INSIGHTi
The Biden Administration’s First Student
Loan Debt Relief Proposed Rule
April 22, 2024
On April 17, 2024, Secretary of Education Miguel Cardona (the Secretary) published in the
Federal
Register a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM), describing when the Secretary may waive all or part
of a borrower’s outstanding federal student loan debt pursuant t
o Section 432(a)(6) of the Higher
Education Act (HEA). That provision authorizes the Secretary to “enforce, pay, compromise, waive, or
release any right, title, claim, lien, or demand, however acquired” under th
e Federal Family Education
Loan program (FFELP). The Department of Educati
on (ED) has argued this provision also applies to the
Direct Loan program—the primary federal student loan program—and th
e Health Education Assistance
Loan (HEAL) program. The NPRM results from negotiated rulemaking that occurred betwee
n October
2023 and February 2024. It is t
he first of two proposed rules deriving from the student loan debt relief
negotiated rulemaking that ED intends to issu
e “to address the burden of Federal student loan debt.”
The NPRM follows a
n earlier effort by the Secretary to provide student loan debt relief. On August 24,
2022, the Secretary announced he would invoke t
he HEROES Act of 2003 to cancel up to $20,000 in
qualifying borrowers’ federal student loans to
“address the financial harms” of the COVID-19 pandemic.
In June 2023, the Supreme Court
ruled that policy exceeded the Secretary’s statutory authority, thus
precluding ED from cancelling any loan balances under that policy.
The NPRM is distinct from the HEROES Act policy. The NPRM relies on a different statutory authority,
would use different criteria to qualify borrowers for relief, and would provide different waiver amounts.
This Insight summarizes the NPRM and describes next steps in the rulemaking process.
Proposed Loan Waivers
Approximatel
y $1.6 trillion in federal student loans, borrowed by more than 43 million individuals, is
outstanding. In summary form, under the NPRM, the Secretary generally proposes to “waive” the
following
for ED-held loans under the FFELP, Direct Loan program
, Perkins Loan program, and HEAL
program:
1. The amount by which each of a borrower’s loans has an outstanding balance that
generally exceeds the amount the borrower owed when the loan entered repayment
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(balance growth)
, for borrowers who are enrolled in an income-driven repayment (IDR)
plan, and whose annual income is less than or equal to $120,000 (for individuals or
married borrowers who file federal income taxes separately), $180,000 (for individuals
filing as a head of household), or $240,000 (for married couples filing jointly).
2. The lesser of $20,000 or the amount by which each of a borrower’s loans has an
outstanding balance that generally
exceeds the amount the borrower owed when their
loan entered repayment. Individuals who received relief under the first waiver proposal
above would not be eligible for this waiver.
3. The outstanding balance of loans that
first entered repayment on or before July 1, 2005 (if
a borrower is repaying
only loans received for undergraduate study) or on or before July
1, 2000 (if a borrower has
any loans for graduate study).
4. The outstanding balance of a borrower’s loan, if the Secretary determines that the
borrower is not enrolled in but
otherwise meets the eligibility requirements for
forgiveness under an IDR plan or an alternative repayment plan.
5. The outstanding balance of a borrower’s loan, if the Secretary determines that the
borrower has not obtained, but
otherwise meets the eligibility requirements for, “any loan
discharge, cancellation, or forgiveness opportunity” under the FFELP or Direct Loan
program. Such opportunities include, for example,
Public Service Loan Forgiveness
(PSLF), total and permanent disability (TPD) discharge, and closed school discharge.
6. The outstanding balance of certain loans
obtained to attend an institution or program
whose participation in HEA Title IV programs ends by ED action for failing to (a) meet
an “accountability standard based on student outcomes” (e.g
., cohort default rate [CDR]
or
gainful employment [GE] requirements) or (b) “deliver sufficient financial value” to
students.
7. The outstanding balance of certai
n loans obtained to attend an institution or program that
has closed and that ED determines either did not satisfy, for at least one year, an
“accountability standard based on student outcomes” or was the subject of an ED review
of an alleged failure to “deliver sufficient financial value” to students.
8. The outstanding balance of certain loans obtained to attend GE programs that have closed
and that ED determines
failed debt-to-earnings and earnings premium measures that are
modeled on ED’s separate rules pertaining to GE requirements.
The Secretary also proposes t
o extend waivers to certain FFELP loans held by a private entity or a
guaranty agency. A borrower could obtain a waiver of the outstanding balance of their loan if the loan was
disbursed before July 1, 2000; if the borrower is eligible for, but did not obtain, a closed school discharge;
or if the borrower’s institution lost Title IV eligibility due to a high CDR and the borrower was included
in that CDR.
Estimated Waiver Effects
ED estimates that a total of
27.6 million borrowers (about 64% of all borrowers) would be eligible for
some amount of federal student loan waiver under the NPRM. For example, th
e Administration estimates
it would waive balance growth for up to 25 million borrowers, with 23 million likely to have all “balance
growth forgiven.” About 2 million borrowers would receive a waiver based on their eligibility for existing
loan discharge, cancellation, and forgiveness opportunities (e.g., IDR plans, PSLF, TPD).
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Next Steps
ED will accept public comment on the NPRM through May 17, 2024. ED
“aims to finalize these rules in
time to start delivering relief this fall.” In addition, in February 2024, the Student Loan Debt Relief
Negotiated Rulemaking Committee reached consensus on a
hardship-based waiver proposal. ED intends
to issue
a second NPRM for a hardship-based waiver in the future.
Author Information
Alexandra Hegji
Sean M. Stiff
Specialist in Social Policy
Legislative Attorney
Disclaimer
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