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The Student Loan Shuffle

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Posted on Apr 24, 2012
DonkeyHotey (CC-BY-2.0)

By Marian Wang, ProPublica

This piece originally appeared at ProPublica.

The Department of Education has been transferring large batches of federal student loans to new loan-servicing companies—leaving in the lurch some borrowers who are suddenly encountering problems with their loans, such as payments that are mysteriously adjusted up or down

The switch, which has been going on for months and will ultimately include millions of loans, is mandated by a little-known provision tucked into the 2010 healthcare overhaul. Pushed by a consortium of nonprofit student loan companies, the provision forces the DOE to use nonprofit loan servicers. But at least in the short run, the switch has caused problems.

Borrower Isabelle Baeck said that after a new servicer, Mohela, took over her loans in December, she received a letter saying that her monthly payments had been reduced to $50—roughly a quarter of what they had been. The change meant Baeck would ultimately pay more in interest over a longer period of time. Concerned, she said she has made repeated calls to get the problem fixed, only to have the payments repeatedly readjusted.

A Mohela representative declined to comment on specific borrower situations but said that the company is working hard to minimize disruption and to resolve issues as they arise.

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Baeck is not alone. Since last fall, one million borrowers have had their federal student loans randomly assigned to one of the new companies, all nonprofits or subsidiaries of nonprofit organizations. It is not known what proportion of borrowers has had problems during the switch.

Like their for-profit counterparts, many of these nonprofit student loan companies traditionally originated, bought and insured student loans, with the day-to-day servicing making up only a portion of their business. Several—including at least six that the department has transferred or is planning to transfer loans to—have been touched by scandal in those other capacities, with accusations ranging from bad lending practices to violating state law to overbilling the Education Department.

In all, the Department of Education expects to add more than a dozen new servicers to the mix, roughly tripling the total number of companies that were handling direct federal loans this time last year. The move would also mean that borrowers with such loans would eventually be using about a dozen separate servicer websites, whereas before there was a single website for all direct loans. 

Some worry the addition of so many new servicers could make standardization and oversight more challenging.

“It’s hard to know if having more servicers will help or hurt because it’s so bad with just a few right now,” said Deanne Loonin, director of the National Consumer Law Center’s Student Loan Borrower Assistance Project. “Our fear is that the more you have, the less ability you have to oversee them.” 

Ultimately, borrowers having their loans moved over to these new servicers have Congress to thank for it. Coupled with the passage of the health care reconciliation bill was an overhaul of federal student lending, which shifted the government away from backing loans by private lenders—what were known as federally guaranteed student loans—and toward loaning directly to students.

For-profit and nonprofit student loan companies alike lobbied over the change and shifted their business models accordingly. In particular, the nonprofit student loan companies won a carve-out to ensure they’d get in on the business of servicing the direct federal loans. The carve-out was crafted and lobbied for by the Education Finance Council, a trade group representing nonprofit student loan companies that spent more than $200,000 on lobbying that year. (The Education Finance Council did not respond to a request for comment.) 

Now, two years later, borrowers are experiencing the effect of the law. 

Borrower Karen Mahnk said she logged into the Department of Education’s student loan website in October and saw that her loan balance—which typically hovered around $100,000—was suddenly zero. When she called around, her servicer told her that she had been put in an administrative forbearance

That didn’t sit well with Mahnk, who said she didn’t want to put off her payments and certainly didn’t want to rack up additional interest. She said she called again and talked to someone else, who assured her the opposite—there was no record of forbearance. 

While still confused about many details, Mahnk said she learned that her loan is being handled by a new servicer, a company called EdFinancial, which shows she’s not due for a payment until June. Taking no chances, Mahnk said she has been forcing through monthly payments. 


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By heterochromatic, April 25, 2012 at 1:24 pm Link to this comment

Connie—- thanks for the info.

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prisnersdilema's avatar

By prisnersdilema, April 24, 2012 at 5:27 pm Link to this comment

They will stall and stall till after the elections. Just remember non profit doesn’t mean
you can’t get rich. It sounds nicer, but salaries at those companies can be astronomical,
just so no money is left on the table, when the cops run in. What happened to student
loan reform? Goldman Sachs wins again.

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By Connie, April 24, 2012 at 5:24 pm Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)

I work for a government contractor which the accounts for the Department of Education as
a customer service representative.  I have heard the complaints about the services for the
last four months since I started working there.  They are, to say the least, rightfully angry
they were never given warning.  Payments frequently go missing once the accounts are
transferred to the servicers, and many of the callers tell me their credit is now ruined
because of DOEd’s blatant lack of transparency with the borrowers. 
    This is the least of the problems with the Education Departtment.  The entire
department is simply rife with corruption with regard to student loans, and trust me, the
servicers are simply the tip of the iceberg.  The contractor is actually owned by General
Dynamics, the fourth largest defence contractor, with profits in the billions but has not paid
any corporate taxes since 2009, and chances are, with it’s acquisition of Vangent, the
contractor (which, by the way, also handles Medicare, and whose “beneficiaries” are
being swindled by Big Pharma and the insurance companies). 
    I could go on, but I have a feeling I’d run out of space.

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By berneredfeathers1, April 24, 2012 at 10:59 am Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)

This article shows that the finance world is a shell game where those with loans
are manipulated from one shell account to another. When Citibank was having
trouble I was shifted to CIBC. The banks buy and trade accounts just like any other
derivative. These maneuvers, I think, are behind the problems that European
countries are having and the consequence that their debt is shifted to more sticky
fingers. Corporations and governments like in Greece are complicit in the game
and the result is the enslavement of the populations. Housing prices have dropped
in the U.S. for the sixth straight month. In my view this is indicative of people that
are catching on to the shell game. If people lose faith in the hope of winning at
the shell game, they walk away and don’t play. This does not bode well for the
future of the global economy.

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