- The Education Dept. announced it extended contracts for six student-loan companies through 2023.
- The companies agreed to higher standards to protect borrowers and ensure a smooth transition to repayment in 2022.
After President Joe
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The department announced in a press release that it extended contracts for six student-loan companies, and within those contracts are stronger standards for performance, transparency, and accountability that will protect borrowers that will be "critical" in ensuring a smooth transition into repayment. Specifically, the new terms give the Federal Student Aid (
"FSA is raising the bar for the level of service student loan borrowers will receive," FSA head
The press release noted that the six companies - Great Lakes, HESC/Edfinancial, MOHELA, Navient, Nelnet, and OSLA Servicing - agreed to contract extensions through December 2023. Notably, while Navient signed a contract extension in September, it later became the third company last month to request a shut down of its federal loan services, which the department is currently reviewing.
FSA will measure the companies each quarter on their abilities to meet goals related to:
- The percentage of borrowers who end a call before reaching a customer service representative;
- How well customer service representatives answer borrowers' questions and navigate repayment options;
- Whether servicers process borrowers' request accurately the first time;
- And the overall level of customer service provided to borrowers.
Cordray said during remarks at a conference earlier this month that student-loan companies are choosing to shut down rather than face more accountability. To be sure, he did not comment on specific companies but noted that "not everybody was thrilled" with his plans to strengthen oversight of the industry.
This is the Biden administration's latest effort cracking down on student-loan abuses. Last week, FSA announced it is reviving an enforcement office to "vigorously investigate" schools' student-loan and federal aid abuses, and it comes on the tail of Rohit Chopra's confirmation to lead the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), who emphasized his plans to protect student-loan borrowers.
As Insider has previously reported, borrowers have experienced immense difficulty receiving help from their student-loan companies, preventing them from paying off their
"Nobody wants to assist you," Moore, said. "And you don't know how to get help. Even though you go back and forth, the lender doesn't know what the servicer is doing and the servicer doesn't know what the lender is doing."