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Survey Shows New England Families Can Still Access Federal Student Loans, Despite Loss of Lenders

Published 11 September 08 03:29 PM | Student Loan Girl 

According to a regional survey of financial aid officers from 214 New England colleges and universities, students and parents have had few problems accessing federal student loans this year, but financial aid administrators have lingering doubts about how easily students will be able to secure college loans next year (“Student Loan Availability Survey of New England Colleges & Universities,” The New England Council, September 2008).

The survey, conducted by the New England Board of Higher Education and The New England Council, asked financial aid officers to describe how New England families fared following federal legislation that Congress passed in May to help families pay for college.

The legislation was designed to ensure that families still have access to federal student loans as private, third-party lenders — crippled by fallout from the subprime mortgage crisis that dried up traditional sources of funding and hurt by legislation that cut $21 billion in their federal subsidies — continue to drop their federal student loan programs.

To date, 104 of these lenders have stopped participating in the Federal Family Education Loan Program, through which borrowers take out their federal student and parent loans from third-party lenders rather than through the federal government.

Although some families were forced to find a new student loan provider after their former lender suspended its federal student loan programs, New England financial aid officers indicated that borrowers have not been deterred from seeking FFELP loans.

In fact, the survey revealed, more parent borrowers are seeking federal PLUS loans through FFELP lenders this fall and more students are taking out unsubsidized federal Stafford student loans.

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