Lawmakers pass ban on withholding college transcripts
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[March 31, 2022]
By PETER HANCOCK
Capitol News Illinois
phancock@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – Graduates from Illinois
colleges and universities may soon be able to access their transcripts
even if they still owe money to the school they attended.
The Illinois House on Tuesday gave its approval to a bill that had
already cleared the Senate prohibiting higher education institutions
from refusing to provide copies of student transcripts either to the
current or former student or that student’s current or prospective
employer.
The proposed change in Illinois comes as the Biden administration is
considering limited changes to federal guidelines that have long
encouraged colleges and universities to withhold transcripts from anyone
who is delinquent on repaying certain student loans.
Senate Bill 3032, dubbed the Student Debt Assistance Act, would go
further than the Biden administration’s proposal by prohibiting the
withholding of transcripts, or charging a higher fee for accessing those
transcripts, on the grounds that the student owes the school any debt.
Rep. Bob Morgan, D-Deerfield, the chief House sponsor of the bill, said
schools have not limited the practice just to collecting student loan
debt but sometimes use transcripts as leverage to collect any debt,
including library fines and parking tickets.
“It's estimated that 6.6 million people in the country cannot get a copy
of their transcript because they owe a debt to their college, sometimes
as little as $25,” he said. “Twenty-five dollars is keeping them from
getting access to their transcripts.”
He said that can prevent students and graduates from being able to get a
job and earn the money it takes to pay off their school debt.
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Students and graduates of Illinois colleges and
universities could soon have access to their transcripts, even if
they still owe the school money, under a bill in the General
Assembly. (Credit: Morguefile.com)
The bill originally passed the Senate without opposition, 55-0. But
Republicans in the House raised concerns that the bill has no cap on the
amount of money someone could still owe a school while still being able
to access their transcripts. That, they said, could make it more
difficult for schools to collect money owed to them, which could force
them to raise tuition and fees on other students to make up for the
loss.
“And that's precisely what this is doing because somebody has to pay for
that cost,” said Rep. C.D. Davidsmeyer, R-Jacksonville. “And if those
debts are outstanding, somebody has to pay for it in the meantime. In
the long term, you know, they may pay it 10 years down the road or 20
years down the road, they may pay it off. But in the short term, current
students are going to be paying that cost.”
Morgan, however, said the bill does not forgive a person’s debt, nor
does it prohibit schools from using other methods of collecting what’s
owed to them.
The bill passed the House 74-33 but was sent back to the Senate for
concurrence with a minor technical amendment. That vote could happen as
early as Wednesday, which would clear the bill to be sent to Gov. JB
Pritzker.
Meanwhile, a similar bill is pending in the Senate that would prohibit
public high schools from withholding a student’s grades, transcripts or
diploma because of an unpaid balance in the student’s school account.
House Bill 4243 passed out of the House 66-36 on March 4 and passed out
of the Senate Education Committee Tuesday on a 10-4 vote. If it clears
the Senate, it would also have to be sent back to the House for
concurrence with a minor amendment.
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news
service covering state government that is distributed to more than 400
newspapers statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois Press
Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation. |