US court allows part of Biden student debt relief plan to resume
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[July 02, 2024]
By Nate Raymond
(Reuters) -A U.S. appeals court allowed President Joe Biden's
administration to move forward with implementing a key part of a new
student debt relief plan designed to lower monthly payments for millions
of Americans.
The Denver-based 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals on Sunday put on
hold an injunction issued by a judge in Kansas last week at the urging
of Republican-led states that argued the U.S. Department of Education's
debt relief plan was unlawful.
The Education Department said that as a result of the stay issued by the
10th Circuit panel, it will continue cutting undergraduate loan payments
and has directed loan servicers it contracts with to move forward with
changes under the plan.
U.S. Secretary of Education Miguel Cardona in a statement said the court
"sided with student loan borrowers across the country who stand to
benefit from the SAVE Plan – the most affordable repayment plan in
history."
The Saving on a Valuable Education Plan provides more generous terms
than past income-based repayment plans, lowering monthly payments for
eligible borrowers and allowing those whose original principal balances
were $12,000 or less to have their debt forgiven after 10 years.
U.S. District Judge Daniel Crabtree in Wichita, Kansas, on June 24 had
concluded that the Higher Education Act of 1965 did not clearly
authorize the type of "unprecedented and dramatic expansion" of
income-based repayment plans envisioned.
Crabtree, in ruling in favor of state attorneys general from South
Carolina, Texas and Alaska challenging the plan, had limited the scope
of his decision, enjoining only aspects of the SAVE Plan not already in
effect.
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U.S. President Joe Biden speaks as he announces a new plan for
federal student loan relief during a visit to Madison Area Technical
College Truax Campus, in Madison, Wisconsin, U.S, April 8, 2024.
REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque
But in a brief, the administration told the 10th Circuit that
Crabtree's ruling was only "technically prospective" and that, in
fact, the Education Department and loan servicers would have to
reprogram complex software to calculate borrowers' new monthly
payments, prepare billing notices and process payments.
That work would take months, and in the interim many borrowers
enrolled in the SAVE Plan would need to be placed into forbearance
until their loans could be serviced with a correct calculation of
payments due, the U.S. Department of Justice argued on the
administration's behalf.
The Education Department last week said about 3 million borrowers
who under SAVE would have lower monthly payments would be placed
into forbearance. Those borrowers would not accrue interest during
that time.
The White House has said that more than 20 million borrowers could
benefit from the SAVE Plan. The administration in May said 8 million
are already enrolled, including 4.6 million whose monthly payments
have been reduced to $0.
While the administration sought a stay of Crabtree's ruling, it did
not seek a similar pause of a separate injunction by a federal judge
in Missouri that barred it from granting further loan forgiveness
for borrowers under the SAVE Plan.
(Reporting by Nate Raymond in Boston; Editing by Alexia Garamfalvi,
Jonathan Oatis and Bill Berkrot)
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