The Department of Education’s Debt-Forgiveness Plan Does Not Go Far Enough

The Department of Education’s Debt-Forgiveness Plan Does Not Go Far Enough

The Department of Education’s Debt-Forgiveness Plan Does Not Go Far Enough

The Corinthian strikers are asking for debt justice, not forgiveness.

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On Monday, the Department of Education made a grand gesture of forgiveness, offering relief to the former students of the scandalized for-profit college chain Corinthian.

The notorious franchise—widely condemned as a predatory diploma mill that bilked both the government and hundreds of thousands of students—recently filed for bankruptcy, amidst charges of massive fraud. As public outcry mounts, Education Secretary Arne Duncan announced that the administration would create a “durable” process for fraud victims to apply for federal loan relief.

Presenting the Education Department as a champion of former Corinthian students and others cheated by for-profit schools, Duncan promised to “make this process as easy as possible for them, including by considering claims in groups wherever possible, and hold institutions accountable.”

The key word was “possible.” To embattled anti-debt activists, the measure smacked of political trickery by the federal authorities that had long failed to regulate for-profit schools like Corinthian. The Debt Collective, an Occupy-inspired campaign against the student-debt system, seeks immediate relief for all Corinthian students. The process of requiring students to file individual claims, they argue, merely deflects public attention from the Corinthian’s crimes and the $1.2 trillion education-debt crisis that the company symbolizes.

“I think it’s a bunch of BS if you really want to know the truth,” says Latonya Suggs, a 27 year-old former student of Corinthian’s Everest College, now an activist with the Debt Collective’s strike campaign. “They know that we are more powerful in numbers so the only way to try to back us down and break us down is to do an individualized process. They know that there are thousands of students that can’t even afford lawyers, and they can’t afford to gather this kind of evidence to prove the situation that’s going on. So now they just leave us in a limbo.”

Duncan’s plan claims to offer a streamlined process for dealing with borrowers’ petitions for relief, but it falls well short of the total discharge of debt that activists have been seeking—and have instructively outlined for Duncan in a model draft order. The Department of Education is also making special provisions to provide loan forgiveness to former students of one Corinthian branch, Heald College, which recently got slapped with $30 million in fines over false marketing of job placement rates.

Ordinarily, student borrowers can qualify for loan relief if their school shuts down during or shortly after their enrollment. Now the Department of Education is allowing individual petitions for relief under an obscure law known as Defense to Repayment.

The debt strikers argue that the complex legal process for Defense to Repayment is unnecessary, since Corinthian’s financial implosion has left its schools basically defunct and the evidence of fraud is glaringly clear. Meanwhile, many debtors spiral deeper financial desperation, unable to secure steady employment with their essentially worthless degrees.

The Debt Collective—which has organized more than 1200 people nationwide to join in solidarity with the Corinthian strikers’ campaign against debt repayment—argues that a case-by-case approach will push borrowers into a byzantine legal process, with no guarantee that they’ll be made whole.

The debt strikers should know, having already initiated more than 1,400 petitions to cancel their individual debts. Although the activists are working with a team of organizers and legal experts, they report major difficulties in gathering the necessary documentation and other legal evidence. Suggs says she wrote her attorney general for help with her petition, and was advised to get a lawyer.

Now countless other students—many of them poorer, with even more limited access to legal advice—may face even steeper barriers as the administration forces them into a bureaucratic rigmarole. With roughly 350,000 Corinthian students from the past five years (carrying an estimated debt of up to $3.5 billion) potentially seeking relief, activists suspect federal authorities are simply trying to deter the debtors, which would leave them without relief and the government relieved of its responsibility.

Meanwhile, several federal lawmakers and attorneys general of California, New York and other states have investigated Corinthians scams and pressed the Department of Education to provide some sort of blanket amnesty on former students’ loans.

In a response to Duncan’s plan, the Debt Collective demanded not loan “forgiveness” but debt justice:

Automatic, class-wide discharges are not only just, they would also serve as a corrective for the Department’s flagrant failures to allocate public funds wisely. [It] would not cost taxpayers, as it would be offset by government profits on the student loan program.

Suggs says her two years in a substandard program at Everest left her with tens of thousands of dollars in federal debt, no job prospects, and little hope of ever returning to school. Students like her, she says, shouldn’t need a lawyer to escape loans that should never have been granted in the first place: “I just feel like everybody is in the same predicament… so why does it have to be an individualized process? They really need to just discharge all of the debt. I mean the school doesn’t even exist anymore.”

The Debt Collective is targeting Corinthian as a singularly shameful example of the for-profit college industry, which is known to prey on low-income students, single parents and veterans. But their campaign is also calling for a complete abolition of all private and federal student debt. Ultimately the group envisions a structural shift away from a hierarchical, commercially driven business model of higher education and toward free education for all.

As for the common criticism that a mass default on student debt would be socially irresponsible, the anti-debt campaign condemns the whole system of forcing people to finance what should be a free social good with borrowed money. “I feel that education should be free…. We shouldn’t have to be forced into a debt trap,” says Suggs. She anticipates getting warnings soon from debt collectors about defaulting on her loans, but she sees no reason to comply. Instead, she’s finding a way to finally put her fraudulent criminal-justice degree to use: “I’m not going to pay them anything, because it’s illegitimate debt. It’s illegal, so why would I pay them anything?”

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Katrina vanden Heuvel
Editorial Director and Publisher, The Nation

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