A bill to overhaul the student loan industry may reach Congress as early as next week; education-committee chairs are working behind the scenes on a piece of legislation that would eliminate the third-party student loan system called the Federal Family Education Loan Program, The Chronicle of Higher Education reports (“Behind the Scenes, a Student-Loan Overhaul Takes Shape,” June 16, 2009).
Although few details have been released about the proposed legislation, lenders and a large number of Congressmen are hoping the FFEL program won’t end up on the chopping block like President Obama has proposed. Already as many as 13 counterproposals to the elimination of FFELP have begun circulating Congress, including a detailed plan from lending giant Sallie Mae.
It’s not likely, however, that the FFEL program will survive this legislative session, some Congressmen say, considering taxpayers could see as much as $94 billion in savings over the next 10 years if FFELP were eliminated, according to estimates from the Congressional Budget Office.
Obama had originally suggested that these savings, which have been readjusted down to $87 billion, could be used to increase Pell Grants award amounts each year at a rate equal to the Consumer Price Index. It now looks like Congress will, instead, propose that the money be infused into the Pell Grant program to allow appropriators to “continue to set the maximum [Pell Grant] award” so as not to end up capping the maximum award amount.
Tuesday, October 20, 2009
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment