A landmark Biden administration initiative to lower rates and speed up student loan forgiveness for hundreds of thousands of borrowers is in serious jeopardy following two separate court rulings on Monday.
The Department of Education unveiled the Saving on a Valuable Education plan last fall. SAVE, touted as probably the most inexpensive income-driven repayment plan ever, offers lower payments, an unprecedented subsidy that stops runaway rates of interest, and accelerated student loan forgiveness in as little as 10 years (as an alternative of the same old 20 or 25 years that other IDR plans allow) for certain borrowers.
But after two separate lawsuits from a coalition of greater than a dozen Republican-led states, two judges have now blocked key features of SAVE. And while the hundreds of thousands of borrowers currently in this system won’t be immediately kicked off the plan, SAVE is now in serious danger.
The status of Biden’s principal plan for student loan forgiveness and repayment
The Biden administration had phased in SAVE’s advantages. When the Department of Education first introduced SAVE last fall, it gave borrowers access to some—but not all—of the available advantages. These included the next income exemption limit (which allows borrowers to earn more without being subject to a repayment requirement), expanded flexibility in filing the spousal tax return in comparison with the predecessor IDR plan, and a generous subsidy that frequently eliminates interest accruals that exceed a borrower’s monthly payment, ending a pattern of negative amortization that always led to bloated balances. Since then, greater than eight million borrowers have enrolled in SAVE.
Next, in January, the federal government began implementing accelerated student loan forgiveness. While SAVE, like other IDR plans, typically provides for loan forgiveness after 20 or 25 years, borrowers who took out student loans of $12,000 or less could receive debt forgiveness in 10 years, with that repayment period extending by one 12 months for each additional $1,000 borrowed. So far, greater than 400,000 borrowers have received student loan forgiveness under this provision.
Starting in July, the ultimate phase of SAVE was scheduled to be implemented. This final step would change the repayment formula for SAVE, cut payments for college students by as much as 50 percent and reduce payments for hundreds of thousands of others as well.
Missouri judge blocks further student loan forgiveness under SAVE
The Republican-led state coalitions in each lawsuits argued that the Biden administration exceeded the funds originally authorized by Congress when it enacted such generous repayment and debt-forgiveness terms under SAVE. They need to block this system entirely.
As a primary step, the states – including Missouri – filed a motion for a preliminary injunction, an order that might temporarily halt this system while the litigation continues.
On Monday, a federal judge in Missouri agreed to a partial injunction. Specifically, the judge ordered that no more student loan forgiveness be granted under the accelerated type of the SAVE program. However, the judge allowed the remainder of the SAVE plan – including the repayment schedule formula and interest subsidies – to proceed, not less than for now.
“Because plaintiffs have demonstrated that Missouri will be harmed by additional debt relief under the final settlement, the Court finds it necessary to enjoin defendants from further implementing the debt relief provisions of the final settlement until this case can be fully litigated,” wrote the judge. “All other aspects of the final settlement were properly announced.”
Missouri is identical state that led the legal challenge to Biden’s original mass student loan forgiveness plan, which might have worn out $10,000 or more in student debt for many borrowers. The Supreme Court eventually stepped in and agreed to strike down the plan last 12 months. Missouri had argued that Biden’s debt forgiveness plans would hurt state revenues because Missouri is tied to MOHELA, a quasi-public state-run corporation that manages billions of dollars in federal student loans. The state relied on similar arguments in its current legal challenge to SAVE.
Judge in Kansas blocks lower payments under SAVE
Meanwhile, a Kansas judge, who’s hearing a separate lawsuit against SAVE filed by several states (most notably Kansas), has issued one other temporary restraining order.
In that case, the court upheld features of the SAVE program that were already in effect, including student loan forgiveness, and concluded that the states had waited too long to sue.
“The equality of opportunity in this case simply does not support reversing the parts of the SAVE plan that the defendants have already implemented,” wrote the judge. “The plaintiffs waited to file suit until the defendants had already done so. And because of this delay, the plaintiffs were unable to prove irreparable harm from the parts of the SAVE plan already in effect.”
However, the judge granted an interim injunction on the remaining elements of SAVE, which were resulting from take effect on July 1 – namely the proposed reduction in monthly payments under the brand new repayment formula.
Student Loan Forgiveness and Repayment Plan Benefits of Save Now In Danger
Advocates for the borrowers sharply criticized the 2 rulings and the legal disputes that led to them.
“Today’s shocking decision halted crucial access to President Biden’s most affordable repayment plan and denied critical relief to borrowers who have struggled with repayment for more than a decade,” Persis Yu, deputy executive director of the Student Borrower Protection Center, said in a press release Monday. “The goal of this lawsuit is to keep more borrowers in debt longer and make it harder for millions of student loan borrowers to feed their families and keep a roof over their heads.”
The SBPC warned that the 2 rulings may lead to “chaos.” While the eight million borrowers already enrolled in SAVE can remain in this system for now, the longer term of the plan stays uncertain because the legal process continues. Either party can appeal, and an appeals court could step in and modify, extend or overturn the prevailing orders.
And now that there are two separate orders covering different features of the SAVE plan, it increases the likelihood that the Supreme Court could ultimately step in. The Supreme Court’s conservative majority expressed hostility toward Biden’s previous attempt at comprehensive student loan relief, making it unlikely that the court would step in and save this system.