AG Balderas Calls on Trump’s Education Secretary DeVos to Reject Toothless Student Borrower Defense Proposal

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: March 5, 2018

Contact: James Hallinan (505) 660-2216

Albuquerque, NM – Joining a coalition of 20 attorneys general, Attorney General Hector Balderas today submitted a letter to the U.S. Department of Education (Department) criticizing proposals that the Department offered during its recent rulemaking sessions to redraft regulations on borrower defense and financial responsibility. Borrower defense is the process by which students who have been defrauded by their schools can have their federal student loans discharged. The Office of Attorney General Balderas has been a leader in helping New Mexicans victimized by ITT Tech, Brown Mackie College and Corinthian College.

“We will continue to fight for New Mexico students and families who have been defrauded by predatory, for-profit education companies, and to stand up the dangerous actions of President Trump and Secretary DeVos,” said Attorney General Hector Balderas. “Thousands of New Mexicans who are victims of fraud by for-profit education companies deserve the support and protection of their federal government.”

In the letter to Education Secretary Betsy DeVos, the Attorneys General underscore that the Department’s recent proposals are a major step backwards. They do nothing to protect students and taxpayers from deceptive practices and fraud. “From top to bottom, the Department has offered proposals that, if enacted, will be disastrous for students and taxpayers. These proposals provide no realistic prospect for borrowers to discharge their loans when they have been defrauded by their schools. Similarly, these proposals will not identify problematic schools and hold them accountable when they engage in misconduct. The only winners will be predatory schools,” write the Attorneys General. The letter goes on to urge the Department to address the serious concerns of the Attorneys General before publishing any rules for public comment.

In the letter, the Attorneys General highlight some of the most glaring issues with the Department’s proposals:

  • The Department proposes a “federal standard” applicable to borrower-defense claims that is wholly inadequate and would serve only to limit defrauded students’ access to critical loan relief;
  • The Department proposes a borrower-defense process that excludes any role for state attorneys general;
  • The Department proposes imposing a three-year statute of limitations on borrower-defense claims. The imposition of any statute of limitations on these claims is patently unfair;
  • The Department proposes preserving mandatory arbitration, which suppresses students from bringing meritorious claims and prevents information about the few disputes that are brought from ever coming to light; and
  • The Department fails to propose a streamlined process to discharge groups of similar borrower defense claims.

The Department’s recent rulemaking comes on the heels of its decision last year to throw out its borrower-defense regulations promulgated in November 2016. These regulations went a tremendous distance to achieving the Department’s then-stated goal of giving defrauded borrowers access to a consistent, clear, fair, and transparent process to seek debt relief. The Department, however, has unlawfully delayed implementation of these rules and decided to draft new rules from scratch. On July 6, 2017, a coalition of Attorneys General sued the Department over this unlawful delay.

In signing today’s letter, Attorney General Balderas joins the attorneys general of: California, Connecticut, Delaware, District of Columbia, Hawai’i, Illinois, Iowa, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New York, North Carolina, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Vermont, Virginia, and Washington.

See attached for a copy of today’s letter.

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