Student Loan News, Updates and Blog Posts

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07.14.09 | Key Republican Says ‘Fight Is Not Over’ on Student Loans

“Republicans haven’t given up on the guaranteed-loan program, Rep. John Kline of Minnesota said today. They have just been preoccupied with health care and other pressing issues,” The Chronicle of Higher Education reports. “‘I remain hopeful we can keep some private capital in this and keep the private sector involved,’ the new top Republican on the House education committee told three higher-education reporters in an interview. ‘We’re not rolling over.’”

07.14.09 | Key Republican Says ‘Fight Is Not Over’ on Student Loans

“Republicans haven’t given up on the guaranteed-loan program, Rep. John Kline of Minnesota said today. They have just been preoccupied with health care and other pressing issues,” The Chronicle of Higher Education reports. “‘I remain hopeful we can keep some private capital in this and keep the private sector involved,’ the new top Republican on the House education committee told three higher-education reporters in an interview. ‘We’re not rolling over.’”

06.22.09 | Can I access all my federal loan details online?

Yes, your federal loan details can be accessed online through the Department of Education’s National Student Loan Data System (NSLDS) database.

The NSLDS database holds all your federal loan details. If you’ve just applied for aid, don’t expect to find any information on NSLDS yet. NSLDS gets its information from schools guaranty agencies and U.S. Department of Education programs after your funds have been disbursed.

The loan details you can expect to find include Pell Grant amounts, Stafford loan, Perkins loan, and Plus loan disbursements. You can log on to www.nslds.com. You will need your four digit FAFSA pin number to access your details.

04.16.09 | Post 9/11 GI Bill

With students scrambling for ways to pay for college one option does exist, although it may not be your first choice. Uncle Sam is still looking for recruits for the military and willing to pay you money toward your education to boot. I actually tried this route when I was 17, but was medically discharged before I even boarded my flight to the Great Lakes due to the discovery of a circulation problem I have called Raynaud’s.

So how does the Post-9/11 GI Bill work exactly? I’ve outlined the specifics for you below.

The Post-9/11 GI Bill is for individuals with at least 90 days of aggregate service on or after September 11, 2001, or individuals discharged with a service-connected disability after 30 days. You must have received an honorable discharge to be eligible for the Post-9/11 GI Bill. The Post-9/11 GI Bill will become effective for training on or after August 1, 2009. This program will pay eligible individuals:

  • tuition & fees directly to the school not to exceed the maximum in-state tuition & fees at a public Institution of Higher Learning. see chart listing 2008 – 2009 maximum rates.
  • a monthly housing allowance based on the Basic Allowance for Housing for an E-5 with dependents at the location of the school.
  • an annual books & supplies stipend of $1,000 paid proportionately based on enrollment
  • a one-time rural benefit payment for eligible individuals.

This benefit is payable only for training at an Institution of Higher Learning (IHL). If you are enrolled exclusively in online training you will not receive the housing allowance. If you are on active duty you will not receive the housing allowance or books & supplies stipend. This benefit provides up to 36 months of education benefits, generally benefits are payable for 15 years following your release from active duty.

For more information you can visit the United States Department of Veterans Affairs.


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03.30.09 | EFC Number Goes Up For 2009-2010

The expected family contribution (EFC) number is increasing from $4,041 to $4,617 for the 2009-2010 academic year.

On February 17, 2009 President Obama signed the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 that included an appropriated amount for the Federal Pell Grant award. As a result the Pell Grant award moved from $4,860 to $5,350.

The Department of Education’s Central Processing System has already begun the process of making corrections to applications filed between January 2 and March 17. The DOE believes approximately 113,000 students had an EFC that fell above $4,041 and below $4,617, which are affected by the change. Changes/updates should be completed by the end of March.

So if you were one of those student whose EFC fell above $4,041 and below $4,617 and you filed your FAFSA before March 17 just make sure to reconnect with your school’s Financial Aid Office to ensure you receive the funds you are entitled to.


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03.27.09 | The Fight Has Begun

Posted in College, FAFSA, Government Spending, Stafford Loan by David Bonvie

If you haven’t heard, one of President Obama’s proposed changes for the Stafford loan program is to eliminate the FFEL program, which stands for the Federal Family Education Loan Program. This basically consists of private lenders who lend out Federal loans. Currently there are 2 types of programs that lend Federal loans, FFELP and Direct loans. Direct Loans are loans lent directly from the government. The President has proposed to eliminate the FFEL program and run all Stafford loans out of the Direct program. About $76 billion in loans has been lent out for this current school year, of which only $26 billion was lent by Direct Loans. Here is a recent article posted by the Wall Street Journal that details how politics are already playing a role in this fight between companies from the FFELP and the Direct Loan Program:

With the Obama administration proposing to cut private lenders out of the federal student-loan business, financial companies are intensifying efforts preserve their role.

Private lenders in the so-called Federal Family Education Loan Program, or FFELP, have lent more than $56 billion in the current school year. The federal government has lent about $20 billion directly. In his budget, President Obama says the government, which pays billions of dollars of subsidies to FFELP lenders, would save money by eliminating the program using private companies.

The latest skirmish in the contentious political battle erupted Thursday when the U.S. Department of Education released preliminary data comparing FFELP loan-default rates with those in the federal direct loan program.

The data indicated a 5.3% default rate in the direct lending program for the fiscal year ended Sept. 30, 2007, compared with a 7.3% default rate for FFELP, which has been the primary source of college financial aid since it was launched in the Johnson administration during the 1960s.

Industry analysts attributed the difference to the mix of schools in the two programs, with the FFELP program lending more to students from for-profit schools. They tend to have higher default rates than other student borrowers.

Private lenders and their trade groups were caught off guard by the data’s release and portrayed it as a strategic maneuver designed to advance President Obama’s plan to eliminate FFELP.

Brett Lief, president of the National Council of Higher Education Loan Programs, a trade group representing FFELP lenders and loan guarantee agencies, said he could not recall the department ever releasing preliminary default rates or separate numbers for the two programs.

“We have never seen the rates broken down,” Mr. Lief said. “It’s unfortunate that the rates are being released before there is an analysis of them,” he added. “This is very serious stuff and I’m saddened that it has come out like this.”

Some outside observers agreed that politics played a roll. Default rates “become a critical issue as folks are talking about a new model for student lending,” said Tim Ranzetta, president of Student Lending Analytics, a research concern based in Palo Alto, Calif. “I’m sure that’s probably why the department put these numbers out.”

Department of Education officials said they released the loan-default data in response to a U.S. Freedom of Information Act request from The Wall Street Journal as well as inquiries from members of Congress.

In response to the release, SLM Corp., the mammoth student lender better known as Sallie Mae, issued a study of its own Thursday. It indicates that borrowers who took out FFELP loans through Sallie Mae were 30% less likely to default on them than borrowers who used the federal direct loan program. Sallie Mae attributed the difference to default prevention programs it uses in conjunction with state loan-guarantee agencies.

Robert Shireman, a senior advisor to Secretary of Education Arne Duncan, said he had not read the Sallie Mae study and could not comment on whether it is accurate.

On Thursday, the Consumer Banking Association, a trade group that represents many FFELP lenders, sent members of Congress a petition signed by 2,500 college financial aid administrators, parents, students and others. The petition urges Congress to reject the president’s proposal to eliminate FFELP.

The president himself is being lobbied by elected officials such as James B. Lewis, New Mexico’s state treasurer. In a letter Thursday to the president, Mr. Lewis, a Democrat, praised the personal service and debt counseling offered by FFELP providers in his state and said the program’s end “would be detrimental to the success of our college-bound students and to the health of the economy, with our state experiencing the loss of over 170 jobs.”

Industry observers say the debate over FFELP’s future is likely to be long and complex. The Congressional Budget Office recently estimated that ending the program will save the government nearly $100 billion over the next decade. President Obama — whose own estimate of the savings is about half that — has said he will use the savings to increase funding for federal Pell grants for low-income students.

The potential boost for Pell will make it difficult for members of Congress on both sides of the aisle to oppose the elimination of FFELP, said Terry Hartle, a senior vice president of the American Council of Education, a trade group representing colleges.

He added, however, that many of the state guarantee agencies that help service FFELP loans have strong political support in their home states and noted that, in a recent letter to colleges, Sallie Mae suggested that additional money for Pell might be found within the federal loan system while still maintaining elements of FFELP.

“It’s certainly possible Congress would eliminate the program,” Mr. Hartle said. “But it’s equally possible – and perhaps more so – to wring more savings out of the program and put the savings into Pell.”

So what do you guys think? An important note to make is that even though the Stafford loan has two different programs right now, the loan terms do not vary. Your interest rate with Direct loans is the same as your interest rate for a Stafford loan from a private lender.  So sound off on this guys/girls…it is sure to be in the news more and more as this fight wages on.

03.27.09 | Will Increases in Financial Aid Be Enough?

Recently, President Obama has been talking about his plans to make college more affordable for families and students. The President’s plan is to increase the Pell grant, and make Federal student loans more accessible to students. Students from Kent State University recently asked Obama about his plans and when exactly those changes would take effect:

Student asks Obama about costs of higher education

Sandra Hernandez, The 33 News

March 26, 2009

President Barack Obama started off by saying, “I’m looking forward to taking your questions.”

This one came from 3 sophomores at Ken State University in Ohio:
“What proposals do you have to make college more affordable and to make student loans easier to get and when will your national service program be available so we can take advantage of the scholarship thank you Mr. President.”

President Obama proposes expanding national service and students would get an educational stipend.He is also pushing for more direct loans without banks as intermediaries.

“That then allows us to either lower student loan rates, or expand grants. We want to increase the amount of the pell grant so that it catches up with inflation.”

Students applying for financial aid at UT Arlington felt encouraged.

Harley Nguyen says, “If they increased the pell grant that would help out a lot.”

Erica Horak says, “That’s kinda one of the reasons why I’m going back to school  because I know that they’re increasing financial aid and making it easier for people to go back.”

Financial aid is the top story in the campus newspaper with news that Sallie Mae will require students to make interest payments on their loans while they’re in school.

5th grade teacher Teresa Williams owes some 75-thousand dollars in loans she has another solution all together.

“I have loans that date back to 1995 from undergraduate and I have a masters and I’m about to start a doctorate program so yeah, I have loans, lots of loans. I’m waiting on them to be forgiven so come on Obama,” she says.

While it is great that President Obama is talking about increasing aid for potential students, I still don’t see an answer as to when all of this will take effect. I also do not see the benefit of making all loans Direct. The Department of Education, in its current state, can barely manage the loans they service now…and they service less than half of Federal loans in existence. I am all for making loans more accessible and increasing the Pell grant and the Stafford loan maximum amounts…but lets do it so it helps students out NOW…not years from now.

Also, while it is great to increase financial aid, it doesn’t help much when schools are forced to increase their tuition as well. Are we really getting anywhere? Increasing aid coupled with increasing tuition really just leaves the student in the same spot: broke and forced to private loans that can be increasingly difficult to pay back. The repercussions of this has the majority of recent grads  and graduates in years to come  crippled by looming private loan debt. How does this help the economy? Increases in financial aid are great, but increase it so it comes somewhat near the average of what a college education costs today. As it stands now, and even with Obama’s proposed increases, the maximum amount of Federal Aid a student can get does not come any where near the cost of a private university.

Points Code: wewantmore

03.20.09 | OBAMA: Federal Aid, Tax Cuts, & Nurse Visits?

President Obama is pushing his budget proposal to overhaul the entire education system throughout the U.Sschool-bus-cartoon-7. His plan would affect students of all ages with a goal of improving education levels all across the U.S. starting with preschool aged children. In a recent speech to the US Hispanic Chamber of Commerce, Obama began to divulge what exactly he has in mind for this giant overhaul. He spoke of a 5 tier reform plan that touches on what seems like every stage of the educational process. The President was quoted as saying, “We have let our grades slip, our schools crumble, our teacher quality fall short and other nations outpace us…The time for finger-pointing is over. The time for holding ourselves accountable is here.”

The 5 reform points that he spoke about are as follows:

1. Increase investments in early childhood programs such as Headstart etc.

2. Holding students accountable for higher/tougher testing standards

3. Increase teacher training and recruitment, and offer “merit pay” (teachers that produce more results will get paid more than others). Along with that, ineffective teachers would be let go if they fail to improve.

4. Renew his campaign for the support of charter schools. (definition of a charter school = Charter schools are elementary or secondary schools in the United States that receive public money but have been freed from some of the rules, regulations, and statutes that apply to other public schools in exchange for some type of accountability for producing certain results, which are set forth in each school’s charter). President Obama also proposed longer school days.

5. For Higher Education he wants to increase the annual Pell Grants maximum to $5550, and push for students from working families to receive a $2500 tax credit.

I can only imagine that the republicans must be reeling…especially about the money for Headstart. Also included in early investments was an idea to have registered nurses visit the homes of single moms regularly to make sure their children are healthy and ready for school life. Not a bad idea, but who will run this program? I will say that he has a point when it comes to holding students and teachers accountable for their performances. Have you ever had a bad teacher? I have, and it made me lose any interest I may have had in the subject at hand. Frankly our country collectively cannot really afford to have children caring less about school than some of them already do.

For those students that are fortunate enough to go on to college, Obama has some plans there as well. The Pell grant is a Federal grant given to students who exhibit more financial need than others; this “financial need” is determined when you fill out the FAFSA (Free Application for Federal Student Aid). Obama proposes to raise the annual maximum amounts on that grant from $4,731 for the 2008-2009 school year to $5350 for the 2009-2010 school year, and then increase it again to $5500 for the 2010-2011 school year. The unsubsidized loan amount for dependent students is currently $2,000, but Obama’s stimulus plan will add an additional $2000 to that, which will help a lot of students out whose parents cannot afford to help them through college. The President also proposes to eliminate the FFEL loan program (private lenders who lend Federal loans) and have all Federal loans run through Direct Loans (the U.S. Department of Education’s Loan program); but wait, there is more….the Perkins loan, which is another federal loan awarded based on need, is typically run through the college itself, but Obama is proposing to shift that loan program so it is run through the government. Now I have my loans from my undergraduate degree with Direct loans, and the customer service is definitely not top notch. I am wondering how the Department of Education is going to manage all the loans that are currently in the FFEL program AND all the Perkins loan and still make sure that those loan programs don’t fall at the waist side. I personally do not see it happening…and didn’t Clinton propose this at one point, but it failed?

A student tax credit is also part of this the Presidents budget proposal, which would put an extra $2500 in students’ pockets. This is definitely helpful to any student in school, and it can also serve as an incentive for someone to go back to school and finish their education.

This new budget proposal has a lot of big ideas, some of which already have the necessary platforms to execute the new plans. Others however do not. It seems like all the ideas would help to improve the education system in the US, but the road to get there might be a long and bumpy one.

Code: EDUCATIONOVERHAUL


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01.21.09 | Stimulus for Your Student Aid?

There is a new economics stimulus Bill that has been introduced into the House of Representatives, that could potentially increase your student aid package that you receive from your school.

The stimulus bill, would be part of the “American Recovery and Reinvestment Bill of 2009″ which is being designed to hopefully save millions of jobs, jump start the economy, and (cross your fingers) give you more financial aid:)

Here are the details:

  • Raise Pell grant maximum by $500 (from $4,850 to $5,350)
  • Increase unsub max amounts by $2000
  • provide $490 million dollars extra for work study for undergrad and graduate students
  • Provide $50 million to help the Dep’t of Ed administer new and surging student aid programs through this ever changing educational environment

Sounds pretty good to me…except the Stafford loan sub and unsub limits still don’t come any where close to covering tuition at a private university. Thoughts on this new proposal?

10.16.08 | Why tax cuts alone are not the answer

Posted in Government Spending, Taxes by Student Loan Guru

I was speaking with a few friends earlier this week who had asked me some general questions about the economy. After answering one question in particular about taxes I thought it might make for a nice blog topic. After all, it is my aim to educate and inform.

First off, the economy is a complicated mechanism as we all know. When we’re struggling thru tough economic time’s politicians can not simply institute tax cuts to remedy the problem. True, tax cuts may be part of the solution but not the sole answer. So why will tax cuts alone not work? I mean, that would help jumpstart the economy, right? More money being spent by consumers on goods and services is a good thing. But the reality is those tax cuts have a counterproductive aspect to them as well.

Conventional wisdom tells us if you have less money to spend than your consumption will decrease. If taxes get cut than the government has less money to spend which means something must get sacrificed. But if you delve a little deeper into the root of what happens when tax cuts are made you will have a better grasp of the mechanics behind this negative relationship.

For example, say McCain or Obama cut taxes. That will mean consumers will have more disposable income in their pockets, which is great. And because of that extra money the consumer can then purchase more goods and services with those extra dollars. That will then lead to a positive shift in the aggregate demand. With consumption on the rise that will then lead to higher interest rates which will then serve as a detriment to businesses that want to invest, since the cost to borrowing money would be increased by those higher interest rates.

So by doing a good thing, cutting taxes to stimulate growth, demand for investment falls. It is such a tangled web we weave. It’s like trying to juggle 10 things at once and hoping you don’t drop one. Unfortunately we’ve been dropping more than we’ve been catching lately. Let’s hope the next circus that comes to town can keep things a float.