Education Secretary Betsy DeVos on Tuesday withdrew student loan borrower protections put in place by the Obama administration, a move that steps away from accountability and opens the door for “rogue” servicers, according to critics.
DeVos outlined the change in a memo (pdf) sent to James Runcie, the chief operating officer of Federal Student Aid (FSA), in which she laments “a lack of consistent objectives” and other “shortcomings” in the current loan processing system, which as one observer sees it, was, in fact clear, and “was built to make repaying loans easier.”
The Washington Post explains the education secretary’s action:
“The guidelines,” Cory Doctorow wrote at BoingBoing, “were enacted after the Government Accountability Office found that the Department of Education’s outsourced debt-collectors were cheating borrowers and engaging in other corrupt, negligent, and criminal practices.” That oursourcing refers to the fact that “the federal government pays hundreds of millions of dollars to companies such as Navient, Great Lakes, and American Education Services to manage $1.2 trillion in student loans,” the Post writes.
Bloomberg writes: “With her memo, DeVos has taken control of the complex and widely derided system in which the federal government collects monthly payments from tens of millions of Americans with government-owned student loans. The CFPB [Consumer Financial Protection Bureau] said in 2015 that the manner in which student loans are collected has been marred by ‘widespread failures.'”
According to MarketWatch, the Education Department “is currently in the midst of awarding a new lucrative servicing contract to a single entity,” with Navient being a finalist. The CFPB sued that company in January “for systematically and illegally failing borrowers at every stage of repayment.” Yet the change ordered by DeVos “could make Navient a more likely contender for that contract, government officials said,” Bloomberg adds.
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