Brigette Honaker  |  April 14, 2020

Category: Education

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Following a student loan class action lawsuit, the Department of Education will begin processing around 170,000 loan forgiveness applications.

The action by the U.S. Department of Education and U.S. Education Secretary Betsy DeVos hinges on a proposed settlement that would resolve claims brought against the education authorities.

Borrowers in the student loan class action lawsuit say that the settlement would be “an enormous relief to know that students will finally have answers on their borrower defense.”

“For years, people have been paralyzed with debt and forced to put their education, personal goals, and financial plans on hold because we didn’t know if or when we might get a decision,” lead plaintiff Theresa Sweet said in a statement.

The Department of Education class action lawsuit claims that loan forgiveness applications were not processed in a timely fashion. The plaintiffs and proposed Class allegedly had “predatory” loans from fraudulent, for-profit colleges.

The Department of Education reportedly failed to process the plaintiffs’ applications – leaving them with uncertainty and financial burdens. The student loans class action lawsuit claimed that “the department’s halt in decision making was influenced by high-level department officials who had relationships to the for-profit colleges implicated by large numbers of borrower defense claims.”

The Department of Education class action lawsuit may be resolved by a recently proposed settlement between DeVos and the plaintiffs. Under the settlement, the department would have 18 months to make final decisions on around 170,000 applications for loan forgiveness. If the settlement is approved by the court, student loan borrowers could see significant relief within 21 months.

The student loans class action lawsuit settlement also includes strict penalties if the Department of Education and DeVos fail to comply with the terms.

For every month that the department fails to meet the settlement agreement’s terms, Class Member student loan debt will reportedly be reduced by 30 percent. If the Department of Education uses involuntary collection methods, Class Member student loans will be reduced by 80 percent.

The settlement will benefit individuals who borrowed student loans through the Department of Education’s Direct Loan or Federal Family Education Loan programs and who are still waiting for their loan forgiveness application to be processed.

The Department of Education notes that the settlement is a good option for student and taxpayers, as it eliminates unnecessary time litigating the issue.

“Rather than have their claims needlessly delayed by unnecessary litigation, students will now have their cases adjudicated promptly,” a Department of Education spokesperson said in a statement.

“The department put a sound adjudication methodology in place and Federal Student Aid has been adjudicating claims. This proposed settlement is validation of that process and of the Department’s longstanding goal to resolve all of these claims as quickly as possible.”

Similarly, class counsel from the Project on Predatory Student Lending at Harvard University’s Legal Service Center has voiced their approval of the settlement. However, the director noted in a statement that the department’s failure to cancel loans in a timely fashion remains “a stain on the federal student loan program.”

“The law is clear – students cheated by for-profit colleges should have their student loans cancelled,” the director said.

DeVos and her department also face a similar Department of Education class action lawsuit from students of Corinthian Colleges.

In this ongoing student loans class action lawsuit, DeVos and the department were found to be in contempt for their “minimal efforts” to comply with a court order halting collections on Corinthian student loan debt. As a result, DeVos and the Department of Education faced a $100,000 fine.

While this case is ongoing, the Project on Predatory Student Lending notes that students may face further difficulties when trying to get their loan debt cancelled, even if they have been defrauded by for-profit colleges.

The difficulties reportedly stem from an August 2019 rule announced by DeVos which implements “near impossible standards” for the loan cancellation process.

Due to these rules, defrauded students may be unable to get their student loans from ITT Technical Institute, Corinthian Colleges, the Art Institutes, Salter College, Brooks Institute of Photography and other for-profit schools cancelled.

Did you file an application for student loan forgiveness? Has your application been processed? Share your experiences in the comment section below.

The plaintiffs are represented by Joe Jaramillo and Natalie Lyons of Housing & Economic Rights Advocates and Eileen M. Connor, Toby R. Merrill, Kyra A. Taylor, and Joshua D. Rovenger of the Legal Services Center of Harvard Law School.

The Department of Education Class Action Lawsuit is Theresa Sweet, et al. v. DeVos, et al., Case No. 3:19-cv-03674, in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California.

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700 thoughts onStudent Loan Forgiveness Settlement Will Process 170K Applications

  1. Christopher Forberg says:

    Add me I went to BCTI in Tacoma WA and filed for forgiveness over a year ago and still no help

  2. Gina Perkins says:

    I applied for student loan forgiveness for BCTI loan. The school closed in 2005. I graduated from BCTI back in 2000 and still owe money to this day. I never got a response to my application which is sad considering there was a class action lawsuit in early 2000 that I was never made aware of.

  3. Bailey S says:

    applied and dont believe it was ever looked into as i never heard anything back.

  4. Michael Marks says:

    Would like to be added, failed out of one of my last rotations of veterinary school (failed directly related to my disability that they illegally refused accommodations for). They took 4 plus years of money and no degree with less than a month left.

  5. Juanita Van Auken says:

    Please add me
    I went to the lacey, wa bcti. I’m still trying to pay for it. I think I still owe $8-9000. On this thing and never made more than $10hr. Please help

    1. Tiffany Johnson says:

      Yes, I left BCTI in 1996 and still owe. Submitted loan forgiveness request over a year ago and this administration is doing nothing about it. Stop ignoring us.

  6. Michael P Bennett says:

    My loans originated with Great Lakes in 2011 transfered to Navient. In 2014, entered a Income based repayment program, and Navient is not giving payment credit towards forgiveness for any payments prior to 2014. I have tax records from 2006-present showing payments. I have emailed them repeatedly requesting an audit and an updated expected forgiveness date, as I have never been late, missed or deferred any payments., but they either do not respond or give a year that does not make mathmatical sense. Even with forgiveness at 25 years, they will have received more than double the amount borrowed. An article on Yahoo.com today reports the Dept. of Ed. recognize the servicers have poor records resulting in borrows being denied forgiveness. How do borrows get this corrected to prevent the servicer from changing the terms extended the years of payments being required?

  7. Angelica C Pittman says:

    Please contact me my credit is screwed due to this and I have no degree because Everest’s college filed bankruptcy and no credits were accredited so I’m left with no degree huge debt and now bad credit

  8. Kelly Wilson says:

    Please add me, I went to Miami Jacobs career college which lied about their accreditation the whole time, their job placement upon graduation and about the transfer of credits among other things. While I was there the school changed dean’s at least 3 times and very qualified instructors were let go and shown the door that had worked for years at previous,more prestigious schools like university of Dayton,etc. And anyone who raised questions about anything to administration about any of this was made feel as if they were crazy. This school lied about everything.

  9. Tina Marie Szopinski says:

    I attended a doctoral program at Walden University. I ran out of student loan funds and the school dismissed me when I only had two chapters left in my dissertation. Walden has a history of this behavior. I believe that I would qualify for forgiveness I have over 200,00 at Walden University

  10. Monica Jo Orwig says:

    How do I find out what’s currently going on with BCTI FRAUD? ADD ME OR WHATEVER BUT I NEED TO TALK TO SOMEONE

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