Senators say Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) has responsibility to help public service workers who have been denied loan forgiveness they earned

WASHINGTON — Today, U.S. Senators Amy Klobuchar (D-MN) and Tina Smith (D-MN) are calling on the federal government’s consumer watchdog to investigate whether a key student loan service company mismanaged a student loan forgiveness program designed to help people who take on careers in public service.

The senators were joined by 21 of their Democratic colleagues in a letter urging Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) Director Kathy Kraninger to investigate student loan servicer Pennsylvania Higher Education Assistance Agency (PHEAA) for mismanagement of the Public Service Loan Forgiveness Program (PSLF).

Congress established PSLF over a decade ago to encourage people to work as teachers, nurses, firefighters, service members and in other public service positions. Under the program, the federal government agrees to forgive the balance of public service workers’ federal student loans after they make ten years of qualifying loan payments. In 2012, the Department of Education awarded PHEAA the exclusive contract to manage the PSLF program. PHEAA services PSLF loans in Minnesota and across the country.

“We write to request that the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) immediately open an enforcement investigation into the Pennsylvania Higher Education Assistance Agency’s (PHEAA) mismanagement of the Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF) program, and the resulting harm to tens of thousands of public service workers and their families,” the senators wrote.

“For several years now, government watchdogs have repeatedly found that PHEAA’s missteps, errors, and mismanagement of the PSLF program caused public service workers to be denied the loan forgiveness that they had earned. In 2017, the CFPB Student Loan Ombudsman’s report found that public service workers had been denied for loan forgiveness because of PHEAA’s ‘flawed payment processing, botched paperwork and inaccurate information.’ A 2018 Government Accountability Office (GAO) report found that public service workers had improperly been denied loan forgiveness because of PHEAA’s inability to properly account for qualifying payments and reliance on inaccurate information. And in 2019, the Department of Education’s Inspector General found that PHEAA had a ‘pattern of noncompliance’ and was among the worst performing federal student loan servicers.”

“Under your leadership, the CFPB has failed to ensure that PHEAA makes good on the promise of loan forgiveness,” they added. “Since 2017, the CFPB has refused to exercise its authority to conduct supervisory examinations of PHEAA’s servicing practices and its management of the PSLF program. We have repeatedly pressed the CFPB to conduct this critical oversight, but you have provided nothing but excuses for the CFPB’s inaction.”

Full text of the letter can be found HERE and below:

Dear Ms. Kraninger,

We write to request that the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) immediately open an enforcement investigation into the Pennsylvania Higher Education Assistance Agency’s (PHEAA) mismanagement of the Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF) program, and the resulting harm to tens of thousands of public service workers and their families.

Congress established the PSLF program in 2007 to encourage individuals to work as teachers, nurses, firefighters, servicemembers, and in other public service positions. Under the program, the federal government agrees to forgive the balance of public service workers’ federal student loans after they make ten years of qualifying loan payments. In 2012, the Department of Education awarded PHEAA the exclusive contract to manage the PSLF program.

For several years now, government watchdogs have repeatedly found that PHEAA’s missteps, errors, and mismanagement of the PSLF program caused public service workers to be denied the loan forgiveness that they had earned. In 2017, the CFPB Student Loan Ombudsman’s report found that public service workers had been denied for loan forgiveness because of PHEAA’s “flawed payment processing, botched paperwork and inaccurate information.” A 2018 Government Accountability Office (GAO) report found that public service workers had improperly been denied loan forgiveness because of PHEAA’s inability to properly account for qualifying payments and reliance on inaccurate information. And in 2019, the Department of Education’s Inspector General found that PHEAA had a “pattern of noncompliance” and was among the worst performing federal student loan servicers.

In 2018, in response to “high denial rates . . . and evidence that some borrowers were misinformed by [PHEAA] about which repayment plans would qualify for PSLF,” Congress authorized a temporary expansion of the eligibility requirements for PSLF. According to a GAO report released last month, only 661 out of 53,523 applications were approved for loan forgiveness under the expanded PSLF program. In total, only 1,216 out of 102,051 PSLF applications have been approved for loan forgiveness.

Under your leadership, the CFPB has failed to ensure that PHEAA makes good on the promise of loan forgiveness. Since 2017, the CFPB has refused to exercise its authority to conduct supervisory examinations of PHEAA’s servicing practices and its management of the PSLF program. We have repeatedly pressed the CFPB to conduct this critical oversight, but you have provided nothing but excuses for the CFPB’s inaction.

Tens of thousands of dedicated public service workers and their families are paying the price for PHEAA’s incompetence and the CFPB’s failure to act. These women and men have served their communities for years, and relied on the government’s promise of loan forgiveness to make important life decisions about where to work, when to start a family, and when to buy their first home. They deserve better.

There is already overwhelming evidence—including in reports by the CFPB, GAO, and Department of Education Inspector General—that PHEAA’s mismanagement of the PSLF program has resulted in widespread violations of federal law. At this point, the time has passed for the CFPB to examine PHEAA’s servicing practices for potential violations of law. Public service workers and their families need immediate protection from ongoing harm. We therefore ask that the CFPB do its job and immediately open an enforcement investigation into PHEAA’s servicing practices, management of the PSLF program, and other potential violations of federal consumer financial laws.

We ask for a response to this request no later than November 11, 2019. Thank you for your attention to this important matter.

Sincerely,

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