CSU Student Association Unanimously Endorses Garamendi’s Student Loan Refinancing Bill

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Congressman John Garamendi introduced the Student Loan Refinancing and Recalculating Act on the UC Davis campus last week. Since it was introduced, it has been co-sponsored by 24 members of Congress.

A former California State University Trustee and University of California Regent, Mr. Garamendi is honored that his Student Loan Refinancing and Recalculating Act has been unanimously endorsed by the California State Student Association (CSSA). The CSSA represents more than 446,000 students in the California State University (CSU) system.

“While federal student loans are one of many tools that students can use to access college, high interest rates have made them increasingly difficult to pay back,” said Taylor Herren, president of the California State Student Association. “It’s fair to ask borrowers to pay back their loan plus the amount to cover administrative costs; however, interest rates higher than that mean borrowers spend longer in repayment and end up delaying significant purchases, such as a house, or wait longer to start a family, ultimately slowing the nation’s economy. We are grateful that Congressman Garamendi recognizes the damage high interest rates have and is pursuing legislation to treat borrowers more fairly.”

“Undergraduate students in the CSU system graduate with an average student loan debt of nearly $16,000. It’s a sign of just how out of control college debt has gotten that this is actually well below the national average. We must do better for our students,” Congressman Garamendi said. “I’m honored that CSU students are joining me in this movement to reform our student loan system. My Student Loan Refinancing and Recalculating Act is part of the solution to making sure that every qualified student in America is able to pursue their dreams.”

It is also endorsed by the Higher Education Loan Coalition, a grassroots alliance of schools dedicated to the continuous improvement and strengthening of the federal Direct Loan program.

Congressman Garamendi pointed out that, while people can refinance their house, they can’t refinance their student loan debt to a lower interest rate under existing law.  He said, “I always wondered what’s wrong with the American policy that we would not allow students to refinance their student loans to take advantage of a lower interest rate.”

“If this piece of legislation becomes law, you’ll be able to do so,” the Congressman said.

The legislation refinances student loan interest rates to the current 10-year Treasury note rate, plus 1%. This means that current interest rates (4.29% for undergraduate borrowers, 5.84% for graduate borrowers, and 6.84% for parent and graduate PLUS loan borrowers) would all be lowered to 3.23%.

In practical terms, this means an undergraduate student with average student loan debt ($35,051) would save $2,760 over the lifetime of their loan; a graduate student with average student loan debt ($57,600) would save $3,480 over the lifetime of their loan.

The bill also ensures that borrowers with an expected family contribution of less than, or equal to, $10,000 will not accrue interest on their student loans while they are in school.

The bill also ensures that borrowers with an expected family contribution of less than or equal to $10,000 will not accrue interest on their student loans while they are in school.

“The federal government owns just under one trillion dollars of student debt,” he explained.  “Forty million students across the United States – some in school, many of them have graduated – are faced with the extraordinary task of paying off their student loans to the federal government.”

He argued this would allow students to pay off their loans quicker and get about their life instead of having to pay off a loan and hold off on getting a job and buying a home.

“Congress has improved student loan refinancing since I entered Congress, but tuition throughout America continues to skyrocket,” Congressman Garamendi said. “One in 7 borrowers default on federal student loans within three years of beginning repayment. We know that 30% of Federal Direct student loan dollars are in default, forbearance, or deferment, and at least 40 million Americans are burdened by student loan debt. Congress can and should do more. The Student Loan Refinancing and Recalculating Act would save millions of students and parents thousands of dollars as they prepare for the future.”

The students facing the worst of these are graduate students who, according to Congressman Garamendi, face rates of between 4 percent and 8 percent.  “This would allow them to refinance these loans,” he said.

John Garamendi explained that this bill would create a forbearance preventing interest from accruing on the loan during school tenure.  Moreover, he explained, “For the life of me I don’t understand why the federal government would charge a fee, an origination fee on the loan.”  This would eliminate the origination fee.

The legislation will be introduced next week and it will address another problem with the system.  Currently, the government is borrowing money at 2% and lending it out at 4% and above.  He said, “The federal government will earn out of the pockets of the students, $138 billion over the course of a ten year period.”  Reducing the loan will not eliminate the profit, “but at least we’re going to reduce the burden on the students.  The federal government ought not be profiting on the students, in any case.”

“Will we succeed?  I think we must, I don’t think we have a choice here,” he explained.  “It’s wrong.  It’s just plain, I think, unconscionable that the federal government would earn $138 billion over the next ten years on the backs of students that are trying to advance their own lives.”

The Congressman said he expects to have the support of the Republicans on this bill.  He said he has already talked to Education and Labor Committee Chair John Klein.  He said they had a long conversation and “he’s very sympathetic.”  He said, “The challenge he has is, by the rules of his caucus, it has to be a comprehensive education bill – so it gets tied up in a lot of other very controversial issues.”

He was told if he could find a way to take this as a stand-alone bill, just dealing with the interest rate issue, “we could probably move it.”  On the other hand, if it gets tied up in re-writing graduate education bills – it is controversial and a big lift.

But the Congressman is confident he can get this done.

—David M. Greenwald reporting

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  • David Greenwald

    Greenwald is the founder, editor, and executive director of the Davis Vanguard. He founded the Vanguard in 2006. David Greenwald moved to Davis in 1996 to attend Graduate School at UC Davis in Political Science. He lives in South Davis with his wife Cecilia Escamilla Greenwald and three children.

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5 comments

  1. Another idea that sounds great as long as you don’t know anything about finance or lending. Yes, the government is currently borrowing money at 2.2% and charging 4.29%, but with 20-30% of the loans in default they are not making any “money on the backs of students”.

  2. Support GARAMENDI….he has proven to be OUR friend….student’s friend, UCD friend

    and too bad HE is no longer a regent….

    STAY away from DODD and from Cecilia Aguilar….

    and also VOTE MARIKO YAMADA>>>>     SHE is the friend of ALL>.. students, staff, faculty and even administrators at UCD<

    and many others who have smaller voices and fewer funds….she also has the backing of some LARGE groups…and MANY in the current Democrat political realmm….

    and in CA, many of  the moderate Republicans also…as well as liberal democrats and so forth..

    Local and state issues are NOT partisan…

    but Mariko is not simply a partisan at all costs EITHER…

    Mariko  is VERY sharp and the hardest worker I have ever seen….and she will continue to fight the good fight but she also has to choose her battles VERY wisely and has to stay out of the fray..

    I however do NOT>..    LOL>>>>and will not….stay out of frays I mean…   LOL

    Marina Kalugin (Rumiansev)

  3. Currently, the current government is run and beholden to BANKS…

    That is why the banks get less than a half a percent on the money they borrow from the FED and can turn around and GOUGE students and it is allowed by our pals in the gov…..

    Like the lame duck and so many others.

    AUDIT the FED….get RID of the FED….and no-one but BERNIE or TRUMP will do THAT..

  4. And,   the true borrowing rate is LESS than half of one percent.

    Even that 2.2 % is NOT the truth….

    PRIME is NOT what the BANKs borrow at….

  5. read and LEARN here…… ubs.com

    and find the loan rates…and notice that the MORE you borrow the lower the rate…

    And the current TRUE borrow rate for BANKS to borrow is also within that website…

    Gotta run…. for those with a financial bent do your own research…and then YOU can post the rates…I was trying to locate on the site…it is kinda hidden…   lol

     

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