Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Federal Update Dan Madzelan Office of Postsecondary Education Jeff Baker Federal Student Aid.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Federal Update Dan Madzelan Office of Postsecondary Education Jeff Baker Federal Student Aid."— Presentation transcript:

1 Federal Update Dan Madzelan Office of Postsecondary Education Jeff Baker Federal Student Aid

2 Program Appropriations Higher Education Legislation Title IV Program Regulations

3 Title IV Program Budgets Appropriations * President's FY 2007 Budget Submission

4 Title IV Program Budgets Aid Available * President's FY 2007 Budget Submission

5 Title IV Program Budgets Status of Appropriations * Committee-passed Bills

6 Title IV Program Budget Priorities Administration Pell Grants –Eliminate Shortfall –Mandate Annual Increases –Establish $1,000 State Scholars Award Congress Pell Grants –Shortfall Eliminated AC/SMART Grants –Mandatory Spending Authorized: $4.53 Billion over 5 Years

7 Title IV Program Budget Priorities Administration Make Active Duty Military Independent Clarify FAFSA “Drug Question” Revise CB Formulas Eliminate/Recall Perkins Congress Active Duty Military are Independent Applies to those in- school and receiving aid Not Addressed

8 Loan Program Budget Priorities Administration Create 25 basis point Loan Holder Fee Reduce insurance to 95% Eliminate special SAP on tax-exempt financings Not proposed Congress Recapture excess interest earnings Lender insurance reduced to 97% Special SAP largely eliminated Phase-out origination fees

9 Legislation Higher Education Reconciliation Act of 2005 Emergency Supplemental Appropriations Act for Defense, the Global War on Terror, and Hurricane Recovery, 2006 Second Continuing Resolution, 2007 –Through December 8, 2006 Third Higher Education Extension Act of 2006 –Through June 30, 2007

10 Third Higher Education Extension Act New restrictions on Eligible Lender Trustee arrangements with Postsecondary Institutions Definition of Hispanic-Serving Institution Clarification of GA Account Maintenance Fees New Loan Discharge for Survivors of 9/11 Victims

11 Hurricane Help for Institutions Hurricane Education Recovery Act –$95 Million to 18 Louisiana Institutions –$95 Million to 38 Mississippi Institutions –$10 Million to 99 U.S. Institutions –$30 Million “Retained” by 18 Gulf Institutions Higher Education Recovery Awards –$50 Million to 41 Gulf Institutions Natural Disaster Student Aid Fairness Act –$28 Million Reallocated to 29 Campus-Based Program Institutions

12 Regulations Interim Final Regulations – Comments Invited –ACG/SMART Grants – July 3, 2006 –Other HERA Issues – Aug. 9, 2006 Final Regulations –ACG/SMART Grants – Nov. 1, 2006 –Other HERA Issues – Nov. 1, 2006 –New September 11-Related Discharges – Dec. 29, 2006

13 Regulations Negotiated Rulemaking for 2008-2009 and Beyond Tentative Calendar – Sessions: Dec. 2006, Feb. and March 2007 – NPRM: May 2007 – Comments:July 2007 – Final Rule:Nov. 1, 2007 – Effective Date:July 1, 2008 with possible early implementation Negotiated Rulemaking Website: http://www.ed.gov/policy/highered/reg/hearulemaking/2007/nr.html

14 FY 2004 FFEL and Direct Loan Default Rates

15 National Student Loan Default Rates

16 Default Rates by Sector School TypeFY 2002FY 2003FY 2004 Public – 2 Year8.5%7.6%8.3% Public – 4 Year4.0%3.3%3.6% Private – 2 Year6.1%6.3%7.4.% Private – 4 Year3.1%2.6%2.9% Proprietary8.7%7.3%8.8% Foreign2.0%1.8%1.5% National Rate5.2%4.5%5.1%

17 Higher Education Reconciliation Act of 2005 Enacted: February 8, 2006

18 Institutional and Program Eligibility Weeks in academic year for clock-hour programs reduced to 26 50% rules do not apply to telecommunications Programs of distance education must be specifically accredited Short-term telecommunications programs are eligible Provision for programs using assessment to measure progress

19 FFEL and Direct Loans Extends eligibility for PLUS Loans to graduate and professional students –Eligibility criteria is the same as for a parent, including credit checks and no in-school status. Student would be eligible for an in- school deferment –Student must file FAFSA –Effective for any loan certified or originated on or after July 1, 2006 PLUS Loan Eligibility to Graduate Students

20 FFEL and Direct Loans Increases annual base loan limits for: –First-year students from $2,625 to $3,500 –Second-year students from $3,500 to $4,500 Increases annual additional unsubsidized for: –Graduate students to $12,000 –Prep for Grad Program to $7,000 –Teacher Certification to $7,000 – Effective for loans first disbursed on or after July 1, 2007 Aggregate loan limits are not increased Annual Loan Limits

21 FFEL and Direct Loans First disbursement of loan Loan can be certified/originated prior to July Loan period must either begin on or after July 1 or include July 1 (cross-over period) If loan period begins before July 1: –Delay certification/origination –Delay first disbursement until July 1 or later –Certify/Originate another separate loan for the increased amount Annual Loan Limits Loans first disbursed on or after July 1, 2007

22 FFEL and Direct Loans Fixed rate of 6.8% for new Stafford loans first disbursed or or after July 1, 2006 Fixed rate of 8.5% for new FFEL PLUS loans first disbursed or or after July 1, 2006 Fixed rate of 7.9% for new Direct Loan PLUS loans first disbursed or or after July 1, 2006 Interest Rates for New Loans

23 FFEL and Direct Loans Phased reduction of the four-percent Direct Loan fee to one percent Phased reduction of the three-percent FFEL origination fee to zero Requires that the one-percent FFEL default fee be deposited into the federal fund of the FFEL guaranty agency. Requires the agency to either deduct from loan proceeds or pay from non-federal sources Stafford Loan Fees

24 FFEL and Direct Loans Generally no re-consolidation of a single consolidation loan FFEL loans consolidated into Direct only if borrower certifies unable to obtain a FFEL consolidation loan Eliminates in-school consolidation in Direct Loans and “early conversion to repayment” consolidation in FFEL Eliminates joint consolidations Consolidation Loans

25 FFEL and Direct Loans An institution with cohort default rates of less than 10 percent for the three most recent years is exempted from the requirement that FFEL and Direct Loans: –Be issued in at least two disbursements for one-term loans –Be delayed for 30 days for first-time students Low Default Rate Disbursement Waivers

26 FFEL and Direct Loans Permanently and retroactively extends the authorization of the increased loan forgiveness of $17,500 for "highly qualified" math, science and special education teachers at qualified low- income schools –Effective on date of enactment, retroactive to October 1, 2005 Teacher Loan Forgiveness

27 FFEL, Direct and Perkins Loans Provides for a military deferment of up to three years for FFEL, Direct and Perkins Loans that were first disbursed on or after July 1, 2001. Includes definitions of “active duty” Active Duty Military Deferment

28 Cost Of Attendance Cost of Attendance (COA) for less than half-time students may include room and board costs, at school’s option Cost of Attendance may include, at school’s option, the one-time cost of obtaining the first professional license or certification

29 Calculation Of EFC - 2006-2007 Simplified Needs Test and Auto Zero EFC Increases the threshold to $20,000 under which a family would automatically have an EFC of zero Eliminates consideration of dependent student’s tax return for both SNT and Auto Zero EFC Tax return alternative if family received benefits from a federal means-tested benefits program

30 Calculation Of EFC - 2006-2007 Treats all 529 Pre-Paid and Tuition Savings Plans as assets of the owner, unless the owner is the dependent student Excludes small businesses from assets Adds active duty military to the criteria that makes a student independent Other EFC Changes

31 Calculation Of EFC - 2007-2008 Increases Income-Protection Allowances Decreases Asset Assessment Rates Other EFC Changes

32 Drug Conviction Provides that an applicant loses eligibility for Title IV aid only if the drug-related offense for which he or she was convicted occurred while the student was receiving Title IV aid

33 Return Of Title IV Aid (R2T4) Specifies that scheduled clock hours are used to determine earned aid for clock- hour programs Limits a grant overpayment due from a student to the amount by which the original overpayment amount exceeds half of the total grant funds received by the student

34 A Couple of Other Issues

35 Preferred Lenders Preferred Lenders Lists are allowed No Automatic Referrals Must process any loan request made by a student or parent regardless of lender May not have unreasonable delays Publications, scripts and staff training should comply Violations could bring sanctions Does not apply to FFEL/Direct Loan choice

36 Alternative Loans Alternative loans must be included as “estimated financial assistance” if enrollment is a condition for the loan –Does not matter where loan proceeds are sent or whether school certified enrollment –May replace EFC –Think about it like an outside scholarship

37 More ACG/National SMART

38 ACG/National SMART NSLDS Reporting December 16 – Reporting to COD Begins December 17 – COD to NSLDS December 17 – NSLDS FAP Access January 1 – 2007-08 ISIRs include 2006-07 ACG/SMART disbursements January 1 – Transfer Monitoring includes 2006-07 ACG/SMART disbursements –Will not include ACG/SMART if previously reported on ISIR

39 ACG/National SMART Determining Enrollment Status Initial Calculation – Enrollment status determined at time of initial award calculation –Enrollment status could be different than Pell Recalculation – Must use same recalculation policy (e.g., recalculation date, census date) that is used for Pell Grants

40 ACG/National SMART Late Disbursements and R2T4 May make late disbursement even if eligibility not determined before student no longer enrolled –Note regulatory time limits for late disbursements Included in R2T4 as “aid that could have been disbursed” as long as eligibility is determined before R2T4 calculation –Could result in post-withdrawal disbursement

41 National SMART Designated Majors Must be designated with one of the approved “Classification of Instructional Program” codes (CIP Codes)

42 ACG/National SMART Academic Year Progression Basic Requirement – Academic year progression based on all credits earned in any ACG/SMART eligible program –Current Institution’s Credits – All credits earned –Transfer Institution’s Credits – Only credits accepted by current institution –Regardless of application to student’s current program

43 ACG/National SMART Transfer Students - GPA Upon transfer, the new institution must calculate GPA using the grades from all coursework accepted from prior institution(s) Once student has GPA at new institution, use new institution’s GPA

44 ACG/National SMART Remedial Coursework Enrollment Status – Use credits or equivalent Academic Year Progression – Institutional policy GPA - Institutional policy


Download ppt "Federal Update Dan Madzelan Office of Postsecondary Education Jeff Baker Federal Student Aid."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google