Federal Student Loan Forgiveness Means Millions For W.Va. Borrowers

Over a thousand West Virginians will have $8.8 million in student loans canceled.

On Wednesday the Biden administration announced $1.2 billion in student debt cancellation for almost 153,000 borrowers. New data released Friday shows the effects on West Virginia.

Over a thousand West Virginians will have $8.8 million in student loans canceled. Texas leads the nation with more than 14,000 recipients having $116.6 million in student loans forgiven, while Wyoming had the lowest amount of forgiveness with 150 borrowers having $1 million canceled.

Kirabo Jackson, a member of the Council of Economic Advisers, said this round of loan forgiveness is for borrowers enrolled in the Saving on a Valuable Education or SAVE repayment plan that have been in repayment for 10 years and took out $12,000 or less in student loans.

“In order to ensure that the burden of college debt does not reduce the benefits of having a college degree, the Biden administration has basically rolled out this new income driven repayment plan called SAVE,” he said. 

Jackson said the program ties the payments that people make to their income levels and family size, not to the size of the loan itself. 

“It means that early in someone’s career, when they’re not making a lot of money, their payments are going to be relatively low,” he said. “In fact, they can actually be zero, if their incomes are too low to basically be able to make payments, while also having enough money for groceries and necessities of life.”

Borrowers who believe they meet the criteria above are encouraged to immediately sign up for SAVE at StudentAid.gov/SAVE.

In total, the Biden Administration has now approved debt cancellation for nearly 3.9 million student loan borrowers totaling almost $138 billion in debt relief.

Senate Bill Aims To Bring More Forensic Pathologists To West Virginia

Facing a national shortage of doctors trained to perform autopsies, West Virginia lawmakers are considering a bill that would fund student loan repayments for forensic pathologists in the state.

Both nationally and in West Virginia, a shortage of forensic pathologists — doctors specially trained to perform autopsies — has slowed medical examinations of the deceased.

Now, lawmakers aim to incentivize more of the doctors to practice in West Virginia.

Senate Bill 572 would grant forensic pathologists student loan repayments from the West Virginia Department of Health. The repayments would occur over a period of ten years, provided that the doctors remain licensed within the state.

Sen. Tom Takubo, R-Kanawha, sponsored the bill. He said that this would help forensic pathologists establish roots in West Virginia and encourage newcomers to pursue the field.

“Hopefully, it gets them here in plenty of time to grow roots and help us get these death certificates done in a timely fashion,” he said Tuesday in a meeting of the Senate Health and Human Resources Committee.

At the meeting, members of the committee voted in favor of the bill, but first referred it to the Senate Finance Committee for further discussion.

State Receives Federal Funding For Healthcare Workers

Federal funding has been approved to support student loan repayment for healthcare workers in West Virginia.

Federal funding has been approved to support student loan repayment for healthcare workers in West Virginia.

Senator Joe Manchin, member of the Senate Appropriations Committee, announced close to $700,000 from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) to the West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources (DHHR).

The DHHR’s Office of Rural Health offers a loan repayment program in exchange for service in a Health Professional Shortage Area in the state.

Healthcare workers can receive loan repayments of $40,000 after two years of service, or up to $90,000 after four years.

A similar program through the DHHR’s Bureau for Behavioral Health provides loan repayment for clinical professions including counseling, psychology, and/or social work therapists.

Student Loan Debt Forgiveness Plan: W.Va. Impact

Kelly Allen, the Executive Director at the West Virginia Center on Budget and Policy says more than 200,000 West Virginians could see relief on student loans as part of a forgiveness plan announced by President Joe Biden.

Kelly Allen, the Executive Director at the West Virginia Center on Budget and Policy says more than 200,000 West Virginians could see relief on student loans as part of a forgiveness plan announced by President Joe Biden.

Randy Yohe discussed the West Virginia impact of student debt relief with Dr. Rodney Hughes, an assistant professor of higher education administration at West Virginia University’s School of Education. His research interests include college access and affordability.

Randy: Dr. Hughes: give me first of all, your overall view on President Biden’s student loan forgiveness plan?

Hughes: It appears to be trying to do multiple things. And then we think about the timing of the announcement. I think the overall picture is that it definitely will have both immediate implications for borrowers, and also implications for higher education and for education policy going forward.

Randy: The West Virginia Higher Education Policy Commission says with all the grants and free community college available, about one third of West Virginia graduates leave school debt free. So how does that affect the impetus of the Biden plan?

Hughes: If students are maybe a little bit too high on income to qualify for the federal need-based aid, and might be eligible for the Promise Scholarship or not, they might still have to take out loans for getting a four year degree within West Virginia. Given that picture of financial aid within the state of West Virginia, it might be the case that if we just look at the sort of national impact of the loan forgiveness, it might be focused on students in other states that don’t provide quite as much support for students attending their public institutions.

Randy: This is going to cost taxpayers more than $300 billion, is that fair to taxpayers?

Hughes: What I think this is trying to do, part of it seems like a financial assistance measure or a financial relief measure for households or individuals that might be struggling or earning, maybe not what you would think, in line with the degree or the educational attainment that they’re after. For students who might have taken advantage of the pause in payments back to 2020, students might have these federal balances, but may not have been recently making payments on them. So for some students, maybe it takes away their liability.

Randy: And then there’s the fairness aspect to those young West Virginians who are entering the working world, pursuing a vocation, plumbing, construction, something that doesn’t need a higher education degree.

Hughes: If we look at past efforts toward loan forgiveness, it’s really focused on for-profit institutions, situations that can be characterized as predatory institutions, really recruiting students heavily under false pretenses, or really without much promise of employment opportunities after students completed their degrees. Is it right for taxpayers to be subsidizing educational attainment that they themselves might not have pursued? So that goes back to like, if we want this to be a financial assistance measure, it doesn’t really make sense just to limit it to students who’ve attended college. If we want it to be promoting college access, would you want to focus as much on prospective or current students? The one part of this conversation that I think is interesting is to point out how loan forgiveness is formulated. Is this idea that Pell Grant eligible students can have more loans forgiven up to $20,000, if they received a Pell Grant before? It’s a statement from the White House saying Pell Grants should have been larger before.

Randy: When you look at this, and understand that one third of West Virginia College graduates leave debt free, and you look at President Biden’s relief program here, his loan forgiveness program, we circle back to what you first said, it’s a multi-faceted reason why this is happening. And it will have a multi-faceted effect on West Virginia and its students. 

Hughes: In addition to people who might leave debt free, there’s students who have a small amount of debt, who might attend for a semester, or might take some courses, but not complete a credentialed degree. And it’s these students with the smallest loan balances, where we often see the highest default rates, because students didn’t finish. So some of that we might say, ‘Okay, this loan forgiveness, even forgiving loans under $10,000 balances would help students at risk of default.’ It’s important that students have opportunities to think about these and then make informed decisions not assuming that college is a necessity, but thinking about what are all the sorts of possible career paths. And then if college is right for a student, and they don’t have the ability to pay out of pocket right away, borrowing can be helpful.

W.Va. Mental Health Professionals Are Getting Help With Student Loan Debt

Licensed mental health professionals who are living and practicing in underserved communities across the state will be eligible to apply for a new Mental Health Loan Repayment program.

The program, which was approved by the West Virginia Legislature and Gov. Jim Justice in 2019, and funded this year, provides money to cover student loan debt and to help retain those workers where they are crucially needed.

“We are tremendously grateful to be able to provide this vital financial aid, which will help retain critically needed mental health providers in historically underserved areas of the state,” said West Virginia Higher Education Policy Commission Chancellor Sarah Armstrong Tucker.

Nearly all of West Virginia’s counties are considered underserved for mental health needs, according to the Health Resources Service Administration. The only counties in West Virginia that do not have a shortage are Hancock, Brooke, Ohio, Monongalia and Putnam.

Up to 33 professionals, including social workers, licensed counselors, marriage and family therapists, and master’s and doctoral clinical psychologists, will be considered every year for a $10,000 award to help with student loan debt.

Every three years, a recipient can reapply.

“Mental health needs are acute in West Virginia, particularly in some of our most isolated and rural areas,” Tucker said. “By offering currently practicing mental health providers this incentive to stay, we’re doing more than we ever have to strengthen West Virginians’ access to the services they need.”

Recipients will be selected through a competitive application process, according to the HEPC. Applicants must meet a number of requirements.

They must have educational debt in an amount equal to or exceeding the proposed award amount, be employed full-time or part-time at an eligible practice site, provide individual and group therapy or counseling for a majority of their practice, and be a West Virginia resident. They must also be a graduate of an accredited program at an institution of higher education, and obtained a degree preparing them for licensure and is currently licensed in West Virginia.

More than $330,000 was awarded by the state legislature for this program in its first year.

Proposed U.S. Senate Bill Would Offer Loan Forgiveness for West Virginians

Student loan debt is a major issue for many millennials. A bill in Congress would offer loan forgiveness to West Virginians who want to return home, or stay in the state, to work.

Senator Shelley Moore Capito and Michigan Senator Gary Peters recently introduced SB676. The bill, which if passed would be called the “Workforce Development Through Post-Graduation Scholarships Act of 2019” would update tax law, allowing foundations, non-profits, and some for-profit companies to provide a multi-year loan forgiveness grant for employees. The new program would be focused on communities with population loss and which have lower than average rates of people with college degrees.

Paul Daugherty, CEO of Philanthropy West Virginia, said the bill would create economic growth in West Virginia, by bringing young talent back to the state.

“This would be one of the first steps to attract young people back to retain them and keep them here when it comes to paying off their loans,” Daugherty said. “Not too many communities offer that in this country.”

Daugherty points to a similar program in Michigan, called Come Home Awards, which successfully used loan forgiveness as an incentive to attract and retain young people.

According to the latest U.S Census report, West Virginia lost more than 11,000 people between July 2017 and July 2018.

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