joe Biden's, servicers Organizations: Service, Joe Biden's Education Department, Education Department, Corinthian Colleges Locations: it's, Cardona
Student-loan borrowers started to face monthly bills again this week. Miguel Cardona told Insider he's aware of the challenges with repayment. October 1 marked the official end of pandemic relief for federal student-loan borrowers. Education Secretary Miguel Cardona told Insider in an interview that he's aware of the challenges this transition is bringing to both borrowers and servicers. AdvertisementAdvertisementStill, some student-loan servicers continue to point to lack of resources when faced with customer service complaints.
Persons: Miguel Cardona, , we're, Cardona, Joe Biden's, Education James Kvaal, he's, Kvaal, Massachusetts Sen, Elizabeth Warren, Warren, servicers, MOHELA Organizations: Service, Bills, Education Department, Education, Federal Student Aid, Republicans Locations: Massachusetts
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