After widespread reports of questionable practices in the student loan industry, the U.S. Congress — and, particularly, minority lawmakers — took the difficult first steps this week to refocus the debate on how best to reform the financial aid system to help low-income students.
“The crisis of confidence in our student loan programs shines a light on a larger problem,” said U.S. Rep. Ruben Hinojosa, D-Texas, chairman of the House of Representatives’ higher education subcommittee. “We have left low- and middle-income families to fend for themselves when it comes to financing a college education.”
As the House confronted Education Secretary Margaret Spellings about loan practices at a public hearing and passed the first of several bills seeking changes in the loan industry, many policymakers cited the need for comprehensive solutions — a combination of more need-based financial aid plus counseling and consumer protection policies.
Even Spellings, under tough questioning Thursday for the department’s lax oversight of lenders, touched on the theme. When asked why non-subsidized private education loans remain unregulated, she cited the importance of such loans due to the underfunding of grants.
“The Pell Grant has not been able to keep up with the cost of college,” she said, adding that the entire system needs reform.
“We cannot fix this broken enterprise by cherry picking a few narrow issues to address,” she continued. “We must peel back the layers, increase transparency, streamline the entire system and provide more aid for students.”
In the first of what may be a series of higher education bills, the House this week approved the Student Loan Sunshine Act. Under the bill, loan companies no longer may: