The following statement was submitted by New York State Attorney General Eric Schneiderman.
When
students go to college, it's because they want a better life. Most New
Yorkers can only afford it by taking on loans. For decades, that bargain
paid off, with graduates paying off modest debt to make their
aspirations a reality.
But
today, the average student debt for New York borrowers is over $30,000.
Out of school, they're putting their paychecks toward paying off
interest rather than starting families, buying homes, and starting
businesses. And some of the nation's largest student loan companies are
worsening the crisis by abusing the system to force borrowers to pay
more than they have to, driving the most vulnerable into default.
I won’t allow a generation of New Yorkers to get victimized by the very system that was created to help them get ahead. I've
directed my office to aggressively pursue fraud and abuse in the
student loan industry, and we are pressing ahead at full speed.
First, we're cracking down on predatory for-profit colleges and the loan servicers who enable them. Last
week, I announced a settlement with Aequitas Capital Management, a
student loan company that schemed with the now-bankrupt Corinthian
Colleges chain to saddle New Yorkers, mostly in Rochester, with loans
they could never afford. Hundreds of borrowers will receive full
discharges of their debt, with an average of $6000 to $7000 in relief. And
later this month, after a major investigation of misleading claims made
by DeVry University, hundreds more students across New York State will
get an average of $2800 in restitution.
Second, we're examining potential abuses in student debt collection. Last
month, my office opened an inquiry into the collection practices of the
National Collegiate Student Loan Trusts, which hold over 800,000
private student loans. As the New York Times recently reported, the
company is under scrutiny for allegedly pursuing cases against students
it says have fallen behind on their student loans--and then failing to
produce paperwork proving that they have the right to collect. We're
going to find out whether New York students have been targeted and
defrauded.
Third, we're holding the federal government to its legal duty to protect students. This
past June, just before a federal rule was set to go into effect that
would protect students from abuse and make it easier for defrauded
borrowers to pursue debt forgiveness, Education Secretary Betsy DeVos
decided it was more important to protect predatory colleges from
lawsuits. Secretary DeVos put a hold on the rule and called it a
"regulatory reset." Weeks later, I joined with 18 fellow Attorneys
General to sue Secretary DeVos and the Department of Education to get them to end their illegal delay.
It's
important for New York to step up. When a student loan company breaks
the law and misleads thousands of students into taking on loans they
can't afford, that company should be held accountable.
In the months ahead, I will continue doing exactly that.
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