Students
across U.S. to march over debt, free public college
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[November 12, 2015]
By Curtis Skinner
(Reuters) - Students were set to walk out
of classrooms across the United States on Thursday to protest ballooning
student loan debt for higher education and rally for tuition-free public
colleges and a minimum wage hike for campus workers.
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The demonstrations are planned just two days after thousands of
fast-food workers took to the streets in a nationwide day of action
pushing for a $15-an-hour minimum wage and union rights for the
industry.
Events for Thursday's protests, dubbed the Million Student March,
have been planned at colleges and universities from Los Angeles to
New York. Thousands of people signed up to attend on Facebook
groups, though it remained to be seen how many would ultimately
participate.
"Education should be free. The United States is the richest country
in the world, yet students have to take on crippling debt in order
to get a college education," the movement's organizers said in a
statement on their website.
Organizers are demanding tuition-free public colleges, a
cancellation of all student debt and a $15-an-hour minimum wage for
campus workers.
The total volume of outstanding U.S. student loan debt has more than
doubled to $1.2 trillion, according to the U.S. Consumer Financial
Protection Bureau, compared with less than $600 billion in 2006.
The bureau said there are some 8 million private and federal loan
borrowers in default, representing more than $110 billion, while
millions more are finding it difficult to keep up with repayments.
Saddled with debt that can sometimes run into the hundreds of
thousands of dollars, many college graduates have struggled to make
payments amid an ailing economy and job market.
Dealing with swiftly mounting student loan debt has been a focus of
candidates vying for the White House in 2016.
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Democratic hopeful Bernie Sanders has vowed to make tuition free at
public universities and colleges, and has pledged to cut interest
rates for student loans.
His rival Hillary Clinton has said she would increase access to
tuition grants, let graduates refinance loans at lower interest
rates, and streamline income-based repayment plans.
Florida U.S. Senator Marco Rubio is the most prominent Republican
candidate to lay out a concrete proposal, saying he would establish
an income-based repayment system for federal student loans, and
would simplify the application process for federal aid.
"This is clearly an urgent crisis, but establishment politicians
from both parties are failing to take action," their statement said.
(Reporting by Curtis Skinner in San Francisco; Editing by Daniel
Wallis and Lisa Shumaker)
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