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Trump administration's student loan plan blocked by court, keeping treasury transfer on hold
Trump administration's student loan plan blocked by court, keeping treasury transfer on hold

Time of India

time13 hours ago

  • Business
  • Time of India

Trump administration's student loan plan blocked by court, keeping treasury transfer on hold

Court documents have revealed that the Trump administration attempted to shift the management of the $1.6 trillion federal student loan portfolio from the Department of Education to the US Treasury. The plan, however, has been halted by a federal court order , according to a report by Newsweek. According to filings submitted to a federal court, the Department of Education had been negotiating with the Treasury Department to take over the management and collections of student loans, a function historically carried out by the Federal Student Aid office. The court intervention came after a judge blocked broader efforts by the administration to reduce the Department of Education's role. As per the Newsweek report, this shift would have impacted more than 42 million borrowers in the US, raising questions about changes to repayment systems, oversight, and borrower protections. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Elegant New Scooters For Seniors In 2024: The Prices May Surprise You Mobility Scooter | Search Ads Learn More Undo 'The Department of Education signed an Interagency Agreement with the Department of Labor on May 21 regarding administration of certain career, technical, and adult education grants. The Workforce Development Partnership will allow ED and DOL to better coordinate and deliver on workforce development programs and strengthen federal support for our nation's workforce, a top priority of the Trump Administration,' said Madi Biedermann, deputy assistant secretary for communications at the Department of Education to Newsweek. (Join our ETNRI WhatsApp channel for all the latest updates) However, the Department said implementation has been paused following a preliminary injunction from a US district judge. This ruling also ordered the rehiring of over 1,300 employees laid off in March and barred the transfer of loan oversight to other agencies like the Small Business Administration without congressional approval. Live Events You Might Also Like: Trump launches website for $5 million 'Gold Card' US residency visa — Here's how to apply Experts pointed out that any such structural change would require legislative backing. The Higher Education Act mandates that federal loans are to be managed by the Department of Education. Kevin Thompson, CEO of 9i Capital Group, told Newsweek, 'The Trump administration is largely restricted from making sweeping changes here. Dismantling a federal agency like the Department of Education requires an act of Congress.' The court's action comes as many borrowers face rising delinquencies. The Federal Reserve Bank of New York reported that between January and March 2025, around six million borrowers were more than 90 days late or in default. Financial literacy instructor Alex Beene said to Newsweek, 'The proposal for the Treasury to take over the federal administrative responsibilities for student loans is no surprise... but it would more than likely not mark a substantial change to their current payment plans.' You Might Also Like: Trump administration hit with second lawsuit over restrictions on asylum access Beene added, 'Disbanding and relocating aspects of the Department of Education would require congressional involvement, and there's already signs of hesitation to support such.' For now, the Department of Education retains control over federal student loans. Borrowers are advised to continue regular payments while legal and policy matters are reviewed.

Education Department struck deal with Labor Department to offload career programs
Education Department struck deal with Labor Department to offload career programs

Yahoo

time2 days ago

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Education Department struck deal with Labor Department to offload career programs

The Education Department struck agreements to send billions of dollars to the Labor Department to administer a suite of education grants and detail several agency employees to the Treasury Department to help manage collections on federal student loans. Those agency plans, revealed in court documents viewed by POLITICO, are now on hold because of a federal judge's ruling that temporarily blocked the Trump administration's efforts to slash the Education Department's workforce. But the quiet — and largely unreported — work laid out in the documents shows how the administration is making significant moves to outsource portions of the Education Department's operations to other Cabinet agencies as President Donald Trump tries to shutter the agency. The department had also been negotiating a memorandum of understanding with the Treasury Department regarding student loan management, agency chief of staff Rachel Oglesby said in a court declaration filed late Tuesday, but paused that work after a court halted the agency's effort to conduct a massive reduction-in-force in March. The agreement with Treasury was finalized in April, according to documents that identified nine Education Department employees — including a person originally assigned to work as part of billionaire Elon Musk's DOGE effort — who are detailed to the Treasury Department as advisers. The detailees will 'support Federal Student Aid functions performed in partnership with Treasury,' according to the agreement. An Education Department spokesperson confirmed the agency signed an agreement with the Labor Department to administer some of the education agency's career, technical and adult education grants. 'The Workforce Development Partnership will allow ED and DOL to better coordinate and deliver on workforce development programs and strengthen federal support for our nation's workforce, a top priority of the Trump Administration,' department spokesperson Madi Biedermann said in a statement on Wednesday. As part of the agreement with Treasury, workers from the Education Department's collections unit for defaulted loans moved to Treasury's fiscal service bureau to discuss government plans to collect on student debts by intercepting payments such as tax refunds, Biedermann said. The administration decided to move student loan collections to the Treasury Department after an agreement fell apart with the contractor who handled student loan collections, a former Federal Student Aid official told POLITICO. The Education Department was too understaffed after its sweeping reduction in force to handle collections itself, the person said. 'It was already weak, but then they fired everyone,' said the former official, who was granted anonymity to discuss sensitive agency dynamics. 'So nobody was there to make collections work.' The Education Department said it paused that work after a federal judge blocked the administration from firing agency workers. The judge in the case ruled that the announced terminations were a thinly veiled effort to functionally dismantle the department without congressional approval. The Trump administration has appealed that injunction to the Supreme Court. But the pause caused by the court's injunction is 'preventing the Department (and other agencies) from pursuing operational efficiencies and cost-savings,' Oglesby said. As an example, Oglesby cited an agreement signed May 21 between the Education Department and the Labor Department that would transfer up to nearly $2.7 billion of congressionally appropriated funds out of Education Secretary Linda McMahon's agency to DOL's Employment and Training Administration. The shift would then put several funding streams under ETA's purview, including formula grants allocated to states through Title I of the Perkins Act and Title II of the Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act, adult literacy programs and other career and technical education programs currently overseen by the Education Department. Though DOL would be responsible for overseeing these tasks, the funding would still technically be held by the Education Department under the terms of the agreement, which would then periodically reimburse DOL. The document says that consolidating the programs under DOL's banner is designed to 'provide a seamless workforce development system' and 'reduce the administrative burden on states' by streamlining reporting requirements. The agreement was signed by acting ETA administrator Lori Bearden and Nick Moore of the Office of Career, Technical and Adult Education. A Labor Department spokesperson declined a request for additional details about the arrangement. 'This is one of many existing agreements ED has with other agencies to collaborate on services for the American people,' Biedermann, the education spokesperson, said. 'As acknowledged in the status report, ED has paused implementing this [agreement] while we seek relief from the district judge's preliminary injunction.' McMahon has said repeatedly that she would not close the agency without congressional approval, however, the Trump administration has taken several steps to slash the agency's operations and workforce. The administration laid off half the staff and then the president announced the department would offload its largest program — the $1.6-trillion student loan portfolio – onto another agency. Attempts to transfer the massive portfolio have had a turbulent start. It has been a longtime conservative goal to move student loans to Treasury, but the president surprised members of his own party in March when he announced that it would instead go to the Small Business Administration. Education Department officials skeptical of the plan met shortly after the president's announcement to discuss Treasury as an option. "It was one of the suggestions, as we first started to talk about dismantling the department, [and] what functions would go, perhaps, to which agencies,' McMahon said Tuesday during an event hosted by Bloomberg News. 'But all of that is still part of discussion. It's not an assignment in any way, except that Treasury has taken back over the collection of student loans.' McMahon has publicly stated that Treasury is a 'natural' place for student loans. Whether or not the Education Department can move certain programs to other agencies without Congress' say-so is something where the agency has been unclear. At a Cato Institute event in May, McMahon suggested that moving programs to other agencies seemed to be an option. 'As we look to take parts of the Department of Education and flow them into agencies where they might fit, that is the side we can attack right away,' she said. 'Ultimately, this department was set up by statute. Congress will have to vote to close it.' But the secretary told Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) on Tuesday that the Education Department cannot unilaterally shift its functions to any other agency 'I asked her what authority she would have to transfer any functions of the department somewhere else, for example, to the SBA, and she said 'I can't do that, that is the job of Congress,'' she said.

Education Department struck deal with Labor Department to offload career programs
Education Department struck deal with Labor Department to offload career programs

Politico

time2 days ago

  • Business
  • Politico

Education Department struck deal with Labor Department to offload career programs

The Education Department struck agreements to send billions of dollars to the Labor Department to administer a suite of education grants and detail several agency employees to the Treasury Department to help manage collections on federal student loans. Those agency plans, revealed in court documents viewed by POLITICO, are now on hold because of a federal judge's ruling that temporarily blocked the Trump administration's efforts to slash the Education Department's workforce. But the quiet — and largely unreported — work laid out in the documents shows how the administration is making significant moves to outsource portions of the Education Department's operations to other Cabinet agencies as President Donald Trump tries to shutter the agency. The department had also been negotiating a memorandum of understanding with the Treasury Department regarding student loan management, agency chief of staff Rachel Oglesby said in a court declaration filed late Tuesday, but paused that work after a court halted the agency's effort to conduct a massive reduction-in-force in March. The agreement with Treasury was finalized in April, according to documents that identified nine Education Department employees — including a person originally assigned to work as part of billionaire Elon Musk's DOGE effort — who are detailed to the Treasury Department as advisers. The detailees will 'support Federal Student Aid functions performed in partnership with Treasury,' according to the agreement. An Education Department spokesperson confirmed the agency signed an agreement with the Labor Department to administer some of the education agency's career, technical and adult education grants. 'The Workforce Development Partnership will allow ED and DOL to better coordinate and deliver on workforce development programs and strengthen federal support for our nation's workforce, a top priority of the Trump Administration,' department spokesperson Madi Biedermann said in a statement on Wednesday. As part of the agreement with Treasury, workers from the Education Department's collections unit for defaulted loans moved to Treasury's fiscal service bureau to discuss government plans to collect on student debts by intercepting payments such as tax refunds, Biedermann said. The administration decided to move student loan collections to the Treasury Department after an agreement fell apart with the contractor who handled student loan collections, a former Federal Student Aid official told POLITICO. The Education Department was too understaffed after its sweeping reduction in force to handle collections itself, the person said. 'It was already weak, but then they fired everyone,' said the former official, who was granted anonymity to discuss sensitive agency dynamics. 'So nobody was there to make collections work.' The Education Department said it paused that work after a federal judge blocked the administration from firing agency workers. The judge in the case ruled that the announced terminations were a thinly veiled effort to functionally dismantle the department without congressional approval. The Trump administration has appealed that injunction to the Supreme Court. But the pause caused by the court's injunction is 'preventing the Department (and other agencies) from pursuing operational efficiencies and cost-savings,' Oglesby said. As an example, Oglesby cited an agreement signed May 21 between the Education Department and the Labor Department that would transfer up to nearly $2.7 billion of congressionally appropriated funds out of Education Secretary Linda McMahon's agency to DOL's Employment and Training Administration. The shift would then put several funding streams under ETA's purview, including formula grants allocated to states through Title I of the Perkins Act and Title II of the Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act, adult literacy programs and other career and technical education programs currently overseen by the Education Department. Though DOL would be responsible for overseeing these tasks, the funding would still technically be held by the Education Department under the terms of the agreement, which would then periodically reimburse DOL. The document says that consolidating the programs under DOL's banner is designed to 'provide a seamless workforce development system' and 'reduce the administrative burden on states' by streamlining reporting requirements. The agreement was signed by acting ETA administrator Lori Bearden and Nick Moore of the Office of Career, Technical and Adult Education. A Labor Department spokesperson declined a request for additional details about the arrangement. 'This is one of many existing agreements ED has with other agencies to collaborate on services for the American people,' Biedermann, the education spokesperson, said. 'As acknowledged in the status report, ED has paused implementing this [agreement] while we seek relief from the district judge's preliminary injunction.' McMahon has said repeatedly that she would not close the agency without congressional approval, however, the Trump administration has taken several steps to slash the agency's operations and workforce. The administration laid off half the staff and then the president announced the department would offload its largest program — the $1.6-trillion student loan portfolio – onto another agency. Attempts to transfer the massive portfolio have had a turbulent start. It has been a longtime conservative goal to move student loans to Treasury, but the president surprised members of his own party in March when he announced that it would instead go to the Small Business Administration. Education Department officials skeptical of the plan met shortly after the president's announcement to discuss Treasury as an option. 'It was one of the suggestions, as we first started to talk about dismantling the department, [and] what functions would go, perhaps, to which agencies,' McMahon said Tuesday during an event hosted by Bloomberg News. 'But all of that is still part of discussion. It's not an assignment in any way, except that Treasury has taken back over the collection of student loans.' McMahon has publicly stated that Treasury is a 'natural' place for student loans. Whether or not the Education Department can move certain programs to other agencies without Congress' say-so is something where the agency has been unclear. At a Cato Institute event in May, McMahon suggested that moving programs to other agencies seemed to be an option. 'As we look to take parts of the Department of Education and flow them into agencies where they might fit, that is the side we can attack right away,' she said. 'Ultimately, this department was set up by statute. Congress will have to vote to close it.' But the secretary told Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) on Tuesday that the Education Department cannot unilaterally shift its functions to any other agency 'I asked her what authority she would have to transfer any functions of the department somewhere else, for example, to the SBA, and she said 'I can't do that, that is the job of Congress,'' she said.

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