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Legislative and Regulatory Impact on Technology Standards

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Title: Legislative and Regulatory Impact on Technology Standards


1
Legislative and Regulatory Impact on Technology
Standards
2
Overview
  • Legislative Overview
  • Market Issues
  • Negotiated Rulemaking
  • 2007 process, resulting in July 1, 2008 effective
    regulations
  • 2008 process, resulting in July 1, 2009 effective
    regulations
  • Discussion/Questions

3
Legislative Overview
  • Higher Education Reconciliation Act (HERA)
  • Cut 18 billion from FFELP
  • Increased annual loan limits for first and second
    year undergrads
  • Reduced origination fees
  • Made provisions of the Taxpayer Teacher
    Protection Act permanent
  • Reduced Lender insurance from 98 to 97
  • Made 458 funds discretionary

4
Legislative Overview
  • College Cost Reduction and Access Act (CCRAA)
  • Cut almost 20 billion from FFELP
  • Reduced SAP on all new loans disbursed on or
    after 10/1/07
  • Increased Lender paid origination fee
  • Decreased interest rates on new undergrad
    subsidized Stafford loans for five years
  • Eliminated Exceptional Performer
  • Instituted an auction plan for Parent PLUS loans
  • College Access Challenge Grants

5
Legislative Overview
  • Higher Education Act (HEA)
  • House passed H.R. 4137 on February 7th 354-58
  • Senate passed S. 1642 on July 24th 95-0
  • Current (11th) HEA Extender (S. 2733) expires
  • on April 30th
  • Reauthorization to be completed..finally????
  • Pre-Conference meetings underway
  • Will need at least one more extension
  • Floor action slated for early spring

6
Higher Education Act
  • Issues include
  • Financial literacy
  • Student loan information disclosure to 3rd
    parties
  • Additional auction study
  • Code of conduct
  • Private loan issues
  • Multiple disclosures
  • Entrance and exit counseling
  • Service on Boards of Directors and on Advisory
    Councils
  • Guarantor/DL audit requirements

7
HEA
  • Private Loans
  • House rolls private loans into HEA
  • Senate does not include
  • More than likely final conference report will
    deal with private loans
  • Disclosures
  • School Certification
  • Info to borrow Federal loans first

8
Market Issues
  • Secretary Spellings.closely monitoring the
    situation
  • Moving forward with Lender of Last Resort
  • Federal Advance or not to guaranty agencies
  • Full authority, no need for Congressional
    approval to advance funds from Treasury
  • Preparing Direct Lending for increased volume
  • Senator Kennedy (D-MA) Introduced S. 2815,
    Strengthening Student Aid for All Act.
  • Americans are facing economic challenges at
    every turn. They see jobs disappearing, homes
    being foreclosed, debts soaring, and benefits
    worth less and less. Now families are finding
    that the loans they rely on to afford the high
    cost of college may also be at risk. We cant
    allow problems in the credit market to prevent
    students from going to college.

9
Market Issues
  • This bill ensures that the federal government
    can step in when banks and student loan companies
    fail to provide student loans due to the current
    credit crunch in the capital markets.
  • S. 2815 will
  • Increase Pell for the lowest income students by
    up to 750.00
  • Increase annual unsubsidized loan limits for
    dependent undergraduate by 1000
  • Increase annual unsubsidized loan limits for
    independent undergraduates by 2000
  • (and for students whose parents unable to get a
    PLUS loan due to poor credit)
  • Allow parent borrowers to defer repayment while
    student is enrolled
  • Provides for institution based Lender of Last
    Resort, vs. current law of borrower based Lender
    of Last Resort
  • Makes the Secretary the secondary market of last
    resort temporarily

10
Market Issues
  • George Miller (D-CA) Introduced similar
    legislation, The Ensuring Continued Access to
    Student Loans Act of 2008, H.R. 5715
  • Already, the crisis in the financial markets has
    badly hurt American homeowners and working people
    we cant let it also stop students from
    pursuing their educational goals, said Miller,
    chairman of the House Education and Labor
    Committee. Students and families cant afford
    any ambiguity or snafus to undermine their
    ability to attend college. I am confident that if
    we act quickly and decisively, then students will
    have the financial support necessary to begin or
    continue their higher education.

11
Market Issues
  • H.R. 5715 introduced 4/8/2008
  • Full Committee Mark up 4/9/08
  • Reported to the floor by voice vote
  • Voted off the floor 383-27 on 4/17/08
  • Increase annual loan limits for all students by
    2000.00
  • Provide Parent PLUS borrowers with a deferment
    for up to six months after the student leaves
    school
  • Allows PLUS Credit extenuating circumstances to
    include being less than 180 days delinquent on
    home mortgage payments or medical bill payments
    and less than 90 days delinquent on other debt

12
Market Issues
  • Clarify Secretarys authority to advance federal
    funds to guaranty agencies for purposes of Lender
    of Last Resort
  • Gives Secretary authority to deem a school a
    lender of last resort school vs. borrower based
    program
  • Requires Secretary to insure guarantors do not
    engage in
  • Give the Secretary of Education temporary
    authority to purchase loans from FFELP lenders
    and service through the Direct Loan Program.
  • The Secretary would be authorized to purchase
    only those loans that would not result in a cost
    to the federal government

13
Market Issues
  • H.R. 5723, The Emergency Student Loan Market
    Liquidity Act
  • Introduced by Paul Kanjorski (D-PA) on 4/8/08
    (Senator Kerry (D-MA) introduced companion bill
    S. 2847)
  • Amends the Federal Home Loan Bank Act to allow
    federal home loan banks to (1) invest surplus
    funds in student loan securities (2) accept
    student loans and student loan-related securities
    as collateral and (3) provide secured long-term
    advances to member banks so that they can finance
    the origination of student loans or purchase or
    finance student loan-related securities.
  • Limits the application of the Act to Federal
    Family Education Loans (FFELs) made under the
    Higher Education Act of 1965.
  • Makes the banks' authority effective for
    investments and advances made between February 1,
    2008, and two years after this Act's enactment.

14
Negotiated Rulemaking - 2007
  • Sessions
  • December 12-14, 2006
  • February 5-7, 2007
  • March 12-14, 2007
  • April 18-20, 2007
  • NPRM Published - June 12, 2007
  • Final Regulations Published November 1, 2007
  • Regulations effective July 1, 2008

15
2007 Neg Reg Topics
  • Simplification of the Deferment Process
  • Accurate and Complete Copy of a Death Certificate
  • Total and Permanent Disability (TPD) Discharge
  • NSLDS Reporting Requirements
  • Certification of Electronic Signatures on MPNs

16
More 2007 Neg Reg Topics
  • Record Retention Requirements on MPNs assigned
    to the Department
  • Maximum Loan Period
  • Prohibited Inducements
  • Frequency of Capitalization on Consolidation Loans

17
Still More
  • Loan Discharge for False Certification as a
    Result of Identity Theft
  • Preferred Lender Lists
  • CCRAA Self-implementing Items
  • Temporary Interest Rate Reduction for Undergrad
    Subsidized Stafford
  • Economic Hardship Deferment
  • Military Deferment

18
School Preferred Lender List
  • Allows school to have such a list, which
  • Cannot deny borrowers choice of lender
  • Must contain at least three unaffiliated
    lenders
  • Cannot cause any unnecessary certification delays
    for borrowers not using lender on PLL
  • Must be updated annually
  • School with a list must provide certain
    disclosures to borrowers

19
School Preferred Lender List
  • A lender is affiliated with another lender if
  • The lenders are wholly or partly owned
    subsidiaries of the same parent company
  • The lenders are owned or controlled by the same
    entity or individuals or
  • The directors, trustees, or general partners of
    one of the lenders constitute a majority of the
    persons holding similar positions with the other
    lender

20
School Preferred Lender List
  • Developing PLL
  • Disclose method/criteria for lender selection
  • Provide comparative borrower benefits offered by
    listed lenders (ED model format to be provided)
  • PLL must prominently state that use of the
    schools preferred lender not required


21
Inducements
  • Retains quid pro quo requirement
  • Provides non-exhaustive list of prohibited
    activities
  • Provides exhaustive list of permissible activities

22
Inducements
  • Regulation introduce 3 new tools for
    anti-inducement enforcement
  • Rebuttable presumption
  • Expansion of FTC Holder Rule
  • Claim/guarantor review of inducement practices


23
Prohibited Inducements
  • The activities on the prohibited list are only
    prohibited if they are tied to loans, loan
    volume, or placement on a school's preferred
    lender list since you can't have an improper
    inducement without intent.

24
Prohibited Inducements
  • Similarly, it is still okay for a bank
    participating in the FFELP to extend benefits to
    a school in connection with a product
    line/service unrelated to student-aid, as long as
    it is not tied to loans, loan volume, or
    placement on a school's preferred lender list.

25
Examples Prohibited Activities
  • Payment of points, premiums, payments or other
    inducements
  • Payments or other benefits provided to student at
    a school who acts as the lenders representative
  • Payments or other benefits to a loan solicitor or
    sales rep of a lender who visits a school to
    solicit individual borrowers

26
Examples Prohibited Activities
  • Payment to another party or any other party of
    referral or processing fees, except to comply
    with Federal or State law
  • Payment of conference or training registration,
    transportation, and lodging costs, for an
    employee of a school or school-affiliated
    organization

27
Examples Prohibited Activities
  • Payment of entertainment expenses, including
    expenses for private hospitality suites, tickets
    to shows or sporting events, meals, alcoholic
    beverages, and any lodging, rental,
    transportation, and other gratuities related to
    lender-sponsored activities for employees of a
    school or a school-affiliated organization

28
Examples Prohibited Activities
  • Staffing services to a school, except for
    services provided to participating foreign
    schools at the direction of the Secretary, as a
    third-party servicer or otherwise on more than a
    short-term, emergency basis, and which is
    non-recurring, to assist a school with financial
    aid-related functions

29
Lender Permissible Activities
  • The activities on the permitted list are
    permitted even if they are tied to loans or loan
    volume, or undertaken to obtain a PLL listing.


30
Examples Permissible Activities
  • Support of and participation in a schools or a
    guaranty agencys student aid and financial
    literacy-related outreach activities, excluding
    in-person school required entrance or exit
    counseling, as long as the name of the entity
    that developed and paid for any materials is
    provided to the participants and the lender does
    not promote its student loan or other products

31
Examples Permissible Activities
  • Meal, refreshments, and receptions that are
    reasonable in cost and scheduled in conjunction
    with training, meeting, or conference events if
    they are open to all training, meeting, or
    conference attendees
  • Items of nominal values to schools,
    school-affiliated organizations, and borrowers
    that are offered as a form of generalized
    marketing or advertising, or to create good
    will

32
Examples Permissible Activities
  • Other benefits to a borrower under a repayment
    incentive program that requires, at a minimum,
    one or more scheduled payments to receive or
    retain the benefit or under a loan forgiveness
    program for public service or other targeted
    purposes approved by the Secretary, provided
    those benefits are not marketed to secure loan
    applications or loan guarantees

33
Guarantor Permissible Activities
  • Default aversion activities approved by ED
  • Meals and refreshments in connection to
    guarantor-provided training of program
    participants and elementary, secondary, and
    postsecondary school personnel

34
Guarantor Permissible Activities
  • Travel and lodging costs to facilitate the
    attendance of school staff
  • In training or service facility tours
  • To participate in the activities of an agencys
    governing board, a standing official advisory
    committee, or in support of other official
    activities of the agency

35
E-signed Promissory Notes
  • Upon assignment to ED, guarantor must provide the
    name and location of the entity in possession of
    original e-signed MPN
  • Lender must retain e-note for 3 years after all
    loans are satisfied
  • If loan is assigned to ED, lender must cooperate
    with requests for affidavits, testimony, etc.

36
E-signed Promissory Notes
  • Contents of Affidavit
  • Steps followed by borrower in signing note (flow
    chart)
  • Screen Shots as appeared to borrower
  • Field edits other security measures to ensure
    data integrity
  • Preservation of note to ensure no alterations
  • Authentication and Electronic Signature Process
  • Timeframe for response 10 business days

37
E-signed Promissory Notes
  • Applies to all e-loans in existencenot just
    those signed after July 1, 2008
  • Screen ShotsRetain documentation and templates
    that applied for discrete periods of time
    document any changes

38
E-signed Promissory Notes
  • Requirements are for lender that created the
    original e-Note, not necessarily the current
    holder of the Note
  • Related issueGoing forward, when submitting
    claims, lenders must provide disbursement
    records. Make sure process is in place prior to
    July 1, 2008.

39
Identity Theft Discharge
  • For discharge, must be a judicial determination
    that conclusively determines that the individual
    is the victim of the crime of identity theft
    committed by a specific individual named in the
    determination
  • Court must conclude that the specific elements of
    the crime have been proven (including
    perpetrators identity and state of mind)

40
Identity Theft Discharge and FACT
Act
  • Regulations do not preempt the FACT Act
    provisions regarding ID theft.
  • Lender must suspend credit bureau reporting and
    grant forbearance (up to120 days) during
    investigation.
  • Not retroactive, but ED will take into
    consideration any prior due diligence lapses due
    to conflicts in HEA vs. FACT Act

41
Identity Theft Discharge and FACT Act
  • If loan does not qualify for discharge, but is
    unenforceable, lender must notify credit bureau,
    stop collecting interest benefits, SAP, and
    return any monies received
  • If, within 3 years of the ID theft report the
    lender receives the court order, lender may
    submit a claim and receive the interest subsidy
    and SAP that would have accrued

42
Death Discharge
  • Final rules allow guarantor to use accurate and
    complete copy of death certificate
  • Recommended trigger "Effective for death
    discharge requests filed by the lender based on
    determinations or re-determinations of eligible
    photocopies on or after July 1, 2008, unless
    implemented earlier by the lender on or after
    November 1, 2007"

43
Total and Permanent Disability Discharge
  • Requires a three-year prospective conditional
    discharge period that begins on date physician
    certifies discharge application
  • If a loan was certified prior to the date the
    physician certified the application and a loan
    disbursement is made after that date, the
    disbursement must be returned within 120 days
    from the date of the disbursement for the
    borrower to remain TPD eligible

44
Total and Permanent Disability Discharge
  • States that borrower has 90 days from date
    physician certifies application to submit it to
    loan holder
  • Provides for refund of payments made after date
    physician certifies borrowers application

45
Simplification of Deferment Process
  • Final rules allow, but not require, a holder to
    grant a deferment based on the determination of
    another loan holder.
  • Borrower still must request the deferment
  • Outstanding issue dates within or a subset

46
CCRAA Stafford Interest Rate Changes
  • Reduces fixed interest rate for undergraduate
    subsidized Stafford loans (FFELP and Direct) from
    6.8 to 3.4 over 4 years
  • 6.0 on or after 7/1/2008, and before 7/1/2009
  • 5.6 on or after 7/1/2009, and before 7/1/2010
  • 4.5 on or after 7/12010, and before 7/1/2011
  • 3.4 on or after 7/1/2011, and before 7/1/2012
  • 6.8 on or after 7/1/2012

47
CCRAA Deferment Changes
  • Economic hardship deferment (HRD)
  • Changes definition of economic hardship for
    purposes of deferment from 100 of the poverty
    line for a family of two to 150 of the poverty
    line applicable to the borrowers family size
  • Effective October 1, 2007

48
CCRAA Deferment Changes
  • Military deferment (MIL)
  • Removes 3-year limit on military deferment and
    extends deferment through 180 days following
    demobilization
  • Available to FFELP, Direct, and Perkins
    borrowers, regardless of date loan was disbursed
  • Effective October 1, 2007

49
CCRAA Deferment Changes
  • Military deferment
  • New 13-month deferment for borrower returning
    from active duty, and who was enrolled in an
    eligible institution prior to being called or
    ordered to active duty
  • Effective October 1, 2007

50
Negotiated Rulemaking 2008
  • 2008 Topics included
  • Direct Loan Public Service Loan Forgiveness
  • Income Based Repayment (IBR)
  • Conforming Economic Hardship Deferment with IBR
  • Definition of Not-For-Profit Loan Holder
  • Harmonizing HEROES Waivers with other Benefits
    Provided to Returning and Active Duty Military
  • Federal Preemption of States Laws Related to
    improper inducements
  • Final Loans Team Meeting April 14-15, 2008
  • Regulations will be effective July 1, 2009 and
    must be published in final form by November 1,
    2008

51
Income-Based Repayment
  • New repayment option available 7/1/2009 for
    borrowers experiencing partial financial
    hardship
  • Eligibility and minimum monthly payment is
    re-evaluated annually
  • Government pays the interest on qualifying
    subsidized Stafford loans for not more than 3
    years (not counting periods of Economic Hardship
    deferment)

52
Income-Based Repayment
  • The repayment period can extend beyond 10 years
    regardless of the amount of the eligible debt but
    not beyond 25 years
  • Payment application order different - to interest
    first
  • Includes a loan forgiveness provision after
    experiencing a partial financial hardship and 25
    years of eligible payments

53
Income-Based Repayment
  • Any loan amount that is cancelled may be taxable
    in the calendar year it is cancelled
  • Additional disclosure requirements
  • IBR may not always be the best/lowest repayment
    option for a borrower should consider impact of
    eligibility for an Economic Hardship deferment

54
Income-Based Repayment
  • POSSIBLE new data elements will likely need to
    track or maintain for future use
  • Minimum and maximum payment amounts
  • Unpaid accrued interest for purposes of billing
    SAP
  • 36 month counter for unpaid accrued interest on
    subsidized Stafford
  • If borrower consolidates unused portion would
    carry over with underlying loan to consolidation
    loan

55
Income-Based Repayment
  • POSSIBLE new data elements will likely need to
    track or maintain for future use (cont)
  • Start point of 25 year period and projected
    ending
  • Potential for any payment made on/after July 1,
    2009 to count toward 300 required payments
  • Calculated partial financial hardship payment of
    zero counts as eligible payment
  • Borrower permitted to pay ahead but forgiveness
    may not occur until reach 25th year

56
Income-Based Repayment
  • POSSIBLE new data elements will need to track or
    maintain for future use (cont.)
  • 25 years of payments (300 payments)
  • Payment history or counter of eligible payments
    would need to carry over to the guarantor in
    cases where loan assigned to guarantor. If
    subsequently repurchased or rehabilitated,
    information would need to flow back to lender.

57
Economic Hardship Deferment
  • POSSIBLE Change to the HRD
  • Elimination of the debt-to-income ratio
    calculation for purposes of determining
    eligibility as of 7/1/09
  • Currently borrowers are eligible for this
    deferment if their total debt is more than 20 of
    their income and if their income minus their loan
    payments leaves them with no more than 220 of
    the income considered poverty level in the U.S.
  • Big Cost ItemED estimated the 10-year cost of
    maintaining this provision at 1.1 billion

58
Public Service Loan Forgiveness
  • New loan cancellation provision for Direct Loan
    borrowers not in default who
  • Have made 120 monthly payments on an eligible
    loan starting after 10/1/2007
  • Must have been directly and full-time employed
    in public service during the entire repayment
    period
  • FFEL borrowers may consolidate into DL to get
    this benefit but ALL payments must have been in DL

59
FFELP NEG REG TEAM
  • TEAM FFELP did amazing job
  • Wanda Hall and Rob Sommers
  • Gene Hutchins and Dick George
  • Scott Giles and Phil Van Horn
  • Tom Levandowski and Walter Balmas
  • Martin Darnian and Carl Perry
  • Thanks to the TEAM FFELP Peanut Gallery as well.

60
QUESTIONS
61
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