This weekend the U.S. House of Representatives is expected to approve the combined student-aid and health-care plan. This is the culmination of a year-long process as well as much strategy and discussion during the past week to determine a final agreement to overhaul the government’s student-loan system.
The final agreement, the Health Care & Education Affordability Reconciliation Act (H.R. 4872), would end the bank-based system of distributing federally subsidized student loans (FFELP program) and move toward a system in which the U.S. Department of Education would provide all loan money directly to colleges and students (Direct Loan program).
The final agreement would use savings generated from the elimination of the FFELP program (approx. $61 billion over 10 years) to increase the maximum Pell Grant. The maximum Pell Grant, currently scheduled to reach $5,500 for the 2010-11 academic year, would increase by the rate of inflation over most of the next 10 years.
The effort by the Obama Administration to urge Congress to approve an annual increase equal to the rate of inflation plus one percentage point was eliminated in the final agreement and the start of the annual increases was delayed until 2013.
Finally, the bill:
- Pays off billions of dollars in accumulated budget shortfalls in the Pell Grant program because of rising college enrollments and demand for the program.
- Includes $225 million a year to help historically black colleges.
- Includes $750 million over five years for College Access Challenge Grants, which support states and other governments in efforts to prepare low-income students to enroll and succeed in college. This is down from the $3 billion in the House version.
- Includes $2 billion over four-years to help two-year institutions. This is down from the $10 billion in the House version.
- Includes $1.5 billion over 10 years to finance the Obama Administration’s proposal to increase assistance to borrowers eligible for income-based repayment of a federally subsidized student loan by limiting their mandatory monthly payments to 10 percent of discretionary income, down from 15 percent, and by forgiving their loans entirely after 20 years, instead of the current 25 years. The House version did not include these funds.
- Eliminates the $9 billion that had been approved in the House version to reduce the interest rate on federally subsidized loans in 2012-13 and subsequent years. The rate is due to drop to 4.5% for the 2010-11 academic year; 3.4% the following year; and then rise to 6.8% after that.
- Eliminates a provision in the House version to spend $8 billion on early-childhood-education programs.
So what is next. If the House passes the reconciliation bill, most likely this Sunday, the bill will move to the Senate where it could be voted on as early as next week.