'A Great American Nightmare': Former Trump student loan official calls for radical overhaul of the system
A former top federal student loan official in the Trump administration says that the system he oversaw needs to be abolished and replaced.
A. Wayne Johnson, who is now running as a Republican for a Senate seat in Georgia after resigning in November 2019, wrote a letter urging the Senate to consider key reforms to the student loan machinery amid stimulus package negotiations amid the ongoing coronavirus pandemic.
The former chief operating officer of Federal Student Aid (FSA) suggested three ideas: Amending the law to allow student loans to be discharged under bankruptcy “without the condition of undue hardship” if the debt is more than 10 years old, removing all information relating to federal student loans from borrowers’ credit bureau files, extending the payment pause that President Donald Trump signed over the weekend to December 31, 2021.
Johnson, appointed by Education Secretary Betsy DeVos in 2017, added that cancelling debt at this time was “inappropriate” — that is, until the system itself was dismantled: “It is my position that the cancellation of Federal student loan debt should only be done at the same time that there is the abolishment of the current Federal Student Loan Program.”
‘The American Dream ... turned into a Great American Nightmare’
Although there are signs of the economy getting back on its feet, as the number of new unemployment insurance claims dip below 1 million, many borrowers are still holding substantial levels of student loan debt.
Johnson’s suggestion of easing bankruptcy laws may help those struggling financially to file for a bankruptcy discharge more easily, given that the current process is complex.
His suggestion to expunge student loan information from credit bureaus may be welcomed by consumer advocates. A recent report by U.S. PIRG of complaints filed on the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau website found that there has been a 50% increase in miffed consumers between March and July of this year, as compared to the year before. And the key complaint was credit reporting inaccuracies.
“These problems are nothing new. They've just been exacerbated by the current economic crisis caused by the pandemic. The truth is the credit bureaus are long overdue for an overhaul. In the interim, the least we can do is stop them from penalizing consumers who are struggling through no fault of their own," said U.S. PIRG Consumer Campaign Director Mike Litt in a press release.
House Democrats called for more lasting relief: The HEROES Act, which passed the House in May and was never taken up by the Senate, included $10,000 of student loan forgiveness for those “economically distressed” in addition to an extension of the interest-free payment pause on student loans and the suspension of debt collection.