By G5global on Monday, March 21st, 2022 in Indiana_Holland payday loans. No Comments
The widespread burden of educators’ college debt greatly impacts the way many educators live, NEA research found. Many are struggling to pay basic bills, including rent and food.
Making matters worse, the promise of federal Public Service Loan Forgiveness, which is supposed to forgive educators’ federal student loan balance after 10 years of payments, has gone unfulfilled. Ninety-eight percent of applicants have been rejected for reasons that often don’t make any sense to them.
No technicalities, no loopholes, just cancel the debt, NEA President Becky Pringle told Education Secretary Miguel Cardona earlier this year. That what educators and other public-service workers were promised, and that’s what they deserve… It is simply the right thing to do.
NEA’s report found that no segment of educators is immune from the burden of student loan debt-and that this crisis affects their recruitment, retainment, and well-being.
This week, U.S. Senator Elizabeth Warren recognized NEA’s findings, calling it a powerful report that “drives home what educators already know-student debt has become a national crisis.” The numbers knocked her over, she said.
The answer to educators’ college debt was supposed to be the federal Public Service Loan Forgiveness program. But the program has been plagued by mismanagement by the Department of Education’s loan servicers, which have grown rich on taxpayers’ dollars. Since 2017, when borrowers first became eligible for forgiveness, 98 percent of applicants have been denied.
In reality, it’s probably even worse. Many more educators have never bothered to apply, says Pringle, they have simply given up because the system is so broken.
NEA led a coalition of labor unions, representing more than 10 million public-service workers, asking the Biden administration to immediately cancel the cumulative debt of public-service workers who have served their communities for at least 10 years.
Sukley, who borrowed to pay her dual master’s in special education and reading, consolidated her loans a few years ago, so that she could get into an income-based repayment program. She had no idea-because her loan servicer didn’t tell her-that her pre-consolidation payments wouldn’t count toward PSLF.
“I feel like I followed all the rules. I’ve been teaching for 10 years and paying for 10 years,” says Sukley. “I consolidated to get my payment lower because-let’s face it-I’m a teacher and I don’t make a lot of money.”
It doesn’t have to be this way. In April, NEA led a coalition of labor unions, representing more than 10 million public-service workers, asking the Biden administration to immediately cancel the cumulative debt of public-service workers who have served their communities for at least 10 years. For all other borrowers, NEA has urged cancellation of $50,000 per borrower. After cancelation, the administration can focus on fixing PSLF, NEA urged.
“I didn’t get into the teaching for the money. Let’s be honest. I did it for the kids and because I love helping them learn,” says Sukley, who teaches special education. But the debt is an enormous burden on her and her family-she’d love to take her 10-year-old twins on the first vacation of their lives-and she also worries about the implications for her profession.
We can make sure students don’t have to choose between basic living expenses or their education, and that families who do attend college are not forever weighed down by a lifetime of crushing student debt. Join us: ask Secretary Cardona to cancel the student debt of longtime public service workers, and $50,000 in student debt for all other federal loans.
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