U.S. cancels student loan debts for
12,900 college fraud victims
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[December 21, 2017]
By Lisa Lambert
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Education
Department on Wednesday canceled the student-loan debts of 12,900 people
defrauded by defunct Corinthian Colleges, but its announcement that it
will give varying amounts of debt relief in the future set off fierce
criticism.
For-profit higher education provider Corinthian collapsed in 2015 amid
government investigations into how many of its graduates found gainful
employment.
An internal review released this month showed the Education Department
had stopped discharging loans of former attendees of Corinthian and
other failed for-profit schools once President Donald Trump took office.
The department added it also had denied 8,600 requests for relief from
Corinthian loans. It gave no reason for the denials and no value for the
canceled debt.
Future loan discharges will follow a tiered system based on income, the
department also said on Wednesday.
Borrowers earning less than 50 percent of their peers will receive full
relief, and those earning more will receive partial relief. Borrowers
will also receive credit for interest that accrues on their loans if the
time to decide whether they qualify for forgiveness takes longer than a
year.
"There is nothing fair about denying students the full relief they are
entitled to when they are cheated," said Senator Patty Murray, a senior
Democrat lawmaker on the Education Committee, adding that thousands of
borrowers would be "stuck paying back loans on worthless or non-existent
degrees."
The department said in the announcement that a tiered system would help
victims more than "an 'all or nothing' approach."
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U.S. Education Secretary Betsy DeVos speaks at Harvard University's
Kennedy School of Government in Cambridge, Massachusetts, U.S.,
September 28, 2017. REUTERS/Mary Schwalm
By law, borrowers defrauded by for-profit schools can have their loans
erased, but since Trump's Jan. 20 inauguration the department had not
approved any of the 25,991 requests for relief it had received, its
inspector general said in a report released this month.
Last week, four states sued the department and Education Secretary
Betsy DeVos, saying they were breaking the law and demanding speedy
relief for borrowers.
California Attorney General Xavier Becerra said his state would
press on with its lawsuit despite Wednesday's announcement, taking
issue with the different levels of relief.
"Under federal law, Secretary DeVos is required to provide full –
not partial – relief to Corinthian students," he said in a
statement.
Massachusetts, Illinois and New York have also sued.
Advocates for the borrowers say students cannot repay the
often-large debts because the schools did not give them adequate
work training or diplomas. They also say struggling borrowers need
to know soon if they will not receive relief so that they do not
face debt collection and other penalties.
(Reporting by Lisa Lambert; Editing by Peter Cooney and Rosalba
O'Brien)
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