Student loans: Notoriously troubled public servant loan forgiveness program to receive overhaul

The Education Department (ED) is rolling out a series of major changes to a notoriously troubled Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF) program for student loan borrowers in public service.

“Borrowers who devote a decade of their lives to public service should be able to rely on the promise of Public Service Loan Forgiveness," Secretary of Education Miguel Cardona said in a press release. "The system has not delivered on that promise to date, but that is about to change for many borrowers who have served their communities and their country."

The PSLF program, created by Congress in 2007, enables government and non-profit employees with federally-backed student loans to apply for forgiveness after proof of 120 monthly payments under a qualifying repayment plan.

Yahoo Finance recently detailed the immense difficulties one professor faced while navigating the system over 12 years before ultimately receiving debt cancellation this year. A bipartisan bill introduced in April 2021 aimed at fixing the PSLF program specifically for members of the military.

Firefighter hand crews put out hot spots near rustic mountain cabin homes on a hillside at the Dixie Fire, in Twain, California on July 26, 2021. - After battling increasingly large and deadly wildfires non-stop for weeks, and with no respite in sight, firefighters in California are admitting they are burnt out.
Firefighter hand crews put out hot spots near rustic mountain cabin homes on a hillside at the Dixie Fire, in Twain, California on July 26, 2021. (Photo by Robyn Beck / AFP) · ROBYN BECK via Getty Images

“Teachers, nurses, first responders, service members, and so many public service workers have had our back especially amid the challenges of the pandemic," Cardona's statement added. "Today, the Biden administration is showing that we have their backs, too.”

On a press call on Tuesday night, an agency official asserted that more than 550,000 borrowers "will be helped by receiving some automatic progress toward forgiveness through the PSLF program," adding that the agency expects more borrowers to qualify in the following months.

According to ED, "just over 16,000 borrowers have ever received forgiveness under PSLF prior to this action."

The announcement was welcomed by advocates, who have spent years calling for an overhaul.

"What you see are borrowers who have done everything right ... only to run into this buzzsaw of red tape," Seth Frotman, a former student loan ombudsman at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) and current executive director at the Student Borrower Protection Center (SBPC), a D.C.-based advocacy group, told Yahoo Finance Live (video above). "It's just tragic when you hear these stories."

Responding to the announcement, Frotman added in a statement that the "Biden administration is taking a critical step towards alleviating that burden for our public service workers. ... President Biden and Secretary Cardona have stepped up. With the stroke of a pen, they are improving the lives of hard-working families across the country and showing this administration’s commitment to repairing the broken student loan system.”