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Washington Update 2012 Winter Legal Meeting Shelly Repp, NCHELP January 19, 2012 Hilton New Orleans Riverside, New Orleans, LA
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Washington Update 2012 Political Landscape Budget Control Act Student Financial Assistance The Administration’s Initiatives
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2012 Political Landscape
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Currently - Gridlock FY 2011 appropriations Debt limit increase FY 2012 appropriations Payroll tax extension
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2012 Elections - President Presidential election Republican primary season in full swing President Obama begins to posture for general election
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2012 Elections - House Current distribution 242 Republicans 192 Democrats 1 vacancy All House seats up in 2012 Reapportionment due to 2010 Census 8 states gain members Texas +4 Florida +2 10 states lose members New York -2 Ohio -2
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2012 Elections - Senate Current makeup 51 Democrats 47 Republicans 1 Independent 1 Independent Democrat 33 Senate seats up in 2012 23 currently held by Democrats 10 currently held by Republicans
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Budget Control Act
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Budget Control Act Aggregate Debt Level
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Budget Control Act 2012 Appropriations Discretionary Spending (Billions of $; excludes war funding) Budget Authority FY 2011 Enacted 1,050 FY 2012 President's Request 1,139 FY 2012 House Budget Resolution 1,019 FY 2012 Budget Control Act 1,043 FY 2012 Omnibus Appropriations1,043
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Budget Control Act Increase in debt limit approved at 11th hour Discretionary spending cut by $917 billion over 10 years Additional action needed Super Committee charged with recommending at least $1.2T in savings - FAILED Balanced Budget Amendment - FAILED $1.2T Sequestration – TRIGGERED, effective January 1, 2013 Assuming one of these paths is taken, debt limit will increase enough to cover expenses through the 2012 election
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Budget Control Act Sequestration Sequestration Uniform reduction in discretionary appropriations and direct spending Reductions half from defense and half from non defense functions, totaling $1.2 trillion (minus interest savings) Certain programs protected, including Pell For student loans, origination fee increase Congress can still enact targeted cuts or revenue increases to avoid the sequester
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Student Financial Assistance
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Challenges For Schools Accountability More compliance responsibilities Financing shift from state to federal States are providing less funding Greater reliance on federal dollars and tuition revenue
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Federal Student Financial Assistance Financial aid now seen as area for savings Pell Grants – maximum grant ($5,550) preserved but eligibility cut Students qualifying for less than 10% of maximum award will no longer receive grants Students without high school diploma or GED can no longer qualify by passing an “ability to benefit” test Reduces current 18 semester lifetime award limit to 12 semesters Income threshold to automatically qualify for maximum grant reduced from $30,000 to $23,000 Stafford subsidies Elimination of interest subsidies for grad & professional students as part of the Budget Control Act Omnibus appropriations measure eliminated interest subsidy during grace period for other Stafford loans for 2012-13 and 2013-14 What about in-school interest?
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Federal Student Financial Assistance Lender Return Lenders have option prior to April 1, 2012 to permanently convert index for special allowance from 3-month commercial paper (financial) to 1-month LIBOR Applies to loans disbursed 1/1/2000 and after and commences with SAP for 2 nd calendar quarter of 2012 Applies to all loans held by a lender and all loans all loans for which a beneficial owner has right to make this election Exceptions Lender not legally permitted to make election without approval of 3 rd parties Rating agency says it will down grade
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Source for Unemployment Rate: Bureau of Labor Statistics. FY for Unemployment rate is one year ahead of Cohort Default Rate. Student Loan Defaults
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Services? Changes to the Delivery System FFELP & Direct Lending Federal Lending Only Students & Families SchoolsLender Services Guaranty Agency Services Federal Government Students & Families Federal Government Schools
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The Administration’s Initiatives
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Department of Education Initiatives Gainful employment/Program Integrity Currently issue for for-profit institutions and certificate programs at other institutions Continued high unemployment for graduates may fuel the case to expand the approach to other types of institutions (i.e. law schools, business schools)
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MoveOn.org Petition Occupy Wall Street Protests Administration Reaction New Student Loan Programs Presidential Initiatives Special Consolidation “Pay as you Earn” Plan
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Presidential Initiatives Special Direct Consolidation Loans Eligibility limited to split loan borrowers (in-school and defaulted FFELP loans are not eligible) Available now through June 30, 2012 Incentive – 0.25% interest rate reduction on FFELP loans Not a traditional consolidation loan Key issue – Are FFELP borrower benefits included in base loan rate?
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Presidential Initiatives Pay As You Earn Will be available to new borrowers in 2008 who receive a loan in 2012 Income contingent repayment plan for direct loans only Caps payments at 10% of discretionary income Shortens repayment period from 25 to 20 years – remaining balance is discharged Revised regulations required (currently subject to negotiated rulemaking)
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Maintaining the Infrastructure: Providing Services after FFELP Voluntary Flexible Agreements Goal is to ensure continuation of services Unfortunately, Department of Education policies are limiting VFA potential
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Maintaining the Infrastructure: Providing Services after FFELP NFP Servicing Program 20+ organizations participating Currently limited to 100,000 accounts per organization Local servicing versus national servicing
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Negotiated Rulemaking Began last week 25 issues included on revised agenda Main goal – develop regulations to implement “pay as you earn” plan/changes to income contingent repayment regulations Information posted on FSA website (http://www2.ed.gov/policy/highered/reg/hearulemaking/2011/loans.html)http://www2.ed.gov/policy/highered/reg/hearulemaking/2011/loans.html and NCHELP website (http://www.nchelp.org/?page=158)http://www.nchelp.org/?page=158
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Questions
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