Remember Me
forgot your password?

Students Scramble to Find Student Loans as Fall Semester Draws Near

It’s crunch time for college students trying to secure the money they need for the fall semester. But with lenders continuing to suspend their student loan programs — the count now stands at 131 federal loan lenders and 30 private loan lenders — students may find themselves challenged to locate lenders that are still offering federal or private student loans.

 

 

 

In an attempt to help lenders be able to continue making new federal student loans, the government included a provision in the Ensuring Continued Access to Student Loans Act, signed into law in May, aimed at providing capital for cash-strapped lenders.

 

 

Under this legislation, the Department of Education can buy federal college loans from lenders, thereby providing these lenders with the liquidity they need to continue funding new parent and student loans. The law specifically targets lenders who, in the current credit crunch, are unable to find investors in the secondary market willing to purchase their student loan portfolios.

 

 

 

Even with this legislation in place, however, lenders continue to find themselves forced to suspend their student loan programs. As recently as July 28, the Brazos Higher Education Service Corp., the 26th-largest originator of federal student loans in 2007, and the Massachusetts Educational Financing Authority, the largest student loan issuer to Massachusetts residents, both announced that they would no longer be able to provide either new or current borrowers with student loans.

 

 

 

As the suspensions of both federal and private student loan programs keep spreading through all types of lenders — large and small; for-profit and nonprofit; banks, non-banks, and credit unions; state loan agencies and schools-as-lenders — students and their families are finding themselves with fewer borrowing options to get the parent and student loans they need to pay the fall tuition bills that are coming due over these next few weeks.

 

 

 

Two Major Lenders the Latest Casualties of Student Loan Crisis

 

 

 

The Brazos Group, a primarily nonprofit group of higher education lending, servicing, and other financial aid companies, first announced that it would stop offering federal college loans back n March. In May, however, after the government passed the Ensuring Continued Access to Student Loans Act, Brazos once again began offering federal parent and student loans, saying that the government’s short-term liquidity plan had renewed the organization’s confidence in its ability to continue offering student loans.

 

 

 

But Brazos once again suspended its education lending program late last month, citing continued turmoil in the student loan industry.

 

 

 

Brazos Executive Vice President Ellis Tredway said his organization simply “ran out of time to get everything in place” to issue new student loans for the fall.

 

 

 

The Massachusetts Educational Financing Authority, which issued more than $500 million in college loans to 40,000 Massachusetts college students and their families last year, had already suspended its federal student loan program in April. Now, MEFA has also pulled the plug on its non-federal private loan program, which provided Massachusetts students with fixed-rate private student loans.

 

 

 

“While we continue to pursue every possible option, raising the necessary funds to offer fixed–interest rate private education loans is taking longer than originally projected and has become even more challenging,” said Tom Graf, MEFA’s executive director.

 

 

 

Students Face the Uncertainty of Switching Lenders

 

 

With over 8 million students and parents having turned to federal college loans in 2006–07, according to the College Board, the number or families that stand to be affected by the ongoing wave of lender departures this year is not unsubstantial.

 

 

Last week, financial aid officers at Texas A&M University — a school with over 54,000 students — heard from seven different lenders warning that they would no longer be able to offer federal student loans, a situation that has made more than a few borrowers uneasy.

 

 

 

Dyneche Duffield, an incoming college student headed to Houston Baptist University, is uncomfortable with the prospect of having to establish a relationship with a new lender other than her local bank, which used to offer student loans.


“I would have much rather taken out a loan there than somewhere where I didn’t know anyone,” Duffield said.

 

 

 

While students like Duffield may still be able to go directly to the Department of Education for their federal college loans or find those remaining lenders who are still offering private student loans (albeit with more stringent credit criteria that are making it harder for students to qualify), the magnitude of the problem within the student loan credit markets and how deeply it has permeated the college loan industry is alarming to many administrators and officials in higher education.

 

 

 

Kathryn Osmond, executive director of student financial services at Wellesley College in Massachusetts, finds the situation with MEFA to be particularly indicative of a long-lasting and serious problem.

 

 

“An economy that is in such a tailspin that it affects a critical agency like MEFA,” said Osmond, “is an economy that scares me.”

 

 

Jeff Mictabor

Jeff Mictabor is an enthusiast on the topic of student loan issues in the news. He has been writing for the past 10 years for a variety of education publications. He now offers his writing services on a freelance basis.

Rate this Article: 0 / 5 stars - 0 vote(s)
Print Email Re-Publish

Add new Comment



Captcha

  • Latest College and University Articles
  • More from Jeff Mictabor

Good behaviour in the classroom

By: Larry | 26/12/2009
Going to infant and junior school is all about learning, but not just learning numeracy and literacy. Until children learn how to behave appropriately in a classroom then their academic learning is often secondary and unfortunately if a child is disruptive then they can prevent other children from learning.

Career in Mass Communication and Journalism Part - 2

By: anirban das | 26/12/2009
Journalism is about finding out what is happening in the world and letting people know about it: it is both the collection and spreading of news as well as the building of public opinion.

Career in Mass Communication and Journalism Part -1

By: anirban das | 26/12/2009
Journalism is about finding out what is happening in the world and letting people know about it: it is both the collection and spreading of news as well as the building of public opinion.

Build Your Career in Journalism Field

By: mukesh | 26/12/2009
Do you want to make your career in the field? Journalism brings many career opportunities in which everybody can select his interested field to build his career. In this article, I have discussed various types of Journalism fields.

Enterprising College Students Can Earn Cash Income Very Easily If They Want To!

By: Father Time | 25/12/2009
Here are several ways that a college student can earn an income without slaving away at a minimum wage job while at school!

How to Help Your Computer to Perform at Its Best?

By: Colon Bolden | 25/12/2009
Taking care of your computer means ensuring that the hard disk is working at it optimum level. Also, your computer needs simple but regular maintenance to stay in good condition. Inside the computer, defragmenting and scanning the hard disk on a regular basis will help.

College Girls Can Earn Lots Of Money While At School!

By: Father Time | 25/12/2009
Just because you are away at school, doesn't mean that you can't earn lots of money to help pay for your education!

Custom Essays – The Art of Writing Top Quality Essays

By: Amanda Mitchell | 25/12/2009
Custom essay writing is a simple process that involves the transformation of ideas you have in mind into a paper. The main thing that counts is an idea: once you get the gist of an idea you should begin writing it down, especially when you are writing an essay.

Income-Based Repayment for Federal Student Loans

By: Jeff Mictabor | 23/11/2009 | Loans
Earlier this year, the U.S. Department of Education rolled out a new repayment option for student loan borrowers that could significantly reduce the monthly payments on your federal student loans.

Expanding Federal Regulation of Private Student Loans

By: Jeff Mictabor | 13/11/2009 | Loans
In a vote last month that fell for the most part along party lines, the House Financial Services Committee approved the creation of a Consumer Financial Protection Agency, which will expand federal oversight of nonfederal private student loans. At the same time, the committee rejected a proposal that would have included school-sponsored “gap loans” under the authority of the new CFPA.

Student Associations Lobby for Bill to Revamp Student Loans

By: Jeff Mictabor | 26/10/2009 | College & University
Student governments and organizations at colleges and universities nationwide are pushing lawmakers to pass legislation that supporters say will make acquiring a higher education more accessible and affordable.

GOP, Lobbyists Mount Criticism of Bill to Overhaul Student Loans

By: Jeff Mictabor | 06/10/2009 | Loans
The Democratic-led House of Representatives, in a 253 to 171 vote on September 17, easily passed landmark legislation that would bring an end to the long-standing Federal Family Education Loan Program (FFELP), the program initiated by the Higher Education Act of 1965 to offer college students federally guaranteed student loans via private lenders.

Pending Legislation Will Overhaul Student Loans

By: Jeff Mictabor | 29/09/2009 | Loans
With a 253 to 171 vote last week, the Democratic-led House of Representatives easily passed landmark legislation that would bring an end to the Federal Family Education Loan Program (FFELP), the program initiated by the Higher Education Act of 1965 to offer college students federally guaranteed student loans via private lenders.

Community Colleges Now Offering Four-Year Degrees

By: Jeff Mictabor | 29/07/2009 | College & University
In this still-uncertain economy that remains rife with unemployment, hundreds of thousands of out-of-work blue- and white-collar professionals, competing for scarce available jobs, find themselves faced with the need to further their training, expand their skill sets, or in some cases change career paths altogether. Many are going back to school, some to obtain their first college degree, others to get an additional or more advanced degree that could give their résumé a much-needed competitive

Obama Ushers In “Fair and Transparent” Credit Card Regulations

By: Jeff Mictabor | 16/06/2009 | Finance
In a sweeping move that aims to provide hundreds of thousands of Americans help with credit card debt, President Obama signed into law last month legislation that will put a stop to credit card companies imposing sudden rate hikes and exorbitant fees and penalties on cardholders.

New Repayment Break on Student Loans Begins July 1

By: Jeff Mictabor | 12/06/2009 | College & University
It’s not an easy time to be graduating from college with student loans. With the unemployment rate soaring toward 10 percent and the average starting salary for college graduates down 2.2 percent this year

Submit Your Articles Free: Signup
Article Categories




Use of this web site constitutes acceptance of the Terms Of Use and Privacy Policy | User published content is licensed under a Creative Commons License.
Copyright © 2005-2008 Free Articles by ArticlesBase.com, All rights reserved. (2.09, 2, w3)