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The American Federation of Teachers (AFT) and the Student Borrower Protection Center (SBPC) released the results of a years-long investigation into industry mismanagement of the student loan system.
âThis report shines a spotlight on the incompetence, malfeasance, and blatant disregard of a company that should be trying to help borrowers achieve their dreams,â said AFT President Randi Weingarten. âItâs a scandal that has hurt millions â and itâs time MOHELA is held to account.â
The report, âThe MOHELA Papers,â allege a scheme to deny service to millions of working people with student debt by the student loan company responsible for handling the Public Service Loan Forgiveness Program. AFT reported that Higher Education Loan Authority of the State of Missouri (MOHELA) imperiled historic progress made by the Biden Administration to repair the scandal-plagued student loan safety net, jeopardizing future debt relief for millions of people.
MOHELA executed a previously unknown âcall deflectionâ strategy â denying service to borrowers harmed by the firmâs mishandling of millions of student loan accounts, said officials with AFT and SBPC, estimating that more than four-in-ten student loan borrowers in repayment with loans serviced by MOHELA experienced a servicing failure since loan payments resumed in September 2023, after a three-and-a-half-year-long pause on bills and interest charges.
âWe had high hopes for MOHELA, but just like Navient, it decided to put profits over borrowers in flagrant disregard of the Biden Administrationâs efforts to fix this countryâs broken loan forgiveness system,â said Weingarten. âTime and time again, MOHELA has decided to thwart, rather than support, the presidentâs plans.â
The joint investigative report by SBPC and AFT revealed that servicing failures by MOHELA have left borrowers pursuing PSLF struggling with a months-long loan forgiveness backlog (currently consisting of over 800,000 unprocessed Public Service Loan Forgiveness forms). It alleges that documents expose a company-wide playbook utilizing a âcall deflectionâ scheme, which diverts borrowers away from customer service representatives and ensuring that borrowers are caught in a byzantine loop of misinformation and false promises were unable to resolve servicing errors.
âOur investigation shows that this was all part of an elaborate plan â MOHELA knew it could never meet its customersâ needs, so it chose to âdeflectâ them instead,â added Persis Yu, deputy executive director and managing counsel of the Student Borrower Protection Center.