Student Loan Payments Have Resumed, but the Fight for Cancellation Isn’t Over

Politics

/

StudentNation

/
October 9, 2023

Student Loan Payments Have Resumed, but the Fight for Cancellation Isn’t Over

With Biden’s plan blocked by SCOTUS, borrowers find themselves closer to reaching $2 trillion of student debt. Now more than ever, we need to end this crisis.

Ad Policy

Student loan cancellation advocates rally outside of the Supreme Court Building in June 2023.

(Kent Nishimura / Getty)

Earlier this summer, when the Supreme Court struck down President Biden’s plan to cancel student debt, millions of Americans’ hopes were dashed. Close to 20 million borrowers would have received full cancellation while others would have seen a significant reduction in their balances.

This story was produced for StudentNation, a program of the Nation Fund for Independent Journalism, which is dedicated to highlighting the best of student journalism. For more Student Nation, check out our archive or learn more about the program here. StudentNation is made possible through generous funding from The Puffin Foundation. If you’re a student and you have an article idea, please send pitches and questions to [email protected]

Instead, after three years of paused payments during the Covid-19 pandemic, student loan borrowers began receiving their bills this month. With another expense being added to their plate, many borrowers are concerned that student loans—coupled with the rising cost of living and inflation—will compromise their chances at a decent life. “It took me eight years from graduating to get a job that allowed me to feel financially stable,” said Joseph Cruz, a borrower from Oregon, “and 10 months into that job, I am no longer feeling as stable.”

With borrowers owing over $1.7 trillion in debt, these stories are far too common. “After starting graduate school this semester, I am running low on savings. The price of gas and inflation are also tightening my budget, plus I just learned that I will have to move in December, which will be a lot of money in terms of applications and deposits,” said Miranda Lopez, a student loan borrower in Arizona. “Payments will be taking money that I would have been putting into savings.”

In the past few months, we’ve seen a serious uptick of e-mails, phone calls, and folks reaching out with questions about their loans, as borrowers nationwide feel increasingly confused and overwhelmed. But our fight for student debt cancellation is not over. This month, the Biden administration canceled an additional $9 billion in student loans for 125,000 borrowers and announced a Plan B to keep widespread student debt cancellation possible, the process—known as negotiated rulemaking, which will take place later this month—is lengthy and uncertain, but still keeps hope alive.

More recently, the Department of Education announced new programs to support borrowers as payments resume. Debtors who cannot make a monthly payment—or don’t want to—can take advantage of the new “On-Ramp to Repayment” program that provides borrowers with a 12-month grace period, preventing them from default.

The new Saving on a Valuable Education plan—which can help lower borrowers’ monthly payments—will take effect in two phases, but borrowers can begin applying now. By next July, they’ll start seeing additional benefits, such as payments being cut in half for borrowers with undergraduate loans, and total debt cancellation for borrowers who have original balances of $12,000 and have been in repayment for 10 years. All federal student loans— except for Parent PLUS—are eligible for the SAVE Plan. In the meantime, the Student Debt Crisis Center will continue fighting for all loan types to be considered eligible for relief.

Each day, borrowers in the US find themselves closer to reaching $2 trillion of student debt. Now more than ever, we need more programs, more support, more empathy, and more understanding of the broad economic benefits that would result from an end to the student debt crisis.

Keep Reading

Shanna Hayes

Shanna Hayes is the Communications Coordinator for the Student Debt Crisis Center.

Sabrina Calazans

Sabrina Calazans is the Managing Director at the Student Debt Crisis Center.

More from The Nation

Trump’s Pick for Speaker Is a Nightmare Waiting to Happen

Trump’s Pick for Speaker Is a Nightmare Waiting to Happen

Trump wants his close political ally Ohio Republican Jim Jordan to become second in the line of presidential succession. Brace yourselves.

John Nichols

The Führer and the Kaiser

The Führer and the Kaiser

McCarcass.

Steve Brodner

Cornel West and RFK Jr. Are Both Helping Biden Now

Cornel West and RFK Jr. Are Both Helping Biden Now

As two of his rivals head into the wilderness, the president is consolidating the left-of-center vote.

Jeet Heer

The “Trump for Speaker” Campaign Shipwrecks on the Shoals of Stupidity

The “Trump for Speaker” Campaign Shipwrecks on the Shoals of Stupidity

Some House Republicans want the former president to be their new boss. There are just two problems with this plan: It’s crazy, and it’s not allowed.

John Nichols

Hope for Asylum Seekers

Hope for Asylum Seekers

The Biden administration will allow nearly half a million Venezuelan migrants in the United States to live and work legally in the country for 18 months.

Who Is the Real Laphonza Butler?

Who Is the Real Laphonza Butler?

The new senator from California has been both a union organizer and a corporate consultant. Which side of her will we see in Congress?

Sasha Abramsky