Proposed Legal Settlement Would Forgive Student Loans For 200,000 Borrowers

In The News Piece in Forbes
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June 23, 2022

Edward Conroy wrote an article in Forbes about a recently settled suit with the Department of Education that would provide loan forgiveness to 200,000 federal student loan borrowers.

The Department of Education (ED) has agreed to settle a suit that would provide loan forgiveness to 200,000 federal student loan borrowers, most of whom attended for-profit colleges. ED will also agree to a specific timeline to review loan forgiveness claims for another 68,000 borrowers, guaranteeing that their claims will be processed within six months.

In a statement, Education Secretary Miguel Cardona said, “Since day one, the Biden-Harris Administration has worked to address longstanding issues relating to the borrower defense process. We are pleased to have worked with plaintiffs to reach an agreement that will deliver billions of dollars of automatic relief to approximately 200,000 borrowers and that we believe will resolve plaintiffs’ claims in a manner that is fair and equitable for all parties.”

The case in question was a class-action suit brought in 2019 by the Harvard Project on Predatory Lending. The case centered on delays in processing what is known as Borrower Defense to Repayment (BD) claims. The BD process provides a way for students who are defrauded by an institution to have their loans forgiven if it is clear the institution did not provide the education it promised students when recruiting them.

From 2015-2019 the students represented in the suit filed BD claims against their former universities, asserting that the institutions they attended falsely promised high-quality education, excellent training, and well-paid jobs waiting for them after graduation. Until the end of 2016, ED had been processing these claims, approving almost 28,000 claims.

Read the full article here.