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The Supreme Court struck down Biden’s student loan forgiveness plan. But he’s trying again.

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The U.S. Supreme Court on Friday struck down President Joe Biden’s signature policy initiative to wipe away mass amounts of student loan debt, a blow to higher ed advocates who presented the cancelation as life altering for tens of millions of borrowers.

In a 6-3 decision, the high court’s conservative wing declared unlawful his proposal to cancel up to $20,000 in student loan debt for individual borrowers earning less than $125,000.

But in a twist, the same day the court invalidated the plan, Biden announced he would start regulatory proceedings to forgive loans under the Higher Education Act, or HEA.

This process will take longer, Biden said in remarks Friday. But he said it’s “the best path” to relief for struggling borrowers. 

He also said the U.S. Department of Education, from Oct. 1 to Sept. 30 next year, will enact a “temporary on-ramp repayment program” as monthly student loan payments restart, ending a pandemic-era freeze. 

Biden said this means borrowers should still make their monthly payments, which are due to resume in October, and interest will still accrue, but the U.S. Department of Education won’t flag the debt for collections, protecting borrowers from default. 

Still, the Supreme Court ruling will likely complicate the restart of monthly loan payments, pundits say.

What is Biden doing now?

The Education Department is starting a process known as negotiated rulemaking, in which it will bring various parties to the table that would be affected by regulatory change — in this case, they’d be discussing Title IV financial aid programs and HEA.

Afterward, the department plans to draft a rule that would allow it to forgive loans en masse.

Rebecca Natow, an educational leadership and policy professor at Hofstra University, said she’s unsurprised the Biden administration wants to go through negotiated rulemaking. It drew criticism for not pursuing regulatory proceedings for the first loan forgiveness program announced last year. 

She also said it appears the administration is trying to move as quickly as possible, as the first negotiated rulemaking meeting is happening July 18. A timeline for a final rule is unclear, but Natow said it is unlikely to be a multi-year process. 

However, there could be some legal hangups. Friday’s ruling referenced a Supreme Court case last year, West Virginia v. EPA, which essentially found the executive branch needed congressional approval to take major executive action. The court intimated that the original loan forgiveness program would require congressional authority, and likely this new one would too, Natow said.

Jesse Panuccio, former acting associate attorney general at the U.S. Department of Justice said that likely the Biden administration will be ensnared in the same legal issues as in Friday’s ruling.

Chief Justice John Roberts, writing for the conservative majority, argued the Biden administration was essentially attempting a rewrite of a post-9/11 law, called the Heroes Act. It gives the U.S. secretary of education powers to rework the federal student loan program in times of emergency, like war, and bypass the traditional regulatory or legislative processes. 

The Biden administration said the Heroes Act gave the education secretary authority to waive loan debt because of the continued economic fallout of the COVID-19 pandemic. 

Panuccio said the opinion speaks to the need for Congress to remedy flaws in the student loan system. 

What’s next?

Federal lawmakers across the political spectrum have proposed legislation to tackle rising federal student loan debt, which has ballooned to about $1.6 trillion. Republicans want to standardize financial aid offers, require students applying for loans to participate in annual financial counseling and trim down options for repayment plans.

Meanwhile, Democrats are trying to invest significantly more in federal Pell Grants, a primary vehicle of financial aid, and rework the Public Service Loan Forgiveness program, which wipes away the debt of nonprofit and government workers after a decade of qualifying payments.

Another policy storm is approaching, too, when monthly loan payments resume later this year.

Robert Kelchen, a higher education professor at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, wrote in a post on his website that he doubted before Friday’s ruling that the Education Department and loan servicers could smoothly transition, partially because Congress didn’t earmark funding to help with it.

Now, additional challenges will come because borrowers who banked on their entire loan debt being wiped out will need to repay it, Kelchen wrote.

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Jeremy Bauer-Wolf

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