Tag Archives: Navient

Thousands in Pennsylvania will have student loans forgiven under new Navient settlement

PHILADELPHIA (WPVI) — The pursuit of higher education often ends in high debt.

“We are told over and over throughout our lives that higher education is what we need to do. It’s the gateway out of poverty,” said Kerry Smith, an attorney with the Community Legal Services.

The Philadelphia-based non-profit provides free help to low-income people struggling with student loans.

“This is a systemic problem that we see many individuals in Philadelphia fall victim to,” said Smith.

It’s the reason why the settlement announced Thursday with Wilmington-based lending company Navient is so huge.

Sixty-six thousand Americans will have $1.7 billion in private student loans canceled. That includes more than 2,400 people in Pennsylvania.

RELATED: Whose student loans are canceled, who qualifies for payments in Navient settlement

Attorneys general from across the country, including Pennsylvania Attorney General Josh Shapiro, says Navient engaged in predatory lending.

“These were loans that were designed to fail. They didn’t care because they were not in it for the borrower, but instead in it to get a larger piece of the pie for federal student loans,” said Smith. “They were left with very high-cost loans that they had no ability to pay.”

It’s something Philadelphia City Councilmember At-Large Kendra Brooks says impacts everyone, but some groups are impacted more than others.

“We know who’s being affected by it: working-class folks, Black folks, and women,” said Brooks.

That includes her family. Brooks took out student loans for herself and two of her daughters.

“I think I’m down to $65,000 left for student loans,” she said of the amount she has left to pay for her own education. “This has followed me for 14 years.”

Smith says the average age of a person who seeks her organization’s assistance for student loans is 55 years old. Often, they are people who are saddled with debt from their college educations or their children or grandchildren’s schooling.

The settlement also includes $95 million in restitution payments for people who had federal student loans. About 13,000 people in Pennsylvania will receive checks for $260 each.

Navient never let them know they qualified for income-based programs that could have made payments as low as $0 a month. Instead, the company enrolled people into forbearance.

“Forbearance is when they are not making any payments, but what happens is the interest keeps accruing on that debt. That student loan debt is just growing and growing,” said Smith.

She adds that the effect ripples far beyond individual loans.

“This is really a civil rights issue,” Smith said. “Student loan debt is increasing an already-wide racial wealth gap.”

That’s why advocates like Brooks want the next step to be federal Student loan forgiveness.

“This will continue to be a problem until we see some real relief,” said Brooks.

Anyone whose debt is being canceled will receive a notice of that in July.

Federal borrowers who are eligible for restitution will get notices of those in the spring.

Smith reiterates that even for those not receiving loan cancellations, there is still help.

There is a federal pause on student loan repayments until May.

Smith suggests using that time to contact lenders and request adjustments to payment plans.

She also advises people to seek help from nonprofit organizations, who specialize in guiding people through the payback process for student loans.

Find more information on student loans from Community Legal Services click HERE.

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Student-Loan Processor Navient to Cancel $1.7 Billion of Debts

A former unit of student loan giant Sallie Mae said it would cancel $1.7 billion in private student debt for about 66,000 borrowers to resolve claims that it engaged in deceptive lending practices.

Navient Corp.

NAVI 0.37%

, a student loan servicer that split off from Sallie Mae in 2014, agreed to the sum in a settlement with 40 state attorneys general. The loans are private loans, so the losses will be covered by Navient’s investors rather than the federal government.

Nearly all the canceled loans originated at Sallie Mae from 2002 to 2010, at a time when student debt soared, on its way to becoming the second-highest form of household credit after mortgages. Sallie Mae was at the forefront of that boom, both as the biggest originator of private loans as well as the biggest lender under a federal program that guaranteed student loans.

The loans primarily went to borrowers with poor credit, and who attended schools with shaky records, including many for-profit schools, according to a website run by the settlement administrator. All of the loans forgiven in the agreement were in default.

“For too long, Navient contributed to the national student debt crisis by deceptively trapping thousands of students into more debt,” said New York Attorney General

Letitia James.

As part of the agreement, Navient continued to deny the claims or that the company has harmed any borrowers. “The company’s decision to resolve these matters, which were based on unfounded claims, allows us to avoid the additional burden, expense, time and distraction to prevail in court,” said

Mark Heleen,

Navient’s chief legal officer.

Navient has faced numerous lawsuits in recent years that alleged the company engaged in unfair and deceptive conduct against borrowers, including steering those with federal loans toward plans that would allow them to stop making payments but in which interest continued to accrue, rather than toward plans in which monthly payments are tied to borrowers’ income.

Last March, a Seattle-area judge ruled that the company had broken a consumer protection law in a case brought by Washington’s attorney general.

“Navient repeatedly and deliberately put profits ahead of its borrowers—it engaged in deceptive and abusive practices, targeted students who it knew would struggle to pay loans back and placed an unfair burden on people trying to improve their lives through education,” Pennsylvania Attorney General

Josh Shapiro

said.

WSJ higher-education reporter Melissa Korn breaks down the select groups of borrowers who are currently eligible for student debt relief and what borrowers can expect next year. Photo: Getty Images

The agreements resolve all six outstanding state lawsuits against Navient, the company said. As part of the settlement, the company will make a one-time payment of approximately $145 million to the states.

In addition to loan cancellation and some restitution for borrowers with private loans, Navient will pay $95 million to about 350,000 federal loan borrowers—or about $260 each—who were placed into certain types of forbearance programs that caused them to accumulate more debt rather than entering income-based repayment plans, the states said.

States will distribute restitution to borrowers within their jurisdictions. Massachusetts, for example, will receive more than $6 million, including $2.2 million in restitution for more than 8,300 federal loan borrowers, state Attorney General

Maura Healey

said.

Federal loan borrowers eligible for restitution will be notified by mail this spring, with checks going out in the middle of the year, according to the settlement administrator’s website. Private borrowers who qualify for discharge will be notified by July.

Private loans without federal backing make up less than 10% of the total $1.7 trillion student-loan industry. About 43 million people owe $1.6 trillion in federal student debt, Education Department data show. About 5.2 million of those federal borrowers are in default. Those borrowers, unless they also held private student loans, aren’t affected by Thursday’s settlement.

Navient recently announced its exit from federal student-loan processing. It had been one of the primary federal contractors, serving around six million borrowers. Its accounts were transferred to a new contractor,

Maximus,

whose role was approved by the Education Department.

The Education Department also has taken steps to forgive billions in debt held by disabled borrowers, as well as borrowers who went to institutions that federal regulators say practiced deceptive recruiting practices, such as ITT Technical Institute. The piecemeal moves have resulted in $11.5 billion in canceled debt for around 600,000 borrowers over President

Biden’s

first year in office. Student loan payments have been suspended by the government during the pandemic, with the latest extension now set to expire on May 1.

The Biden administration is in the midst of restructuring its student-loan processing system. In November it announced it was ending its relationship with private collection agencies that had been tasked with recovering payments from federal student-loan borrowers in default to improve collections and provide borrowers with more support.

The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has been suing Navient since 2017 over allegations that it steered borrowers into postponing payments instead of entering lower-cost, income-driven repayment plans. The CFPB has said the practice cost borrowers $4 billion in interest expense. Navient has disputed the government’s claims.

Write to Gabriel T. Rubin at gabriel.rubin@wsj.com

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Navient, with six million borrowers, asks to stop servicing federal student loans.

A second major federal student loan servicer is calling it quits, a decision that will force the Education Department to transfer the accounts of millions of borrowers just as the government begins to resume collecting payments early next year.

Navient said on Tuesday that it wanted to end its contract with the federal government and offload its responsibilities to Maximus, another federal loan servicer. Navient services the accounts of around six million borrowers.

Jack Remondi, Navient’s chief executive, said the company wanted to “provide a smooth transition to borrowers” as it shifted its focus to businesses other than federal student loan servicing.

The Education Department “is reviewing documents and other information from Navient and Maximus to ensure that the proposal meets all legal requirements and properly protects borrowers and taxpayers,” Richard Cordray, the chief operating officer of the department’s Federal Student Aid office, said in statement.

Two months ago, another large federal servicer, FedLoan, said it, too, wanted out. The departures will leave the Education Department scrambling to move more than 15 million borrowers to new servicers — a process that has in the past been chaotic and error prone.

Nearly all federal student loan borrowers have been skipping their payments thanks to a moratorium on collections that the government imposed in March 2020 in response to the coronavirus pandemic. But those bills are about to return: The Biden administration has said it intends to restart collection on Jan. 31.

Navient won’t be entirely done with the federal student loan business if its request succeeds. The company is the subject of a lawsuit brought by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau in 2017 over what the federal agency said was a pattern of misdeeds and mistakes that hindered borrowers trying to repay their loans.

“That case just continues to grind its way through the slow — very, very slow — court process,” Mr. Remondi told analysts on a recent earnings call. “We’re eager to have our day in court.”

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