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Biden announced a "Fresh Start" plan to return borrowers behind on payments to good standing before reentering repayment. Data from the New York Fed found less than 1% of borrowers are in default due to the plan. The Education Secretary recently confirmed that payments will resume this year, with or without broad debt relief. This progress is important given that student-loan payments are expected to resume this year after what will be an over three year pause. The Education Department is also in the process of implementing a new income-driven repayment plan, which it says would be "the most affordable repayment plan ever."
Education Secretary Miguel Cardona confirmed his commitment to resume student-loan payments this year. Payments are set to resume 60 days after June 30 or 60 days after a Supreme Court debt-relief decision. On Thursday, Education Secretary Miguel Cardona testified before the Senate Appropriations Committee about his budget request and plans for the upcoming fiscal year. In light of the conservative-backed lawsuits that paused the broad debt relief, Biden extended the student-loan-payment pause through 60 days after June 30 or 60 days after the Supreme Court issues its final decision. As Insider previously reported, the department has started communicating with student-loan companies to prepare borrowers to resume repayment.
Since the Biden administration announced improvements to Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF) and temporarily expanded forgiveness eligibility in October 2021, 615,000 public service workers have seen $42 billion in student debt erased, according to a Department of Education (ED) statement released Monday. PSLF allows federal student loan borrowers who go into public service — such as teachers, nurses, government employees and more — an opportunity to have their debt forgiven after completing 10 years of service. That's why the Biden administration has made it a priority to address issues with the process and make it easier for qualifying borrowers to see forgiveness. Borrowers are required to be on an income-driven repayment plan to make their 120 monthly payments to qualify for forgiveness. But under the temporary expansion, which ended in October 2022, eligible borrowers could receive forgiveness regardless of the type of payment plan they followed.
The House could likely take a first vote this week on a bill that would overturn student-debt relief. 261 advocacy groups urged congressional leaders on Monday to ensure that doesn't happen. They said the bill could force borrowers into an "abrupt" return to repayment and block targeted relief. "It will also force the Department of Education to unwind loans forgiven under Public Service Loan Forgiveness for first responders, nurses, educators, servicemembers, and hundreds of thousands of other public service workers across the country," they continued. Along with the CRA, McCarthy's bill to raise the debt ceiling — which passed the House two weeks ago — had spending cuts attached that included banning student-loan forgiveness.
The Education Department said 615,000 borrowers have gotten $42 billion in relief since October 2021. That's a result of temporary reforms to the Public Service Loan Forgiveness program. On Monday, the department announced that 615,000 borrowers in public service have received $42 billion in student-loan forgiveness since October 2021. That's why it implemented a limited-time waiver that allowed past payments to count toward borrowers' forgiveness progress, including those that were previously deemed ineligible for relief. Have you recently received debt relief through the public service loan forgiveness program?
Miguel Cardona, Miseducation Secretary
  + stars: | 2023-05-06 | by ( The Editorial Board | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
Education Secretary Miguel Cardona Photo: Lev Radin/Zuma PressThe federal Department of Education’s mission is supposed to be . Apparently Education Secretary Miguel Cardona thinks it’s something other than improving educational results. New national test results this week showed eighth-grade U.S. history scores at an all-time low, and Mr. Cardona’s response was to attack the GOP. Scores dropped the most among the lower performers. The civics results are similarly depressing.
Questions ranged from the simple — knowing that factory conditions in the 1800s were dangerous, with long days and low pay — to the complex. For example, only 6 percent of students could explain in their own words how two ideas from the Constitution were reflected in the Rev. The dip in civics performance was smaller but notable: It was the first decline since the test began being administered in the late 1990s. About 22 percent of students were proficient, down from 24 percent in 2018. Across subjects, declines were often driven by the lowest-performing students, a trend that has federal officials so concerned that they are now considering rewriting test questions to zero in on what these students are missing.
The Supreme Court is expected to issue a decision on Biden's student-debt relief by the end of June. They could have debt relief right now if it weren't for these lawsuits." And it looks like the Education Department is planning for those payments to resume with or without relief. The implementation of targeted debt relief reformsThe Education Department has some other things in the works, aside from broad student-debt relief. Share your student debt story with this reporter at asheffey@insider.com.
The Education Department is asking student-loan companies to prepare for the student-loan payment resumption. Since March 2020, federal student-loan payments have been paused and interest has been waived to give borrowers financial relief during the pandemic. New documents obtained by Politico through a public records request found that the Education Department has been issuing guidance to student-loan companies surrounding restarting payments. According to the documents, the companies should prepare to resume charging interest on borrowers' loans in September, and the department is anticipating borrowers will make their first monthly payment in October. But some borrowers want to ensure that the department will keep pushing for relief, regardless of a court ruling.
Kevin McCarthy unveiled his bill to raise the debt ceiling on Wednesday. It included banning student-loan forgiveness and ending the payment pause. The 320-page bill included $4.5 trillion in spending cuts, including strengthened work requirements on welfare programs, rescinding unspent pandemic funds, and banning student-loan forgiveness. Currently, Biden's broad debt relief is paused following two conservative-backed lawsuits that blocked the implementation of the plan, and the Supreme Court is expected to issue a final decision of the legality of the relief by June. "Let's get this straight: MAGA House Republicans are holding the economy hostage to prevent student debt relief from happening, while making it easier for the rich to cheat on their taxes," Biden wrote on Twitter on Thursday.
The Supreme Court rejected an appeal to halt debt relief for borrowers who say they were defrauded. The Higher Education Act has been floated as another way for Biden to pursue his debt-relief plan. The Supreme Court is already considering whether Biden's plan to cancel up to $20,000 in student debt for federal borrowers is legal. Activists and students protest in front of the Supreme Court during a rally for student-debt cancellation in Washington, DC, on February 28. Still, along with the lawsuits against broad debt relief, the payment pause is also being challenged — leaving millions of borrowers in financial limbo.
The Supreme Court ruled that $6 billion in student-debt relief for 200,000 borrowers can move forward. Three schools named in the settlement had asked the Supreme Court to pause the relief. The lawsuit was first filed in 2019 under former President Donald Trump on behalf of borrowers with stalled borrower defense claims, or claims borrowers can file if they believe they were defrauded by the school they attended. The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals rejected the request, and now, the Supreme Court came to the same conclusion. "The application for stay presented to Justice Kagan and by her referred to the Court is denied," the Supreme Court wrote in its very brief decision.
The Education Department pushed back on a lawsuit to halt student-debt relief for borrowers who said they were defrauded. A federal judge signed off on a settlement that would give those borrowers $6 billion in debt relief. The Education Department agreed to the settlement last summer, and in November, a federal judge signed off on $6 billion in debt relief for 200,000 borrowers. On Wednesday, the Education Department responded to the schools' appeal, and as expected, it told the Supreme Court that staying the relief will cause "obvious harm" for impacted borrowers and the department itself. The Supreme Court heard oral arguments in a case aiming to block that broader relief in February.
A federal judge ruled that 200,000 borrowers can move forward with relief in a borrower defense settlement. Last month, three schools mentioned in the settlement appealed the decision to the Supreme Court. 20 GOP-led states filed an amicus brief supporting the schools, arguing Biden doesn't have authority to carry out this relief. Unlawful delay of debt relief results in clear monetary harm." The Education Department has until Wednesday to file a response to the three schools' lawsuit, which currently sits with Supreme Court Justice Elena Kagan.
TRANSGENDER YOUTH ATHLETESA recent Title IX proposed rule from the Department of Education prohibits outright bans in transgender athletes in sports, but allows schools to keep them from some teams. The Department of Education hopes to take feedback and have the rule finalized in time for the next school year, he said. "I do believe there are very deliberate attempts to attack public education so that a private voucher option sounds better," Cardona said. Florida is one of several states that have banned public schools from teaching "Critical Race Theory," an academic framework that teaches that racism is embedded in U.S. laws, policies and institutions. Cardona said he intended to double down on ensuring access to education for all students.
Marsha Wipperman, 59, took on parent PLUS student loans so her son with autism could attend college. "I'm going pay it. So I just signed away on my parents loans because that's what a parent does." Marsha Wipperman took on $77,000 in PLUS loans for her son. 'I've done 100% what I needed to do at that time'Parent PLUS loans gave Wipperman's son the opportunity to attend college, and she wouldn't have done it any other way.
Biden proposal limits bans on transgender athletes
  + stars: | 2023-04-06 | by ( Jarrett Renshaw | ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +2 min
WASHINGTON, April 6 (Reuters) - The Biden administration on Thursday proposed a rule change that would prohibit schools from enacting outright bans on transgender athletes from teams that are consistent with their gender identities, but offered flexibility on exceptions for the highest levels of competition. The proposed change to Title IX is likely to revive debates about transgender rights, particularly in sports. Across the country, there has been a push by conservative U.S. lawmakers to prevent transgender women from participating in school sports. The proposal would also offer flexibility to K-12 schools and universities to limit the participation of transgender students when including them could undermine "fairness in competition" or potentially lead to sports-related injuries. Critics say transgender women who take part in women's sports are often bigger and stronger than their cisgender opponents and have an unfair advantage.
An appeals court rejected three companies' request to pause relief for borrowers in the Sweet vs. Cardona lawsuit. Last year, a federal judge signed off on a settlement in the case that would give 200,000 borrowers $6 billion in debt relief. Those borrowers filed a lawsuit in 2019 over stalled borrower defense claims against the schools they attended. Cardona agreed to a settlement last summer in the case that would give 200,000 impacted borrowers $6 billion in debt relief. Borrowers who filed a claim against a school not included on that list will receive relief based on the following timeline:
People rally in support of the Biden administration's student debt relief plan in front of the the U.S. Supreme Court on February 28, 2023 in Washington, DC. Colleges challenging a class-action settlement that could lead to student loans being canceled for hundreds of thousands of borrowers on Wednesday asked the Supreme Court to put the case on hold. The application at the Supreme Court was filed by Everglades College, Lincoln Educational Services Corporation and American National University. They asked the Supreme Court to put Alsup's ruling on hold and consider hearing the case on an accelerated basis. In the separates cases involving Biden's debt relief plan, the Supreme Court in February appeared skeptical that it was lawful.
453,000 student-loan borrowers have gotten debt relief through the PSLF waiver, the Education Department said. Biden's Education Department announced in October 2021 temporary reforms for PSLF, a program that allows government and nonprofit workers to receive loan forgiveness after ten years of qualifying payments. While many borrowers are still waiting for their applications to be processed, the Education Department also announced permanent reforms to PSLF in October following the waiver's expiration. "Higher education should lift you up, not weigh you down," Education Secretary Miguel Cardona wrote on Twitter in January. "Thanks to changes we've made to the Public Service Loan Forgiveness program, everyday Americans can reach dreams they put off for far too long.
Cardona said it's a "shame" for the millions of borrowers who would benefit in the GOP lawmakers' districts. After the Republicans introduced the resolution, Cardona said in a statement that those lawmakers "represent millions of borrowers who have applied for student debt relief." Biden's plan to cancel student debt has been paused since November due to two conservative-backed lawsuits seeking to permanently block the relief. And Sen. Joe Manchin, a centrist Democrat, previously called the debt relief "excessive." "We're talking about more than 2.1 million borrowers who have applied for student debt relief in Texas, more than 380,000 borrowers in Louisiana, more than 250,000 borrowers in Iowa."
Sen. Elizabeth Warren sent a letter to the Education Department with recommendations to better protect student-loan borrowers. Biden's Education Department has reformed the borrower defense to repayment, which are claims students can file if they believe they were defrauded by the school they attended. In her letter, Warren urged Cardona to ensure predatory schools cannot receive federal aid. It aimed to prevent students from borrowing federal loans for programs they probably wouldn't be able to pay off. But in 2010, former President Donald Trump repealed the rule, and Biden's Education Department pushed off reinstating it until 2024.
But the debt relief still faces challenges ahead as the Supreme Court decides its legality. Chip Somodevilla/Getty ImagesOther roadblocks student-debt relief could faceA CRA resolution might not work, but Republicans have still put forth other legislation. "We will continue to fight this cruel Republican attempt to end student debt relief with everything we have," he said. Amid potential challenges, Biden's administration has not relented in its confidence student-debt relief will reach borrowers this year. "Our student debt relief plan is necessary in the wake of the pandemic," Education Secretary Miguel Cardona wrote on Twitter.
Rep. Rosa DeLauro asked all federal agency heads how GOP spending cut proposals would impact them. Miguel Cardona outlining the "devastating" impact the cuts would have on student-loan borrowers. He said the cuts would delay student-debt relief and make it even harder to get customer service help. Education Secretary Miguel Cardona, in his response, elaborated on the "devastating effects" the GOP proposal would have on students and parents who rely on financial aid — especially student-loan borrowers. But the agency already has a lot on its plate with minimal resources, given Congress approved a budget last year that did not increase Federal Student Aid's funding.
But before that, he spent 20 years in public education and founded a middle school in the Bronx. What Youngkin, DeSantis, and other Republicans are doing is "all a sham" because parents have always had rights, Bowman said, and McAuliffe's response was "misguided and misinformed." Bowman said he wants Biden, Cardona, Vice President Kamala Harris, and First Lady Jill Biden, a community college professor, to speak even more about public education and parents' longstanding rights as partners. He wants Biden to hold a town hall and "speak up on what's real in our public schools." His vision for education, he said, includes an end to annual standardized testing, a greater focus on project-based learning, more equitable funding for public education, and greater investments in children with special needs.
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