Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byLilian Hart Modified over 8 years ago
1
Notices of Proposed Rulemaking Carol Lindsey – TG, Vice President, Policy and Compliance Joe Pettibon, Assistant Provost, Texas A&M University
2
It’s the law! The Neg Reg process is mandated by law for changes in Title IV program regulations The process is designed to solicit public input, practitioner expertise, and comments from stakeholders in federal rule changes This process originates with changes to the law, or issues of concern to ED or the public
3
Important Neg Reg concepts Goal: to develop a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) that reflects a final consensus of the negotiating committee Consensus: there must be no dissent by any member on any issue for the committee to reach consensus
4
The process ED holds meetings/hearings to solicit input on issues ED proposes topics ED solicits nominations for non-federal negotiators and alternates ED selects non-federal negotiators ED announces proposed topics, confirmed negotiators, and meeting schedule
5
ED Website http://www2.ed.gov/policy/highered/reg/hea rulemaking/2009/negreg-summerfall.html http://www2.ed.gov/policy/highered/reg/hea rulemaking/2009/negreg-summerfall.html – Includes a “Team” web page – Includes the NPRM
6
Organizational protocols Safeguards for members – any member may withdraw at any time – all members shall act in good faith – contact with the press is generally limited to discussion of overall objectives and progress Meeting facilitation – ED selects third-party facilitators to assist the committee in meetings and other deliberations
7
Committee members Committees typically involve 12-15 primary negotiators, representing those most likely to be significantly impacted by proposed topics and potential outcomes Additionally, alternate negotiators are appointed from same broad stakeholder groups represented by primary negotiators
8
Committee members – 2009-2010 Schools/Lenders – 2- year public – 4-year public – Financial aid administrators – Lending community – Private nonprofit – Private for-profit – College presidents – Admissions – Business officers Total of 4 negotiators with direct aid experience Other interests – Students – Consumers – Accreditors – Workforce development – Test publishers – ATB – State higher education officials
9
Organizational protocols Decision making Consensus – “...there must be NO dissent by ANY member in order for the committee to be considered to have reached agreement.” – “members should not block or withhold consensus unless they have serious reservations….” – “absence will be equivalent to not dissenting” – “all consensus agreements… will be assumed to be tentative… until members… agree to make them final agreements”
10
Neg Reg agenda Agenda items are chosen on the premise that they can be resolved within the bounds of regulations – Neg Reg does not address items requiring statutory change – Issues for the agenda ideally are those likely to be successfully negotiated — that is, that stand a good chance of reaching consensus
11
The process Committee approves membership Committee approves protocols Committee finalizes agenda topics ED explains issues and solicits preliminary input Committee reacts ED provides draft regulatory language Negotiations occur Tentative agreement may be reached on individual issues Negotiations conclude with or without consensus
12
Rulemaking steps ED develops preamble and proposed Regs ED may share preamble with Neg Reg committee if consensus reached NPRM published – submitted to the Federal Register – posted to IFAP – 30-90 day public comment period
13
Rulemaking steps ED reviews comments and may make changes ED responds to public comments in preamble of final rules Final rules published in Federal Register by November 1 Final rules become effective, usually July 1 of the next year
14
If consensus reached ED will use the consensus-based language in the NPRM, UNLESS it reopens the Neg Reg process or provides a written explanation to committee members of the reasons for making changes. If there is a change, committee members may submit comments on the change. Negotiators and their organizations WILL REFRAIN from commenting negatively on the proposed rules, but may submit comments on any new considerations or important clarifications.
15
If consensus not reached ED will determine whether or not to proceed with development of proposed regulatory changes If regulatory changes are proposed, ED will decide what those changes should be, taking into consideration the interests of the federal government, taxpayers, and other stakeholders Public comments and non-federal negotiator priorities and concerns will also be considered in drafting the proposed regulations
16
The Issues – 2009-2010 Broad Issues – Ability To Benefit – State Authorization – HS Diploma – Incentive Compensation – Defining a Credit Hour – Agreements between Institutions – Gainful Employment – Retaking Coursework – Misrepresentation Financial Aid Specific – Verification – SAP – Disbursements – R2T4 Attendance – R2T4 Mini-Sessions
17
Broad issues Ability To Benefit – Applies to students without a HS diploma or equivalent credential – Should these tests be more closely regulated and monitored State Authorization – Should schools be eligible for Title IV aid if a state does not license or otherwise authorize – Should there be minimum standards for state authorization
18
Broad issues High School Diploma – Should there be minimum standards – In reaction to diploma mills Incentive Compensation – Financial aid or admission officers may not be paid based on securing enrollments – 12 “Safe Harbors” eliminated
19
Broad issues Defining the Credit Hour – Should there be a standard definition Agreements Between Institutions – In the case of consortia, should there be a minimum amount of instruction that must be provided by the credential-granting institution Gainful Employment – What is reasonable loan debt in relation to expected starting salaries
20
Broad issues Retaking Coursework – Credit hour and clock hour programs do not share uniform requirement Clock hour > must complete, Credit hour > may retake Misrepresentation – Should current regulations be enhanced
21
Financial aid specific issues Verification – Flexibility for ED to identify the data fields to be verified each year – Changed “base year” to “specified year” – Eliminate the 30% rule – Required to send through all ISIR corrections – Applicant must update all dependency changes throughout award year
22
Financial aid specific ssues SAP – Introduces standardized terminology Warning and Probation status – Place time limits on continued Title IV eligibility Yearly versus payment period SAP assessments Warning status only available if SAP is assessed every payment period
23
Financial aid specific issues Disbursement – Primary focus on the timing of disbursement – Primary concern is the purchase of books for Pell eligible students – Proposal: Payment of anticipated credit balances must occur by the seventh day of the payment period (if certain conditions apply) Or, student must be provided sufficient funds to cover the purchase of books/supplies
24
Financial aid specific issues R2T4: Attendance – Current regs: If “required to take attendance by an outside entity” must use attendance records to establish the withdrawal date. – Proposal: If the institution requires instructors to take attendance, even for just some students or a limited period, the records must be used Concern: – Census periods > inconsistent treatment depending on timing
25
Financial aid specific issues R2T4: Mini-Sessions or Modules – Term-based programs with shorter segments – Current guidance: If student completes one module or session in the term, not a withdrawal – Proposal: If student does not complete all days in the payment period, IS considered a withdrawal – This would impact term-based schools with summer mini-sessions on inter-term programs
26
Tentative agreement
27
Questions?
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.