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In New Jersey Student Loan Program, Even Death May Not Bring a Reprieve

  

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Via:  pj  •  8 years ago  •  17 comments

In New Jersey Student Loan Program, Even Death May Not Bring a Reprieve

In New Jersey Student Loan Program, Even Death May Not Bring a Reprieve

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The New York Times

By ANNIE WALDMAN11 hrs ago

 

Amid a haze of grief after  her son’s murder  last year, Marcia DeOliveira-Longinetti faced an endless list of tasks — helping the police gain access to Kevin’s phone and email; canceling his subscriptions, credit cards and bank accounts; and arranging his burial in New Jersey.

And then there were the college loans.

When Ms. DeOliveira-Longinetti called about his federal loans, an administrator offered condolences and assured her the remaining balance would be written off.

But she got a far different response from a New Jersey state agency that had also lent her son money.

“Please accept our condolences on your loss,” a letter from that agency, the Higher Education Student Assistance Authority, said. “After careful consideration of the information you provided, the authority has determined that your request does not meet the threshold for loan forgiveness. Monthly bill statements will continue to be sent to you.”

Ms. DeOliveira-Longinetti, who co-signed on the loans, was shocked and confused. But her experience with the authority, which runs by far the largest state-based student loan program in the country, is hardly an isolated one, an investigation by ProPublica, in collaboration with The New York Times, found.

New Jersey’s loans, which currently total $1.9 billion, are unlike those of any other government lending program for students in the country. They come with extraordinarily stringent rules that can easily lead to financial ruin. Repayments cannot be adjusted based on income, and borrowers who are unemployed or facing other financial hardships are given few breaks.

The loans also carry higher interest rates than similar federal programs. Most significant, New Jersey’s loans come with a cudgel that even the most predatory for-profit players cannot wield: the power of the state. New Jersey can garnish wages, rescind state income tax refunds, revoke professional licenses, even take away lottery winnings — all without having to get court approval.

“It’s state-sanctioned loan-sharking,” Daniel Frischberg, a bankruptcy lawyer, said. “The New Jersey program is set up so that you fail.”

The authority, which boasts in brochures that its “singular focus has always been to benefit the students we serve,” has become even more aggressive in recent years. Interviews with dozens of borrowers, who were among the tens of thousands who have turned to the program, show how the loans have unraveled lives.

The program’s regulations have destroyed families’ credit and forced them to forfeit their salaries. One college graduate declared bankruptcy at age 26 after struggling to repay his debt. The agency filed four simultaneous lawsuits against a 31-year-old paralegal after she fell behind on her payments.

Another borrower, Chris Gonzalez, could not keep up with his loans after he got non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma and was laid off by Goldman Sachs. While the federal government allowed him to suspend his payments because of hardship, New Jersey sued him, seeking $266,000 in payments, and seized a state tax refund he was owed.

One reason for the aggressive tactics is that the state depends on Wall Street investors to finance student loans through tax-exempt bonds and needs to satisfy those investors by keeping losses to a minimum.

Loan revenues also cover about  half of the agency’s administrative budget .

In 2010, the agency filed fewer than 100 suits against borrowers and their families. Last year, it filed over 1,600. (Some could result from federal loans handled by New Jersey, though such loans make up just 4 percent of the agency’s portfolio.)

The cases are handled by debt collectors, who can tack on another 30 percent in fees on top of the outstanding debt.

Marcia Karrow, the authority’s chief of staff, said that “the vast majority of these borrowers are happy with the program.” She added that New Jersey’s loans had “some of the lowest default rates” in the country. But when asked to produce the annual default rates, the agency sent ProPublica and The Times data only for students with strong credit scores, making it impossible to calculate the overall rate.

A spokesman for Gov. Chris Christie said the governor did not control the authority and declined to respond to questions about the loan program. But Mr. Christie, a Republican, appointed its executive director,  Gabrielle Charette ; he also has the power to appoint at least 12 of the agency’s 18 board members and can veto any action taken by the board.

Besides administering the loan program, the authority provides financial aid counseling, conducting hundreds of financial aid nights at New Jersey high schools, where it offers advice about paying for college, including pitching its own loans.

Ms. DeOliveira-Longinetti, who emigrated from Brazil and had long worked as a nanny while raising her son as a single mother, always knew that paying for his college education would be a challenge. Even after marrying her husband when Kevin DeOliveira was in middle school, she knew that their combined income would not be enough to cover the costs. A friend told her about New Jersey’s program. That, along with a combination of scholarships, grants and other loans, allowed Mr. DeOliveira to enroll at the University of Vermont.

Since her son’s murder, Ms. DeOliveira-Longinetti has made 18 payments to New Jersey. Paying $180 per month, she has about 92 to go.

“We’re not going to be poor because of this,” she said. “But every time I have to pay this thing, I think in my head, this is so unfair.”

A Different Path

For decades, states served as middlemen for federal student loans. Most of the loans were made by banks and were handled and backed by regional and state-based agencies as well as by the federal government. The arrangement was unwieldy, expensive and marked by scandal.

After Pennsylvania’s student loan agency lost a public records lawsuit in 2007, documents revealed that the agency had spent nearly $1 million on things like  fly-fishing, facials and falconry lessons .

That same year, New Jersey’s agency was caught in what amounted to a kickback scheme. The state attorney general found that the agency had  improperly pushed  one company’s loans in exchange for annual payments of $2.2 million. A subsequent investigation by the state’s inspector general found that the agency was in “ disarray .”

In 2010, Congress and the Obama administration decided to effectively eliminate the role of state agencies by having only the federal government lend directly to students.

Some states, like California,  decided to downsize  and transferred their federal loan portfolios. Others, such as Pennsylvania,  won contracts  from the federal government to service debt from the federal loan program.

New Jersey chose a different path. In the years leading up to the end of the federal program, New Jersey sharply expanded its loan program, slowly replacing the federal loans it once handled  with state loans . From 2005 to 2010, loans from the agency nearly tripled, to  $343 million per year . Since then, the agency has reduced its loans by half, but its outstanding portfolio has remained roughly the same, about $2 billion.

Ms. Karrow said the growth of New Jersey’s program was simply a result of both the increasing number of students and the rising cost of tuition. But in fact, college enrollment and tuition have not grown as rapidly as the program’s size.

While other states have similar loan programs, New Jersey’s stands apart, for both its size and its onerous terms.

Massachusetts, running the next-largest program, with  $1.3 billion in outstanding loans , automatically cancels debt if a borrower dies or becomes disabled, something many other states also do. The program of the third-largest state lender, Texas, is half the size of New Jersey’s. And Texas offers  a flat interest rate , a modest 4.5 percent, while New Jersey’s rates can reach nearly  8 percent . Some other state loan programs have more flexible repayment options — Rhode Island, for example, offers  income-based repayment .

New Jersey, meanwhile,  encourages students to buy life insurance  in case they die to help co-signers repay. As  an agency pamphlet  cautions, “Are you prepared for the unthinkable?”

The agency, Ms. Karrow said, treats each instance of a deceased borrower case by case and tries to be compassionate, but, she added, “we must also meet our fiduciary duty to our bondholders.”

When consumer lawyers protested the program’s onerous conditions at a 2014 agency meeting, the agency, according to minutes from the session, said that giving borrowers a break would make the bonds sold to finance loans “ less attractive to the ratings agencies and investors .”

Indeed, in a recent bond assessment, the credit rating agency Moody’s cited the authority’s “administrative wage garnishing, which  it uses aggressively ,” for “significantly higher collections” compared with other programs.

New Jersey rule  adopted in 1998 allows the authority to give borrowers in default a second chance by allowing them to become current on their account through on-time payments. But the agency has never granted a reprieve and instead cuts off contact with borrowers, leaving them at the mercy of collection firms.

Ms. Karrow said  federal regulations  prohibited the agency from offering such relief, but student loan experts disputed that assertion.

“There is nothing in the federal law or regulations that prohibits them from offering private loan rehabilitation, ” Mark Kantrowitz, a financial-aid expert, said.

The combination of a lack of flexibility, an unwillingness to discharge loans and the state’s power to seize wages has resulted in even “more intractable problems for our clients than predatory mortgages, deceptive car loans or illegal internet payday lending,” said David McMillin, a lawyer with Legal Services of New Jersey, a nonprofit that provides free legal assistance to low-income state residents. “Many borrowers and co-signers find themselves facing a lifetime of debt problems.”

‘As Aggressive as Possible’

Given the lack of options, some New Jersey borrowers have resorted to declaring bankruptcy, even though, as is true of all student loans, their debt is rarely canceled. Declaring bankruptcy also makes it virtually impossible to secure a mortgage, lease a car or even use credit cards for years. But for New Jersey borrowers, such an extreme step at least offers a way to gain manageable monthly payment terms.

As a co-signer, Tracey Timony struggled to help pay off her daughter’s $140,000 in loans. Though the Higher Education Student Assistance Authority can seize wages or tax returns without court approval, it must secure a judgment to dip into borrowers’ bank accounts or place liens on their property. Instead of garnishing Ms. Timony’s wages, New Jersey sued her after her daughter defaulted.

“The agency is looking to put as much pressure on the borrower and be as aggressive as possible, and the way that you do that is you go after everybody that is liable,” Jennifer Weil, a New Jersey student debt lawyer, said. “In case the garnishment doesn’t work, a judgment will help put pressure on the parents.”

Ms. Timony declared bankruptcy and got monthly debt payments that will rise no higher than about $1,000 a month, far less than what the agency had demanded.

“I never thought that sending my daughter to college would ruin our lives,” Ms. Timony said.

Few have felt the weight of the agency’s powers more than Mr. Gonzalez, the college graduate who was sued after receiving a diagnosis of cancer and losing his job.

He had borrowed the maximum he could in federal loans — a total of about $30,000 for five years — and paid for most of his tuition with loans from New Jersey.

“I felt so comfortable because it was the State of New Jersey,” Mr. Gonzalez said. “It’s the state, my government, trying to help me out and achieve my American dream. It turns out they were the worst ones.”

Over five years, he took out over $180,000 in state loans. Unlike most other states, New Jersey does not impose a strict cap on loans to discourage overborrowing. One family, according to a recent state audit of the agency, took out over  $800,000 in loans , more than five times the value of its home.

Mr. Gonzalez’s loans had a relatively high interest rate — on average about 7.5 percent. At the time it seemed like a good investment. He graduated with an engineering degree from Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University in Florida and landed a job on Wall Street working as a programmer for Goldman Sachs.

But a few months after he started, unusual rashes began to appear on his legs and underarms. He learned he had non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma and started radiation therapy.

After three years of cancer treatments, Mr. Gonzalez was also laid off.

He needed to take care of his student loans. The federal government and his private lenders all deferred his debt for at least six months.

Mr. Gonzalez expected New Jersey to do the same, but the agency refused, requiring him to pay at least $500 a month. With unemployment checks as his only income and burdened by continuing health expenses, it was too much for him.

He made no payments while the agency reviewed his case. In June 2014, Mr. Gonzalez moved to Florida to lower his cost of living. His health slowly improved and he started his own company, developing technology for small businesses. In his first year, he made just $26,000, but he started to pay back his federal and private bank loans.

On May 8, 2015, after months of hearing nothing, he received an email from New Jersey: His deferral request had been denied and his loan was being sent to a collection agency.

“Unfortunately, because of how the loan originated, the authority is not in a position to offer forbearance or relief,” Robert Laird, a program officer at the loan agency, said in the email.

Terrified by what a default would mean for his credit rating, Mr. Gonzalez told the agency that he would stop paying for health insurance and use the money — $200 per month — to repay the loans.

The agency rejected the offer. “In the event that your doctor declares you total and permanently disabled, please keep me posted,” Mr. Laird told Mr. Gonzalez in an email.

One day in April, a stranger rang Mr. Gonzalez’s doorbell.

“Chris Gonzalez?” he asked. Mr. Gonzalez nodded. “You’ve been served with a lawsuit from the New Jersey Higher Education Student Assistance Authority.”

The suit demanded over $260,000 — about $188,000 for the original loans, $34,000 in interest, and $44,000 to cover the fees of a collection agency’s lawyer.

Even if his business improves, Mr. Gonzalez has no idea how he will afford his ballooning payments.

 

“I don’t have money,” he said. “I am spending it all on my debt.”

http://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/in-new-jersey-student-loan-program-even-death-may-not-bring-a-reprieve/ar-AAi0M0N?li=BBnbcA1


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PJ
Masters Quiet
link   seeder  PJ    8 years ago

New Jersey rule  adopted in 1998 allows the authority to give borrowers in default a second chance by allowing them to become current on their account through on-time payments. But the agency has never granted a reprieve and instead cuts off contact with borrowers, leaving them at the mercy of collection firms.

Ran across this story and cannot believe that this is happening.  Crazy.....

 
 
 
Kavika
Professor Principal
link   Kavika     8 years ago

Sounds like a giant scam to me....Follow the money, and see who is getting paid off.

 
 
 
PJ
Masters Quiet
link   seeder  PJ  replied to  Kavika   8 years ago

Good morning Kavika - Happy 4th!  

Something certainly doesn't seem completely on the level.  It doesn't seem like it's a "State" program.  Unless they are selling their list to the highest bidder to dump their delinquent accounts but it doesn't seem like that is what's going on. 

 
 
 
Cerenkov
Professor Silent
link   Cerenkov    8 years ago

I don't understand the outrage. If you sign or cosign a loan, you are promising to pay it back, no matter the circumstances. 

 
 
 
Hal A. Lujah
Professor Guide
link   Hal A. Lujah  replied to  Cerenkov   8 years ago

Well, if death shouldn't be considered as an extraordinary circumstance, then why would anyone ever consign for anyone?  What a regressive attitude.

 
 
 
Cerenkov
Professor Silent
link   Cerenkov  replied to  Hal A. Lujah   8 years ago

If she cosigned a car loan for her son, do you think the bank would wright it off? What an ignorant attitude.

 
 
 
Hal A. Lujah
Professor Guide
link   Hal A. Lujah  replied to  Cerenkov   8 years ago

It is a given that a certain small percentage of loan recipients will meet a very unfortunate end before the loan can be repaid.  It is cold and inhuman for the system to allow for the families of these folks to endure extensive additional financial grief, rather than absorb the relatively minor expense.  Your response is that of the quintessential, cold hearted conservative. 

 
 
 
PJ
Masters Quiet
link   seeder  PJ  replied to  Hal A. Lujah   8 years ago

Sadly, things aren't so black and white but for some it boils down to money.  Crazy, crazy, crazy  

 
 
 
ArkansasHermit
Freshman Silent
link   ArkansasHermit  replied to  PJ   8 years ago

Have to agree with Cerenkov on this one Hal.  Anyone who signs as a guarantor of a loan is responsible for said loan.

Credit card, Home, Auto or Student loans doesn't really matter.  You sign, You owe, (unless you're the one that's dead, of course).

It would be nice if the death of a signer negated the loan obligation, just like it would be nice if our system had the, "Every seven years, forgive all debts", that the bible mentions but that's not the system we live under.

When my dad died he left about $80K in credit card cash loan debts behind.  Mom only knew about ONE of the 14 credit cards he had used, the one she was a co-owner of.  Took me over 5 years to clean up all that debt.  The card mom co-signed on I was only able to get a 20% settlement on.  She paid 80% of the balance due & closed out the card.  On the cards she wasn't on, two took a 10 Cents on the dollar, (around $500), to settle and the others got nothing. 

Because those debts kept getting sold to lower and lower bottom feeding collectors I was still fielding calls about them every 8 months or so, for years.

The only reason I was able to get a settlement on the one she co-signed was because I was able to convince them that 80 cents on the dollar was all this poor, old, widow women would be able to afford.

Had a similar problem with the wife's car. 

Two weeks before she was diagnosed we had bought her a new car.  Learning she was not likely to live another year and not knowing how expensive her treatments could become, I went back to the dealer and tried to sell them back the car. 

The owner of the dealership would not buy the car back.  Instead, (in one of those random acts of humanity that sometimes happen), he added an insurance policy to our paperwork that would pay the car off after her death and backdated it to match the original sales date.

I was a co-signer on the car note and fully responsible for it's payment, as my wife would have been if I had been the one that died first.

 
 
 
Hal A. Lujah
Professor Guide
link   Hal A. Lujah  replied to  ArkansasHermit   8 years ago

Well, the difference is that a college education is not something that is transferable.  It has no residual value once the student or graduate is dead.  You can sell a car, but a $150,000 education is a burden that could absolutely ruin a parent who is heading into retirement. I understand that by cosigning, the cosigner of an educational loan is accepting the potential liability of default, but death is something different.  Imagine telling your kid that you would cosign for their education, but you're afraid they might die so they will just have to go through life without an education.  In other words, I trust you to repay this loan, but I don't trust you to not be struck by lightning.

 
 
 
ArkansasHermit
Freshman Silent
link   ArkansasHermit  replied to  Hal A. Lujah   8 years ago

Imagine telling your kid that you would cosign for their education, but you're afraid they might die so they will just have to go through life without an education.

 

Oh I completely agree with you on the morality, (or lack there of), of this situation Hal but I also agree with Cerenkov as to the reality of things as they are today.

Just another good reason to work toward free pre-K through 2 or 4 years post High school vocational training/education. 

 
 
 
PJ
Masters Quiet
link   seeder  PJ  replied to  ArkansasHermit   8 years ago

Hi AH - I'm not opposed to meeting financial requirements but this seems a bit extreme.  My credit score is sacred to me.  I've tried to instill that in my boys.  If you have great credit you can do almost anything.  The system is rigged to cut breaks to those who don't need the breaks as much as others but I'm not going to complain.  It's allowed me to purchase quite a bit including cars with free financing.  But for others who are reaching for that American dream and trying to improve their lot in life it seems as though there are some that take advantage of that dream and wait in the wings like vultures watching for a sign of weakness.  They prey are the less fortunate.  If I was ever in that type of situation I would rather invest in a lawyer than in paying off the debt of a loved one that passed away.  

 

Oh - Happy 4th!

 
 
 
PJ
Masters Quiet
link   seeder  PJ  replied to  Hal A. Lujah   8 years ago

Happy 4th Hal!  I'm not opposed to meeting one's obligations but as you say there has to be some common sense and compassion applied here.  

 
 
 
Hal A. Lujah
Professor Guide
link   Hal A. Lujah  replied to  PJ   8 years ago

I agree, and happy 4th yo you as well!  It's another long day of travel for me, unfortunately.

 

 
 
 
PJ
Masters Quiet
link   seeder  PJ  replied to  Hal A. Lujah   8 years ago

I was going to ask whether you were still on the road.  Sounds like you're heading back home though because you seem less excited about being on the road.  You start your new job soon if I'm remembering correctly.  My husband and I are heading out at the end of the week for a little R&R.  Safe travels today.

 
 

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