Monday, July 11, 2016

Will the Department of Education's Proposed "Debt Forgiveness" Rules Open Yet Another Pandora's Box?

The DOE's aggressive stance on campus sexual assaults has made all higher ed institutions into police, prosecutors and courts.  The upshot is a plethora of lawsuits by disappointed complainants and outraged respondents.  Now the activist agency has proposed new rules, poised for imposition in 2017,  that will open the floodgates for allegations by disappointed students, alumni and parents that they were mislead and defrauded by their colleges and universities.  Here's the DOE's announcement of its latest initiative:

Education Department Proposes New Regulations to Protect Students and Taxpayers from Predatory Institutions

June 13, 2016
This new regulatory effort builds on the Obama Administration's commitment to protect taxpayers' and students' investments and ensure that all Direct Loan borrowers can engage in a process that is efficient, transparent and fair when applying for a loan discharge based on the misconduct of the institution.
“We won’t sit idly by while dodgy schools leave students with piles of debt and taxpayers holding the bag,” said U.S. Secretary of Education John B. King Jr. “All students who are defrauded deserve an efficient, transparent, and fair path to the relief they are owed, and the schools should be held responsible for their actions.”
The proposed regulations would streamline relief for student borrowers who have been wronged and create a process for group-wide loan discharges when whole groups of students have been subject to the misconduct. They also establish triggers that would require institutions to put up funds if they engage in misconduct or exhibit signs of financial risk.
Additionally, the proposed regulations require financially risky schools and proprietary schools in which students have poor loan outcomes to provide clear, plain-language warnings to prospective and current students, and the public. The rules also make it simpler for eligible students to receive closed-school discharge.
Finally, in a major step to protect student borrowers and prevent schools from shirking responsibility for the injury they cause, the proposed regulations would prohibit the use of so-called mandatory pre-dispute arbitration clauses and class action waivers that deny students their day in court if they are wronged. Under these regulations, schools would no longer be able to use their enrollment agreements, or other pre-dispute arbitration agreements or clauses in other documents, in order to force students to go it alone by signing away their right to pursue relief as a group, or to impose gag rules that silence students from speaking out.
“These regulations would prevent institutions from using these clauses as a shield toskirtaccountabilityto their students, to the Department and to taxpayers,” saidU.S.Under Secretary of Education Ted Mitchell.“By allowing students to bringlawsuits againstaschool for alleged wrongdoing,the regulations removethe veil of secrecy, create increased transparency, and give borrowers full access to legal redress."
Last September, the Department began a negotiated rulemaking process to clarify how Direct Loan borrowers who believe they have been wronged by their institutions can seek relief and to strengthen provisions to hold colleges accountable for their actions. Current provisions in federal law and regulations allow borrowers to seek discharge of their Direct Loans if their college's acts give rise to a state law cause of action.
The third and final session of negotiated rulemaking was held in March, but the committee did not come to a consensus on a draft of the rule. The Department took the committee’s feedback into account when drafting this proposed regulation.
The proposed rule publishes in the Federal Register on June 16, and the public comment period ends Aug. 1. The Department will publish a final regulation by Nov. 1.
The proposed regulations build on years of work by the Obama Administration to protect students and taxpayers from fraudulent or failing institutions of higher education. Those efforts include the landmark Gainful Employment regulations ending Federal student aid eligibility for career colleges that are not paying off for their students, establishing tougher regulations targeting misleading claims by colleges and incentives that drove sales people to enroll students through dubious promises, requiring States to step up their oversight through the state authorization regulation, creating a new Enforcement Unit to protect students and taxpayers from unscrupulous colleges, and calling for improved accreditation practices that focus on student outcomes.

According to Inside Higher Ed, "The draft regulations include new requirements that apply mostly to the for-profit sector, including that institutions must issue warnings to prospective students about poor loan-repayment rates, and financially troubled institutions must set aside money to pay for loan-forgiveness claims."

However, the online chronicler of our industry add in a more recent story, "Yet for-profits aren’t the only ones fretting about the rule, which is slated to go into effect next year if enacted. Many nonprofit colleges also face financial and reputational challenges due to the scope of the so-called borrower-defense-to-repayment proposal, said lawyers and several traditional higher education groups."

Looking back over Mr. Obama's second term, one has the sense that the DOE aims to obliterate the for-profit sector of higher education... witness the evisceration of Corinthian Colleges last year.  In a sense this prefigured this latest round of regulations in that the Department provided Corinthian's thousands of active students with loan relief.  Indeed, the Inside Higher Ed story suggests as much.

Here is where to find the proposed regs if you have the stomach to review all 530 pages.

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