Proposed Legislation Would Prevent Student Loan Lenders from ‘Cherry-Picking’ Schools They Lend To
To ensure all students have access to student loans regardless of what type of school they attend, two Democratic senators introduced legislation Tuesday that would prohibit banks and other lenders from “picking and choosing” which institutions of higher education they do business with, according to a New York Times article (“Bill Promotes Universal College Loans,” June 18, 2008).
Under the proposal, lenders that participate in the Federal Family Education Loan Program would have to extend credit to any eligible student, regardless of a student’s income or the type of institution they attend, as long as the student’s college is a member of the FFEL program, writes Times reporter Jonathan Glater.
Senators Patty Murray, D-Wash., and Christopher Dodd, D-Conn., introduced the legislation in response to the decision of Citibank, JPMorgan Chase, PNC, and SunTrust to stop offering student loans to community colleges and other two-year institutions.
“Lenders offering loans backed by taxpayer dollars shouldn’t be able to discriminate against certain schools or students,” Murray said in a statement. “Denying loans based on school, program length, or income level locks the door for far too many.”
Bill Faces an Uncertain Future
Banks who have ceased lending to certain two-year institutions contend that they lose money on the loans. Schools that have been cut off by the banks tend to have higher default rates and fewer borrowers with small loan amounts — financial factors that, lenders say, make business at these schools less profitable.
But financial aid administrators counter that lenders should not be allowed to “cherry-pick,” because selective lending could make it harder for low-income students to pay for college.
The proposal, which is under review by the
U.S. Department of Education, has already been met with controversy. Some financial aid officials support the measure as way of ensuring access to student loans, while others believe it might have the unintended consequence of pushing lenders out of the federal student-loan business altogether at time when over 100 lenders have already left the FFEL program.
While the bill’s prospects are unclear, Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass., chairman of the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions, is expected to co-sponsor the bill.