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What colleges need to know about problems with student loan servicing

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The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has turned a critical eye toward higher education’s monetary ecosystem recently.

This month, it scrutinized the deals colleges strike with banks. But it’s been investigating other aspects of the sector as well.

That follows a September publication about student loan servicers — companies that administer federal student loans. The document paints a picture of an industry where deceptive and abusive practices have been common, and where borrowers may not get the debt relief to which they’re entitled. 

Ben Kaufman, director of research and investigations at the Student Borrower Protection Center, said colleges should be aware of the findings and understand the lending landscape they are bringing students into when they encourage them to take out loans. 

“College requires debt for most people,” Kaufman said. “If you’re a school administrator and you know full well that the student loan servicing system is broken and likely to lead to harm for your students, I would sure hope that you’d be thinking about that when you are made aware of how much debt they are taking on to attend your school.”

Here are top findings from the CFPB regarding student loan servicers:

Erroneous loan forgiveness determinations

Part of the job of a student loan servicer is fielding applications for loan forgiveness through the U.S. Education Department’s debt cancellation programs — programs that exist independently from President Joe Biden’s broad-based debt cancellation and whose existence is much less controversial. But the CFPB has found several unfair, abusive and deceptive practices by servicers related to disbursing loan forgiveness. 

Examiners discovered that loan servicers wrongfully denied some applications for Teacher Loan Forgiveness. Applicants worked for five years as a teacher at a qualifying school but were wrongfully denied because they wrote down dates in MM-DD-YY format, instead of the longer MM-DD-YYYY. 

Similarly, in the case of Public Service Loan Forgiveness, or PSLF, the bureau noted servicers issuing erroneous denials and approvals of applications for relief. Even wrongful approvals may be considered unfair, according to the CFPB report, because they may lead borrowers to work longer for their employers under the belief that they are making progress toward loan forgiveness. Servicers also were found to have miscalculated borrowers’ estimated eligibility date or number of qualifying payments made, extending the life of their loans. 

Other unfair PSLF practices

The CFPB found that some servicers intentionally hid useful information from borrowers. Servicers told some borrowers they were not eligible for PSLF because they had paid through an ineligible repayment plan — neglecting to mention they were in fact eligible for a slightly different loan forgiveness program, Temporary Expanded PSLF. One servicer’s training materials specifically instructed representatives to not start conversations about the temporary expanded program. 

“Examiners identified calls where representatives told borrowers that there was nothing they could do to make years of payments under graduated or extended payment plans eligible for PSLF,” the CFPB reported. “In response to a direct question from a consumer about her nearly 12 years of payments, one representative explained that they ‘count for paying down your loan, but it doesn’t count for PSLF.’”

At least one servicer excessively put off processing Public Service Loan Forgiveness forms, with delays lasting almost a year. 

COVID-19 payment pause misinformation

The CFPB found that at least one servicer deceived borrowers by implying that they were required to make payments through the COVID-19-related payment pause to qualify for PSLF. 

Hundreds of consumers were affected by this situation, the CFPB reported. In the first year of the payment pause, 8% of borrowers whose loans were forgiven through PSLF made payments during the suspension and did not receive a refund of those payments. 

Income-driven repayment problems

Servicers also manage enrollments into income-driven repayment plans, or IDR, which allow borrowers to pay a set percentage of their qualifying income toward their loans each month instead of a predetermined absolute dollar amount. The bureau found that servicers engaged in several unfair or abusive practices relating to income-driven repayment enrollment, including wrongfully denying IDR requests or inflating IDR payment amounts. 

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Lilah Burke

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