Amy Laitinen
Senior Director, Higher Education
This year, Secretary Cardona and the Department of Education (Department or ED) will attempt to alter the higher education landscape through a regulatory process known as negotiated rulemaking, also known as “neg reg.” On May 24th, 2021, the Department of Education’s Office of Postsecondary Education announced its intention to establish negotiated rulemaking committees to address a number of issues related to higher education. This negotiated rulemaking will likely have significant implications as the Department seeks to undo the damage done by the DeVos Administration which stripped regulations related to quality assurance and accountability. This website is devoted to tracking the process and providing information about ED’s 2021 neg reg, including background papers on the key issues, data, and more. New America’s higher education team will continue to update this website as the process progresses.
Disclaimer: This report is a living document and updated periodically based on new data and Negotiated Rulemaking sessions. This report was first posted in March 2019 for the Department of Education's Negotiated Rulemaking session.
We updated this website on January 5, 2022. We updated "Session Summaries," with a new summary from session three. We've added several recordings and transcripts of sessions. In "Additional Resources & Materials," we added several resources.
Did you miss a session of neg reg or are looking for a summary of any of the sessions? Find them here!
Session 1
Session 2
Session 3
Prison Education Subcommittee Summaries
While Congress passes laws, it is up to the Executive Branch (usually in the form of federal agencies, like the Department of Education) to implement the laws. In order to implement the law, the Department needs to resolve ambiguity or clarify the meaning around certain terms in order to make implementation possible. It does this by creating “rules,” through a process known as regulation.
While most other federal agencies are allowed to issue regulations without going through a “negotiated rulemaking” process, the Department of Education is different. The Higher Education Act requires that the Department obtain “the advice of and recommendations from individuals and representatives of the groups involved in student financial assistance programs” before issuing regulations on federal financial aid programs (e.g. grants, loans, work-study). The Department must convene a group of stakeholders to provide input on the proposed set of issues, topics, and regulatory language the Department is considering for regulation. According to the law, these representatives, or negotiators, may include “students, legal assistance organizations that represent students, institutions of higher education, State student grant agencies,” and more. If the stakeholders and the Department negotiate and reach agreement, or consensus, on what the proposed regulatory language should look like, the Department is required to propose that language when developing its regulations. If an agreement is not reached, the Department is provided wide latitude in developing its regulations. This process is known as negotiated rulemaking, or “neg-reg.”
This year's negotiated rulemaking will be unlike any other in that it will likely be held virtually due to the continued COVID-19 pandemic. Before the actual rulemaking begins, the Department will hold three days of virtual hearings to establish the rulemaking agenda and committees on June 21st, 23rd, and 24th. You can find the official notice in the federal register here.
Public hearing transcripts and recordings can be found below:
The Department invited organizations and groups that are significantly affected by the topics covered in the rulemaking to submit comments—these can be oral comments presented during the hearings or written comments submitted by July 1st. Organizations can also submit comments suggesting ED consider topics not listed in the original agenda. You can find New America's submitted written comments here. Other comments can be found here.
The Department of Education proposed rulemaking on a whopping fourteen topics, arguably the most ambitious neg reg list of possible topics to date. ED’s suggested topics in this year's negotiated rulemaking include:
Additionally, the Department invited public input on how it could address gaps in student outcomes such as retention, completion, loan repayment, and student loan default by race, ethnicity, gender, and other key student characteristics through its regulation. These topics are just the ones the Department has suggested, but it will be listening for other topics that the public suggests in oral and written comments.
On October 4th, 2021, the Department published their intent to establish a negotiated rulemaking committee on the 90/10 rule.
The current negotiated rulemaking covers a broad set of topics. To manage the process, the Department has broken the rulemaking bodies into committees. The Department established two committees so far: one full committee with voting rights (Affordability and Student Loans Committee) and a non-voting subcommittee that will debate the content of the proposed regulations in the context of incarcerated students (Prison Education Program Subcommittee).
The subcommittee, which may include negotiators from the full committee as well as individuals not on that committee, will each make recommendations to the full committee, but only the full committee will get to vote on consensus or what the final regulatory language should look like.
This year's negotiated rulemaking will cover the following topics:
Seven of the fourteen topics originally listed in the Negotiated Rulemaking Committee Notice will not be considered by the Affordability and Student Loans Committee. These topics and others suggested during the negotiated rulemaking public hearings and written comments may be considered by a different committee at a later negotiated rulemaking date. This additional round of negotiated rulemaking will be announced in a Federal Register Notice.
For more information about the negotiated rulemaking process as a whole, please click here.
The negotiated rulemaking hearings will take place during three separate virtual sessions. These hearings are open to the public and will be open for interested parties who registered in advance to provide oral comment.
Session times are 10am-12pm and 1pm-4pm eastern with a public comment period from approximately 3:30-4pm.
The full committee and subcommittees will each meet during three separate sessions. Timing of all meetings is to be determined. All full committee meetings are open to the public.
Negotiated rulemaking meetings for both the full committee and the subcommittees are open to the public and will be livestreamed by the Education Department. You must register in advance to watch the rulemaking and can do so on the Department's negotiated rulemaking website. You can register directly for the third session here. Protocols for the rulemaking can be found here.
The Department has selected negotiators for rulemaking by reviewing public nominations for negotiators. These negotiators usually are knowledgeable about the topic, represent the interests of those significantly affected by the topics proposed for rulemaking, and reflect the diversity of program participants. The Department generally selects one negotiator and one alternate negotiator. The primary negotiator participates in the negreg discussion and votes to reach consensus. The alternate negotiator does so only if the primary negotiator is absent. The subcommittee will only have primary negotiators but is nonvoting and will only present recommendations to the main committee.
The Department identified several constituencies that they would like to see represented at the negotiation table, and the full list of negotiators can be downloaded here (revised list here) and will be available on the Department's negotiated rulemaking website. The Prison Education Program subcommittee original members are here with a revised list here. The constituencies represented include:
The Department also asked for nominations for advisors. Advisors are not be members of committees nor do they participate in reaching consensus. Instead, they serve as a resource to committee members. The list of these non-voting advisors is in the downloadable link above of the full list of negotiators. In addition, that document contains information on the Prison Education Programs Subcommittee which will be held October 18-20, 2021 and November 8-10, 2021.
Session 1
Links shared via the Zoom chat during Session 1.
Subcommittee on Prison Education Session 1
Session 2
Subcommittee on Prison Education Session 2
The Department has provided issue papers that contain background information on each topic it will consider for regulation, along with regulatory text and other resources, depending on the topic:
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Session Two
Session Three
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Session Three
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Session Three
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Session Three
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Session Three
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Session Three
Check out New America's comments to the Education Department related to this rulemaking here, and all public comments here.
TICAS One Pager: Discharges for Borrowers with Total and Permanent Disability
TICAS One Pager: Closed School Discharges
TICAS One Pager: Interest Capitalization on Federal Student Loans
TICAS One Pager: Public Service Loan Forgiveness
TICAS One Pager: Borrower Defense to Repayment
TICAS One Pager: Mandatory Pre-Dispute Arbitration and Class Action Waivers
New America/TICAS blos: Income-Driven Repayment and Negotiated Rulemaking
TICAS One Pager: Income-Driven Repayment
TICAS One Pager: Discharges for False Certification of Student Eligibility
Please follow the conversation using #NegReg. Follow our negotiated rulemaking official account @HigherEdNegReg, and @amylaitinen1, @sellensatt, @higheredrachel, @e_conroy1, and @moniqueositelu for further commentary.
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