$500 Million in Student Loans Forgiven (Thanks to Joe Biden!)

$500 Million in Student Loans Forgiven (Thanks to Joe Biden!)

The Department of Education also noted that it will begin alerting impacted borrowers and work “expeditiously” to cancel their student loan debt.

 

Here's What You Need To Remember: The Department of Education on Wednesday announced that it will cancel about $500 million in federal student loans for thousands of borrowers who attended ITT Technical Institute.

The Department of Education on Wednesday announced that it will cancel about $500 million in federal student loans for thousands of borrowers who attended ITT Technical Institute.

 

“Our action today will give thousands of borrowers a fresh start and the relief they deserve after ITT repeatedly lied to them,” Education Secretary Miguel Cardona said in a statement. “Today’s action is part of the Biden-Harris Administration’s continued commitment to stand up for borrowers when their institutions take advantage of them. Many of these borrowers have waited a long time for relief, and we need to work swiftly to render decisions for those whose claims are still pending. This work also emphasizes the need for ongoing accountability so that institutions will never be able to commit this kind of widespread deception again.”

The forgiveness program will cancel 100 percent of loans held by 18,000 borrowers who went to ITT, a for-profit institution that faced widespread allegations of fraud.

ITT closed in 2016 when the allegations first surfaced.

“We are glad that the Department is finally providing this long overdue relief to some former ITT students,” Abby Shafroth, staff attorney at the National Consumer Law Center, told Forbes. “These borrowers and their families are struggling, some for more than a decade, under the weight of student loans they would never have taken on if they were told the truth about the school’s lies regarding job placement, or if the Education Department had cut ITT off the federal aid gravy train when it should have long ago. This is only a first step: hundreds of thousands of other former ITT students were subject to the same lies, and the government must stop collecting on these fraudulent loans and cancel their debts immediately. The Education Department also must address the other 100,000 plus borrower defense applications from borrowers at other schools, which remain outstanding.”

In September 2020, 48 attorneys general and the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau ordered that PEAKS Trust, a private loan program run by ITT and affiliated with Deutsche Bank entities, would have to forgo the collection of the outstanding education debt from students. That ruling secured more than $330 million in private student loan forgiveness for 35,000 former ITT students.

Two years prior, Kevin Modany, the institute’s former chief executive, and Daniel Fitzpatrick, former chief financial officer, agreed to pay penalties of $200,000 and $100,000, respectively, as they settled fraud cases with the Securities and Exchange Commission that pressed them for deceiving investors

The Department of Education also noted that it will begin alerting impacted borrowers and work “expeditiously” to cancel their student loan debt.

The department’s student loan cancellation measure comes as Democrats in the House and Senate have pushed the Biden administration to implement a massive forgiveness program since Americans currently owe more than $1.7 trillion in student loans.

Some far-Left Democrats have insisted that President Joe Biden forgives up to $50,000 per federal student loan borrower through executive order, though the president has only signaled support for cancelling up to $10,000 per borrower.

 

Biden asked Cardona earlier this year to draft a memo outlining his executive authority to forgive student loans as he continues to experience intense pressure from the left to approve a cancellation measure.

Rachel Bucchino is a reporter at the National Interest. Her work has appeared in The Washington Post, U.S. News & World Report, and The Hill.

This piece first appeared earlier this week and is being republished due to reader interest.

Image: Reuters.