After facing a contempt of court order for failing to provide debt relief to defrauded students of for-profit colleges, US education secretary Betsy DeVos has come back with a new version allowing the loan forgiveness 鈥 if the ex-students have little or even negative income.
Ms DeVos, acting in the case of thousands of customers of the now-collapsed Corinthian Colleges and the ITT Technical Institute chains, is insisting that such borrowers don鈥檛 deserve full loan forgiveness under a federal law that allows it, because she believes they still received some educational benefit.
A federal judge in October ruled Ms DeVos聽in contempt聽for continuing to subject former Corinthian students to years of loan collection efforts, despite a previous court order to stop.
Her department has now come up with a plan that would proceed with the debt relief, but through聽聽that leaves out most defrauded students聽聽their median earnings with those in similar fields.
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The estimated result of that methodology, according to Education Department聽听产测听US News & World Report, is that 95 per cent of the relief claims will be denied.
鈥淪imply discharging all of these loans,鈥 Ms DeVos told a congressional hearing on the matter, 鈥渋s not fair to taxpayers nor to those who have paid or are paying their loans.鈥
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Democrats on the House education committee聽聽the idea, saying that the law authorising debt relief only requires the students to have been defrauded, not for them to be destitute. And the department鈥檚 own investigators, according to聽聽obtained by NPR, affirmed that the students were genuine victims of fraud.
The new formula created by the Education Department would require many of the defrauded students to show very little income, or even negative income, to be eligible for the debt relief promised under federal law.
The department鈥檚 methodology was 鈥渨holly inappropriate and confuses many statistical concepts that aren鈥檛 meant to be used together鈥, Douglas Webber, an associate professor of economics at Temple University, writes in聽. It 鈥渕isunderstands and misapplies fairly basic statistical techniques in a way that makes it materially harder for defrauded students to find relief鈥, he says.
Democrats have long argued that such actions on behalf of for-profit colleges constitute a pattern with Ms DeVos, a billionaire with聽financial ties聽to such proprietary institutions and to student loan companies. She has聽advocated聽for the聽for-profit sector despite聽data showing聽that about half of its students default on their loans, well above average among other colleges.聽
But Ms DeVos, with the support of congressional Republicans, has insisted she was acting out of a sense of fiduciary responsibility to taxpayers. The government can鈥檛 give 鈥渂lanket forgiveness for anyone who raises their hand and files a claim鈥, Ms聽. Some borrowers, she said, have requested loan forgiveness on the grounds that 鈥渢heir teacher was unfair or that they have not found a job they like鈥.
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罢丑别听聽that聽borrowers聽may be eligible for repayment forgiveness if the college 鈥渕isled you, or engaged in other misconduct in violation of certain state laws鈥.
The department鈥檚 own analysts, according to the memos uncovered by NPR, found that thousands of former Corinthian and ITT students deserved full debt relief because of clear fraud such as the for-profit schools making false promises about their graduates鈥 career prospects and their ability to transfer credits.
The federal judge who issued the contempt ruling, Sallie Kim of the US District Court in San Francisco, first ordered Ms DeVos in May 2018 to stop collecting such debts. Judge Kim in October served Ms DeVos with the contempt finding and a $100,000聽(拢76,000) fine after finding that the department had not complied.
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In its proposed new methodology, the Education Department said it will allow full debt relief in cases where former students of the colleges that defrauded them have earnings 鈥渓ower than two standard deviations from the median鈥. Applicants with incomes higher than that, but lower than the median, will receive debt relief on a sliding scale.
One lawmaker, Lori Trahan, a Democrat of Massachusetts, calculated the effect on a hypothetical student with a diploma from Corinthian in business administration and management.
The median comparison earning for that degree was about $18,000 and two standard deviations was about $20,500, Ms Trahan told Ms DeVos. That, Ms Trahan said, means the defrauded student would be eligible for the loan forgiveness promised in law if she earned 鈥渘egative $2,500鈥.
鈥淚t鈥檚 criminal,鈥 Ms Trahan said of the department鈥檚 position.
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