NBC News - July 26, 2022
Student loan servicers told not to contact borrowers as payment pause deadline nears
A little more than a month before the student debt moratorium is scheduled to end, the federal government has told loan servicers not to contact borrowers about resuming payments, a trade group official said Monday.
The Education Department has been telling loan servicers not to reach out to borrowers as recently as “the last couple weeks,” said Scott Buchanan, the executive director of the Student Loan Servicing Alliance, which represents all of the companies that service the federal loans subject to the administration’s moratorium.
NBC News has asked the Education Department for comment.
The Wall Street Journal first reported Monday that loan servicers have been told not to contact borrowers.
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President Joe Biden in April extended the pause on federal loan repayments until Aug. 31, saying the nation was still recovering from the coronavirus pandemic.
A White House official said Monday night that “no decision has been made" about whether to extend it again. The official said Biden will make a decision before Aug. 31.
Repayments on federal student loans were first paused more than two years ago when the pandemic took hold.
The pause began in March 2020, when then-President Donald Trump signed into law the CARES Act, which halted payments through September 2020 and froze interest accumulation. Trump later took executive action to extend the deferral period through January 2021.
Biden has repeatedly extended the moratorium — starting on his first day in office and most recently in April. The moratorium doesn’t apply to borrowers with privately held loans.
Buchanan said his group has previously warned the government about issues that may arise from resuming payments.
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