Civil War Echos in a Puzzling Name Choice

December, 2023

Lincoln — Looking recently into the family tree, I came across the name Abel McClellan Wimer, born 1869, son of John Elias Wimer (1837-1907) and his wife Sarah Margaret Moyers (1847-1937).  They lived in Otoe County, Nebraska, in the 1880s and later homesteaded around Dalton in the Nebraska panhandle.  John Elias Wimer was a former Confederate soldier, a member of a horse artillery unit of the 7th Virginia Cavalry.  John Elias Wimer is a first cousin of mine, four generations removed, through his mother Mary Susannah Zicafoose (1802-1856). 

So why did he name his first born son with Sarah Moyers, also from a Confederate family, after a Union general, George McClellan?  

The connection could possibly have been through his first wife, Jemima Lamb, daughter of Noah W. Lamb. She had died in 1867; her father was a Union supporter, at least by the end of the war. 

Noah Lamb is also my cousin, three generations removed, through his Simmons mother.   I first came across him in an April, 1865, letter from Union Captain John Boggs to the West Virginia governor asking for the governor's help in returning several head of Noah Lamb's horses to him after they had been stolen by the Elza gang, known as the Dixie Boys.  Boggs attested to Lamb's character and loyalty to the Union.  

This is ironic, because Lamb on his Simmons side descended from slaveowners, while Wimer on his Zicafoose side did not.  

Which is not to say Lamb's whole family was Union loyalist.  Noah Lamb's son, who bore his father's name, apparently joined the Confederate army, if his 1924 obituary is to be believed.  The obituary cites, in the overblown 'lost cause' language of the time, the son's gallantry as a Confederate cavalryman in the Shenandoah Valley.  Civil War records show a Noah Lamb serving in the 58th Virginia Infantry, which fought there.  

After the war, young Noah married Susannah Wimer, sister of John Elias Wimer, and moved to Coffey County, Kansas.  His neighbor there was Peter John Wimer, another Wimer sibling.  Susannah died in Kansas in 1871.  Noah moved back to West Virginia and married Mary Ann Zicafoose.  Peter moved back to Virginia after being in legal trouble and died in 1908 in a poorhouse in Rockingham County.  John Elias Wimer eventually left Nebraska for Louisiana and then California, where he is buried with a marker indicating his service to the Confederacy.  

Little of this explains the naming of Abel McClellan Wimer (1869-1904).  It could have been a gesture somehow to heal family rifts and to move on from the war.  It could have been out of bitterness towards Abraham Lincoln (McClellan ran against Lincoln for president in 1864).  It could have been for something McClellan did early in the war, such as exchanging and freeing captured Confederates from Pendleton County.  It could have been simply in the tradition of the time to name babies after famous people; a later son was named after Grover Cleveland.  

It's an unsolved mystery; maybe something will turn up that explains the unusual naming.  

Abel McClellan Wimer (1869-1904)

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Correction:  In a previous version of this post, the elder Noah Lamb was identified as having served in the Union Army.  That is likely to have been another person of the same name, and has been corrected.  Addition: a reader of this blog from West Virginia writes that other childen of the time were also named after McClellan, as a way to show disapproval of Lincoln.  

FAFSA Delays Are Only Part of the Problem

December, 2023

Washington — A bipartisan group of thirty-seven U.S. senators recently wrote urgently to the Secretary of Education, troubled by a delayed rollout of the latest version of the Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA).  The new version permits an additional 1.5 million financially-needy students a maximum Pell Grant.  The senators wrote:

While the simplified FAFSA is meant to provide more students with federal student aid, we fear the most vulnerable students will be negatively impacted by these delays.

I asked a score of higher education experts not about the delays, but perhaps more importantly about how much the new FAFSA would actually help the financially needy once it is implemented.  They demurred, knowing that it is one thing to increase grant awards, but it is quite another to know how students' entire financial aid packages will look as a result.  

Many colleges prepare the aid packages behind closed doors.  They often see advantages for themselves in adding loan burdens onto students and parents by shuffling fungible grant aid away from needy students to meet institutional goals of enrolling students at the least possible cost to themselves, and not one dollar more.  Increasingly, this is being done by AI. 

Buyer beware. 

One of the worst "awards" in a financial aid package is a federal Parent Direct PLUS loan.  It is so bad that many colleges will not, on ethical* grounds, include such a loan in an aid package.  But thousands of colleges do.  The application is simple and the warning signs in the loan application are easy to miss.  

Here are three quotations to watch for in the application process if you are a parent and a college encourages you to borrow Parent Direct PLUS.  

• "Loan Amount Requested:  For each academic year, you may borrow up to—but not more than—the school's cost of attendance, minus the amount of other financial assistance received."

Beware:  An alert consumer will recognize that the amount of the loan proceeds to be paid to the college can be raised by the college itself by reducing the amount of "other financial assistance received," much of which is under the college's own control.  Institutional grant aid is often used as a strategic tool for exactly these purposes; federal SEOG and state grant programs may also be fungible.  Note that the college has every reason to maximize parent borrowing because it is the recipient of loan proceeds while bearing none of the risks of default. Parent Direct PLUS loans are a cash-cow for colleges that chose to exploit families for their own benefit.  Too many students drop out under the weight of family debt.

• "To qualify for a Direct PLUS Loan, you must not have an adverse credit history. If the credit check shows that you have an adverse credit history, we will explain how you may still be able to qualify for a Direct PLUS loan."

Beware:  Colleges often advise parents, even if parents believe they will not pass an adverse credit check, that they should apply for Parent Direct PLUS because if they are turned down, their students will be classified as independent and will be eligible to borrow more in their own right.  However, parents should know that the credit check, performed by contractors of the U.S. Department of Education, was weakened in 2014 through negotiated rulemaking under pressure from colleges, so parents may find themselves qualified in spite of believing they cannot afford to repay.  Moreover, even those who fail can qualify if they claim "extenuating circumstances" or get a co-signing sponsor.  Incentives for abuse abound.     
   
• "Before you can receive a Direct PLUS Loan, you must complete a Direct PLUS Loan Master Promissory Note (Direct PLUS Loan MPN), which explains all of the terms and conditions of Direct PLUS Loans and is your legally binding agreement to repay all Direct PLUS Loans you receive under the Direct PLUS Loan MPN."

Beware:  Colleges often congratulate parents on qualifiying for Direct PLUS "awards" before parents understand that the interest rates for such loans are much higher than for other federal student loans and that origination fees are also much higher.  They do not advise parents that they have a right to know, under federal regulation [34 CFR § 668.42 (b)(3) and (4)], if they were targeted behaviorally and demographically by a college's AI algorithm as meeting criteria for Direct PLUS packaging, let alone how that algorithm was developed.  Also, parents are almost surely unaware that the Parent Direct PLUS is the only federal student loan that makes money for the U.S. Treasury, which creates an incentive on the part of policymakers not to look closely at what thousands of colleges are doing to put families into debt from which they may never recover.   

Note to Congress and to parents:  The links below provide a primer on these issues.  After you read them, you may wonder if all this is actually legal.  It's a good question.  Manipulations and deceptions by colleges may violate consumer protection laws; price-fixing may be involved if one subscribes to a recent statement of the Department of Justice about universities that covertly and systematically withhold institutional grants from financially needy students. 

An overview: https://opportunityamericaonline.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/04/THE-U.S.-MAKES-IT-EASY-FOR-PARENTS-TO-GET-COLLEGE-LOANS—REPAYING-THEM-IS-ANOTHER-STORY.pdf 

Defaults: https://www.newsweek.com/2021/07/30/parent-loans-fraught-peril-default-rates-hit-20-30-percent-many-colleges-1610943.html 

*Ethical issues: https://www.nasfaa.org/news-item/26254/Parent_PLUS_Loan_Packaging_Comes_Under_Scrutiny ["And the problems plaguing the program over the years have been well-documented. Numerous reports have identified issues and potential solutions, ranging from a lack of strict federal standards on the loans to the fact that there are no measures in place to hold institutions accountable who encourage parents to borrow beyond their means."]

Algorithms and AI:  https://www.brookings.edu/articles/enrollment-algorithms-are-contributing-to-the-crises-of-higher-education ["The prevailing evidence suggests that these algorithms generally reduce the amount of scholarship funding offered to students. Further, algorithms excel at identifying a student’s exact willingness to pay, meaning they may drive enrollment while also reducing students’ chances to persist and graduate."]

Algorithms and debt:








The Causes of National Student Loan Dysfunction

November, 2023

Washington — Is the nation's long-running student loan imbroglio a failure of program implementation or are its causes more deeply rooted in decades-old structural contradictions and counterproductive incentives that doomed loan programs from the start?  

It is a mistake to attribute too many of the failures to faulty implementation.  Wrong turns in policy choices, especially in 1972 and 1996, created conditions that even the best implementation efforts cannot overcome.

The Higher Education Act of 1965 established federal student aid programs within a structure of cooperative federalism.  College Work Study (CWS), Education Opportunity Grants (EOG), and National Defense Student Loans (Perkins Loans) required state and institutional participation through fiscal federalism mechanisms such as matching and maintenance-of-effort requirements (also known as "skin-in-the-game").  Guaranteed Student Loans (GSL) had no such requirements, but it was envisioned as a minor bridge program to fill gaps in other coverage.  

The Nixon administration upset this approach by proposing two new programs in a unitary government structure, through which the federal government provided all funding and administration with no required state or institutional buy-ins.  Basic Education Opportunity Grants (BEOG) were established in the Education Amendments of 1972, along with a national secondary market (Sallie Mae) to expand the GSL program.  

Unsurprisingly, states and institutions began to prefer the programs that made no demands on them and lobbied Congress accordingly.  However, the Reagan administration soon shifted the balance of student aid funding away from BEOG (renamed Pell Grants in 1980) toward GSL (renamed FFEL in 1992).  By the mid-1990s, FFEL loans became far and away the major source of student financial aid. 

In 1996, Sallie Mae and several state-established FFEL secondary markets proposed for-profit* status for themselves, touting market forces as good for student loan efficiencies.  The Clinton administration and Congress acceded.  The result, however, was to prioritize the interests of stockholders over the interests of borrowers.  

In 2001, the Bush administration appointed lobbyists associated with for-profit secondary markets and for-profit colleges to high positions in the Department of Education.  Lending again exploded in a wild-west atmosphere because both the program structures and incentives were aligned to facilitate it.   

The Great Recession of 2008 required Congress to step in to save student loan secondary markets through ECASLA legislation and in 2010 Congress ended the scandal-plagued FFEL program by originating all new federal student loans through a Direct Loan program, which uses Treasury rather than private capital for the loans.   

These changes, however, did not address underlying structural and incentive issues, nor did various efforts to ease repayment burdens on borrowers, which unfortunately have complicated student loan administration and become tangled in litigation.  Attempts at increased regulation of the programs conceived in the unitary government model have, likewise, been mired in controversy for years. 

Recent headlines suggest that student loan servicing issues — borrowers can't even get through to their servicers — are the result of a failure of the Department of Education and its contractors to apply digital age technology correctly.  That may be true, and a better approach** must be sought.  But even the best technology cannot repair programs structurally misaligned with their goals and riddled with perverse incentives. 

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*Sallie Mae was already for-profit, but as a regulated Government Sponsored Enterprise (GSE). 

**Jennifer Pahlka, in Recoding America: Why Government is Failing in the Digital Age and How We Can Do Better (2023), offers many compelling case studies and much good advice.  Her focus, however, is on program implementation, not on program structures and incentives.  She does not, unfortunately, offer analyses of federal student aid programs.  

Crackdown Welcome, but Decades Too Late

October, 2023

Washington —  Welcome news from the U.S. Department of Education:  it is finally cracking down on student loan servicers that are failing in their responsibility to borrowers.  Federal funds under contract will be withheld from servicer MOHELA for its many serious transgressions.  Other servicers have been put on notice.  

Unfortunately, it comes years and even decades too late.  Had borrowers been better protected from faulty servicing over the years, many would not find themselves in the kinds of repayment crises that now justify billions of dollars of outright loan cancellations.  Which the department is slowly but methodically making.   

I have a hypothesis that I believe is worthy of exploration:  servicers that have somehow been held to account for their behavior over the years have victimized far fewer borrowers than those that have not experienced accountability sanctions.  In the former group are those that either cleaned up their performance or dropped their federal contracts.  In the latter group are those whose bad behaviors were overlooked or even indulged by the Department of Education and the Department of Justice, ultimately at great cost.  

A new report by the CFPB ombudsman included the graphic below (click to enlarge) that appears to support the hypothesis, if read over time.   Navient was eventually held to account by CFPB litigation; PHEAA was held to account by the Massachusetts attorney general.  Both were further undone by U.S. Senate hearings in 2021.  But holding Navient and PHEAA to account came too late for many borrowers.  These two servicers were able to hold off accountability for decades, due in part to the revolving door of personnel who rotated between the servicers, federal offices, and key staff positions in Congress. 

Accountability came earlier for several servicers who had to suffer the consequences of making false claims in their role as lenders in the early 2000s.  In response to qui tam litigation, they either undertook serious reforms to regain credibility (and earn greater servicing volume) or went out of business.   But those consequences were not initiated or administered by the Department of Education, which sent unsubtle messages to servicers like Navient and PHEAA — and MOHELA — that lax oversight would continue as far as it was concerned.  Even false claims against taxpayers did not have to be repaid, under a Bush administration decision carried out by Secretary Margaret Spellings.   






With the new, tougher stance of the Department of Education comes an invitation to those with knowledge of violations to report them. See footnote, below.*  Before praising the department for this initiative, however, it should be pointed out that if more information on these subjects were published by the department, more people could offer insights on servicing problems and solutions.  For example, it would be good to know how much of the federal loan portfolio is principal, interest, capitalized interest, fees, negative amortization, etc.  Even estimates would be helpful.  Nor is it too late to take the long-neglected advice of student loan expert Tom Butts, who has called for the department to open up competition for student loan servicing to include experienced home mortgage and credit card servicers. 

A closer look is also overdue to determine why and how so many borrowers took on so much debt in the first place, particularly those who wouldn't have, and shouldn't have, but for being manipulated into it by postsecondary institutions and their vendors, consultants, and contractors.  A good place to start is with New America's Kevin Carey, whose provocative 2022 article ("The Single Most Important Thing to Know About Financial Aid: It’s a Sham") compares student financial aid packaging at many institutions to airline ticket pricing.

The comparison is apt.  It raises the question of how federal student aid programs, which are supposed to be helping those with financial need, got transformed into life-ruining debt burdens for literally millions of citizens.  Was the Department of Education not aware of this?  Has it done anything to stop the exploitation? Are revenue-maximizing, data-driven algorithms imposed over federal programs even legal?  (I would like to see a case brought against the worst practices.) Are Navient (dba Sallie Mae) and PHEAA now establishing an even wilder private student loan market to make up for their losses of federal servicing revenue?  

The problem is not just with one department that is not up to the job of taking on the nation's student loan behemoths.  The U.S. Supreme Court itself found, last June, that a theoretical loss of federal student loan servicing income at MOHELA, which in turn might somehow affect the state of Missouri, gave Missouri new-found standing to oppose a loan cancellation plan of the Biden administration, and to prevail.  The result:  the very servicer making errors requiring remediation was protected by the high court, not the borrower victims. 

As if this were not convoluted enough (and tragic for many families, including parents who took on heavy debt for their children), Congress is not funding the legitimate needs of the servicers to correct errors and be more responsive to borrower rights under law.  There are some in Congress who apparently want to see the entire loan system collapse, for political reasons.  Despite the accountability measures finally being applied to MOHELA by the Department of Education, the general outlook for borrowers looks bleak.  

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"As part of its ongoing effort to identify and respond to misconduct by institutions in the Title IV programs, the Office of Enforcement, in November 2022, began to invite knowledgeable sources to submit tips and information about potential violations. FSA welcomes information from current or former employees, students, vendors, or contractors of postsecondary institutions; third-party servicers; third-party lead generators; and any other individuals with knowledge of potential violations. Knowledgeable sources may submit relevant tips and information by visiting Ed.gov/FSATips or emailing FSATips@ed.gov."

No One Looks Good in Prison Deal

September, 2023

Lincoln —  Seldom is a public policy deal struck that does not have winners somewhere along the way, but the recent state prison siting agreement on 300 acres north of Lincoln may be one.  No one is looking good; fingers are pointing; conspiracies abound.  

The cause of transparency in government was dealt a blow from both the state and the city.  Citizens had no warnings about what was going on.  Suddenly the state announced a new prison was to be built at North 112th and Adams Streets in northeast Lincoln, and that it had already paid landowners $17 million for 305 acres, or about $56,000 per acre.  When nearby residents revolted, the site was switched to another location north of I-80 that was already owned by the city, but which the city had previously said was not available.  The city gave it up and got the Adams street property in exchange, but with vaguely defined strings that it would pay for improvements at the new alternative  site.  The fait accompli was hastily announced at a press conference.  

The rule of law may also have been dealt a blow.  Statutory procedures are supposed to govern such transactions.  If the state was acting under its eminent domain authority, there should have been public notice and an independent appraisal of the property.  

The cause of affordable housing lost out, too.  Imagine what landowners will think their agriculture-zoned property is worth if the state itself is paying $56,000 per acre.  Will taxpayers now have to subsidize developers even more to increase Lincoln's affordable housing stock? 

Neighborhood comity evaporated quickly, when north Lincoln residents complained that this would never have happened to south Lincoln.  And those near the final site asked why they had no voice at all in the matter. 

Ethnic and racial divides widened as Native Americans watched how quickly the city acted to move the prison away from a location next to a largely white, middle-class neighborhood, compared to their own constantly thwarted attempt — even through the city's board of zoning appeals — to protect an indigenous peoples' spiritual site in an environmentally fragile area near Wilderness Park.

Conservationists watched to see if anyone was aware how the prison site at 112th would degrade Prairie Pines, an important prairie and woodland natural habitat next door.   It was seldom mentioned.  

Penal reform advocates, who wanted to reduce prison populations as a part of prison construction considerations, lost a chance to make their arguments.  

Political analysts of all stripes, especially those with an eye for real or imagined conspiracies, widened already yawning gaps with declarations of who got the better of whom in the land deal.  Some said the state cleverly planned it all beforehand to force the city's hand on the property the state wanted in the first place.  Others said the city got the better deal because it wound up with a property to sell off, probably at a profit of millions at the needless expense of state taxpayers.

Was there a way to avoid all of this?  Questions remain as to why the city, or at least the city's state legislative delegation, did not press the state to explain the authority under which it was acting, and if the authority was eminent domain, to follow public transparency and appraisal requirements. 

Is there a way to move forward to remediate some of the damage done?  Yes.  The situation calls for a review by an outside, independent third party to determine how public transparency was avoided, at what cost.  

The city could recover considerable credibility if it were quickly to commit to an open and transparent process to evaluate options on its newly acquired Adams Street property.  The city's own comprehensive plan calls for a buffer around natural resources like Prairie Pines; so does its climate action plan.  Its new local food plan might be a good fit with some of the property.  Sales of portions of the property could be used to fund conservation easements to protect other natural resources, including remaining parcels near the controversial development near Wilderness Park.  Prompt and proper appraisal of the Adams Street property would put a damper on wild land speculation around Lincoln that hurts the cause of affordable housing.  

Most of all, state and local governments must let citizens have a say.  

 

   


 

  

Time for the Big Fix in U.S. Higher Education

August, 2023

Washington — Now is a propitious time to fix much of what's wrong in U.S. higher education pricing, admissions, and financial aid.  Three recent developments make such action more plausible than previously, and a looming student loan repayment crisis makes it a necessity.  

Affirmation action based on race is out, per the U.S. Supreme Court.  Legacy admissions are perhaps the next preferences to fall, partly in response to the affirmative action decision.  And then there is Henry et al. v. Brown, a lawsuit striking at the way institutions surreptitiously manipulate enrollment management to favor the wealthy over the financially needy, which has contributed to the debilitating student loan crisis.  This case is not going away until there are many large settlements in favor of borrowers.  All eyes are on the Secretary of Education to see what he will do in response to these three developments. 

Now, as to the necessity of a sweeping fix, consider the following.  

All this is happening at a time when millions of student and parent borrowers are going back into loan repayment in October, after the Covid pandemic pause gave them three years of temporary relief.  The Biden administration is trying to effect a smooth transition to repayment but is hampered by a lack of resources from Congress to do the job.  The administration's earlier attempt to cancel up to $20,000 of debt for borrowers with annual incomes under $125,000, which would have cut the number of accounts to service by nearly half, was blocked in June by the Supreme Court.  

The Biden cancellation plan was not only blocked by the Supreme Court, it was also unpopular with many because it did not address the underlying causes of the huge debt build-up, which would be all too likely to repeat themselves quickly.  This viewpoint was widely distributed across the political spectrum, but the lack of attention to the future has been pounced upon by congressional Republicans especially, who continue to hold up funding to provide servicers what they need to get people back into repayment accurately and efficiently.  (This is ironic in that most servicers are located in red states, and are being impaired by their own congressional delegations.)

So what should the Secretary do?  There is a ready solution to address all of the above:  begin to enforce laws already on the books. 

The Secretary should send department program review teams to selected institutions with instructions to review whether their pricing, admissions, and financial aid processes are complementing or conflicting with the statutory purposes of federal student financial aid programs under the Higher Education Act. If they are complementing federal programs, they are not in trouble.  But if institutions are undermining federal programs by favoring the wealthy, in such a way that it results in higher debt for the financially needy, whether by legacy admissions or secretive algorithms, their future participation in HEA Title IV should be reviewed.*  Transparency in financial aid, and therefore in setting net price, is required by federal law.**  Serious misrepresentations by institutions in matters of admissions and financial aid are punishable under law by limitation, suspension, or termination from federal programs.***  

This reform action by the Secretary is urgently needed to convince skeptics that immediate help for servicers and borrowers (many of whom are the victims of unfair institutional practices) will not lead to even greater borrowing in the future.  Putting institutions on notice that they can and will lose their eligibility for federal student aid if they try to game the system, against the purposes of the HEA, will change institutional behavior.**** Reducing bias toward the wealthy (as well-documented by Raj Chetty and others) will also redound to the benefit of the lower income and its disproportionately large minority component.  This will counterbalance the loss of race-based affirmative action, which over the past three decades unfortunately acquired its own bias toward wealth. 

Such action by the Secretary is also necessary to restore the faith of Americans in the promise of higher education, which badly needs it.

_______________________________  

* Legacy admissions are often dwarfed by wealth biased algorithms. Chetty et al. estimate them at 46% of bias toward wealth in their sample. Doing away with the former may only be cosmetic if it leads to increased reliance on the latter.

** 34 CFR § 668.42 Financial assistance information   

*** 34 CFR § 668.71 Scope and special definitions

**** Many institutions would welcome relief from the destructive merit-based aid arms race.  

   

DOJ and the Student Loan Crisis

August, 2023

Washington — How much of the nation's student loan crisis can be attributed to the Department of Justice?   It's a question that deserves more exploration than it has received.

There are at least four instances in the past few decades when DOJ made highly questionable calls that exacerbated the crisis.  

1.  In the early 1990s, a group of colleges known as the Overlap Group agreed to limit the amount of grants they were giving to non-needy students, to be able to target the financially needy instead.  DOJ stepped in to say it would be a violation of the Sherman Antitrust Act for the colleges not to compete against each other with grants for the non-needy.  A federal appeals court ruled for the colleges, but DOJ did not change its position.  Congress then carved out a narrow exemption for such colleges, but again DOJ held fast in its interpretation.  This helped set the stage for a merit-based arms race among many colleges that not only remains to this day but has spread widely, short-changing need-based aid that could have been deployed to the financially needy to reduce student loan borrowing.  It has also led to tuition hikes and the practice of discounting to give the illusion of aid.  

2.  In the early 2000s, several student loan lenders began making false claims against the Department of Education.  After Inspector General's audits, Secretary of Education Margaret Spellings ended paying the false claims but did not require the lenders to pay back any ill-gotten gains.  In subsequent litigation over the false claims, DOJ did not intervene against the lenders, despite remarkably detailed discovery evidence documenting the illegal schemes. (If this didn't result in DOJ's intervention, what would?) This sent a signal to the student loan industry that action against it from DOJ under the Higher Education Act was unlikely.  Bending or breaking rules might eventually have to be stopped, but there would be no consequences, even requirements to reimburse.  This set the stage for widespread loan servicer dysfunction in the subsequent decade, adding billions of dollars of debt onto student and parent borrowers.  Secretary Miguel Cardona recently announced the cancellation of $39 billion of such debt, which appears to be only a first installment.

3.  In 2016, another small group of colleges held discussions to try once again to limit college aid to the non-needy, which might have led to reform of legacy admissions as well.  (Legacy admissions are sometimes explained as a way for colleges to raise funds, but those funds are often returned back as aid to non-needy students.)  According to a chapter in a soon-to-be-published book about "enrollment management," when DOJ learned of these discussions, it demanded that the colleges preserve any records as possible evidence of violations of the Sherman Act.  This gave the enrollment management industry (historically associated with lenders) the green light to roar ahead on making so-called merit aid even more of a priority over need-based aid at many colleges.  The financially needy would have to rely on ever greater student loan debt.  

4.  In 2023, DOJ's solicitor general appeared before the Supreme Court on behalf of President Biden's student loan cancellation effort under the HEROES Act.  A key question in oral argument was whether the State of Missouri, out of its relationship with the Missouri-based student loan servicer MOHELA, had standing as a plaintiff.  Elizabeth Prelogar argued for DOJ that Missouri did not have standing, but inexplicably (a huge surprise to me), said MOHELA would have standing if it had been a plaintiff.  This gave the Supreme Court majority an opportunity to make a much shorter leap to give Missouri standing, if DOJ was conceding that MOHELA had it.  

I thought at the time (and still do) that this was a huge gaffe tactically and an abrupt reversal of DOJ policy.  In 2016, the loan servicer PHEAA asked the Supreme Court to take up, on certiorari, a 4th Circuit decision that PHEAA was not an arm of Pennsylvania.  The Court asked the solicitor general to advise it of the position of the United States on the question.  In the summer of 2016, in the DOJ solicitor general's office, both PHEAA counsel and counsel for two plaintiffs against PHEAA gave presentations.  (I was present for the plaintiffs.) In a written response to the Supreme Court's request shortly thereafter, the solicitor general counseled the Supreme Court to deny certiorari to PHEAA, on grounds that it was not an arm of Pennsylvania, which the Court then did in January, 2017.* 

The relationship of PHEAA to Pennsylvania is substantially the same as MOHELA to Missouri.  What made Elizabeth Prelogar suddenly argue that MOHELA would have had standing?  The Supreme Court had denied PHEAA certiorari on essentially the same question.  Why didn't DOJ raise this?  Neither Missouri nor MOHELA had standing until DOJ gave MOHELA away in oral argument.  It was then inevitable for Chief Justice John Roberts to exploit it in his written decision.  

It can be argued that the Supreme Court majority was bent on making the student loan case another notch in its belt supporting a "major questions doctrine," regardless of roadblocks in its way, but why was DOJ such a willing party to it on the question of standing?** On such points is the course of history determined.  

It is another example of how DOJ has made dubious decisions on student loan matters for decades, which have disadvantaged borrowers and have actually undermined the federal government's own programs to help the financially needy.  DOJ actions have driven up borrowing and its inactions have contributed to a broken student loan servicing system.  Its gaffe hangs over future attempts to provide student debt relief.  

What will done about it?  DOJ has recently shown signs that it is beginning to understand how it has been hurting the financially needy, and how some colleges have tried to use their (now-expired) statutory exemption from the Sherman Act to collude in favor of merit-heavy enrollment management schemes.  Is DOJ's decision to file a statement of interest with the court in the Henry case a long-overdue reversal?  Probably not.  DOJ still has a long way to go.***   

________________________  

*See Dan E. Moldea, Money, Politics, and Corruption in U.S. Higher Education (2020), pp. 125-126.

**DOJ and the Solicitor General were more impressive in defending the use of the HEROES Act as the basis for student loan relief, although many experts believe the HEA would have been a better choice.  Unfortunately, DOJ also disadvantaged itself on the matter of the relief apparently being so costly that it triggered a "major question" in the view of some on the Court.  The relief could and should have been scored at a "minor question" level by subtracting debt cancellation already (April, 2022) announced and owed borrowers as a result of servicer dysfunction, as well as subtracting uncollectible amounts already subject to the Federal Claims Collection Standards (FCCS), 31 C.F.R. Subt. B, Ch. IX, which is under DOJ and Treasury jurisdiction.  The numbers presented to the Court were double- and triple-counting, and should have been unduplicated.  Had they been, the sharpest written exchange among justices in modern Court history, which has shaken the Court's standing in the eyes of the public, could have been avoided.

***From the DOJ statement of interest: "The United States offers no view on Plaintiffs’ antitrust standing, their factual claims, the proper definition of “need-blind,” the application of any applicable statute of limitations, or the separate motions to dismiss...."  In other words, in its statement DOJ offered the court a way out of the case without ever looking at how exactly financially needy students were being forced into higher levels of debt, despite the plaintiffs' detailed descriptions of enrollment management schemes that were illegal if for no other reason than they were secretive and not disclosed as required by the Higher Education Act (see citations below).  Rather than dealing these schemes a coup de gras, DOJ is choosing to soft-pedal them. 

34 CFR § 668.42 Financial assistance information.

(a)

(1) Information on financial assistance that the institution must publish and make readily available to current and prospective students under this subpart includes, but is not limited to, a description of all the Federal, State, local, private and institutional student financial assistance programs available to students who enroll at that institution.

(2) These programs include both need-based and non-need-based programs.

(3) The institution may describe its own financial assistance programs by listing them in general categories.

(4) The institution must describe the terms and conditions of the loans students receive under the Federal Family Education Loan Program, the William D. Ford Federal Direct Student Loan Program, and the Federal Perkins Loan Program.

(b) For each program referred to in paragraph (a) of this section, the information provided by the institution must describe -

(1) The procedures and forms by which students apply for assistance;

(2) The student eligibility requirements;

(3) The criteria for selecting recipients from the group of eligible applicants; and

(4) The criteria for determining the amount of a student's award. 
[Emphasis added]    


34 CFR § 668.71 Scope and special definitions.


(a) If the Secretary determines that an eligible institution has engaged in substantial misrepresentation, the Secretary may -

(1) Revoke the eligible institution's program participation agreement, if the institution is provisionally certified under § 668.13(c);

(2) Impose limitations on the institution's participation in the title IV, HEA programs, if the institution is provisionally certified under § 668.13(c) ;

(3) Deny participation applications made on behalf of the institution; or

(4) Initiate a proceeding against the eligible institution under subpart G of this part.


Will Merlin Hear these Birds in the Future?

August, 2023

Lincoln — The bird identification app Merlin heard the following birds during the early mornings of July 23-29 on the north half of our tallgrass prairie and riparian woods at 5840 West Superior.  

The property is in the process of receiving a conservation easement, but two neighboring properties to the north and east, currently grasslands, may soon be developed.  If that happens, how many of these species will disappear?  Likely a majority of them.  

July 23. Red-eyed Vireo, Downy Woodpecker, Northern Cardinal, American Goldfinch, Black-capped Chickadee, Field Sparrow, American Crow, House Wren, Red-headed Woodpecker, American Robin, Song Sparrow, Cedar Waxwing, Blue Jay

24. (additional) Vesper Sparrow, Upland Sandpiper, Eastern Kingbird, White-breasted Nuthatch, Common Yellowthroat, Baltimore Oriole, Rose-breasted Grosbeak, Eastern Wood-Pewee, Red-bellied Woodpecker, Gray Catbird, Grasshopper Sparrow, House Finch, Red-tailed Hawk 

25. (additional) Cooper's Hawk, Great-tailed Grackle, Eastern Meadowlark

26. (additional) Dickcissel

27. (additional) Yellow-throated Vireo

28. (additional) Great-crested Flycatcher, Brown Thrasher

29. (additional) Killdeer

Total July 23-29: 34 species

Unexpectedly absent from the Merlin list (heard or seen at other times):  Great Horned Owl, Barred Owl, Yellow-billed Cuckoo, Northern Bobwhite, Yellow-shafted Flicker, Red-winged Blackbird, Tree Swallow, Barn Swallow, Eastern Bluebird, Orchard Oriole. 

And what about butterflies and other pollinators?  Monarchs were spotted frequently during the last week of July, especially on Whorled milkweed, Common milkweed, and Butterfly milkweed.  Wachiska Audubon reports in its August newsletter that the 17-acre aforementioned grassland to the east, owned by the City, "was hayed a few weeks ago, and by the end of July the native grasses and forbs had really taken off.  There were dozens of common milkweed plants that were over two feet tall after the haying and some timely rains...."  Wachiska deserves credit for clearing invasives from this parcel to give grassland birds and pollinators a chance.  




Speak for Yourself, David Brooks

August, 2023

Washington — David Brooks made a splash with his column "What if We're the Bad Guys Here?"

We can condemn the Trumpian populists until the cows come home, but the real question is: When will we stop behaving in ways that make Trumpism inevitable?

Speak for yourself, David Brooks. Just when will you stop? You're long overdue.

Some of us have been trying to behave responsibly, reaching out to the Trumpian populists to address their real needs, to demonstrate to them that democracy works, that they do not need to follow a dangerous authoritarian to get their voices heard and their needs addressed.

I've spent years working on the Farm Bill (which should be called the Food Bill), trying to get elected officials on both sides of aisle to make the bill a vehicle to address crises in rural (and culturally rural) areas, such as the lack of healthy food, the faltering health care system, and the deaths of despair caused by obesity and opioids. One solution would be to bring back the Extension Service to address nutrition and wellness. Do you know what the Extension Service is, why it is trusted when other institutions are not, and why channeling help through it could make a big difference in political as well as physical health? Do you and your fellow Bad Guys (the so-called elites) ever think in these terms? Not in my experience.

I've spent even more years trying to stop the nation's student loan system from widening class and race inequalities.  With rare exception, I have not noticed you and your fellow Bad Guys engaged in this effort. Now higher education is widely distrusted, especially by the Trumpian populists, which portends ill for the nation on many levels — political, economic, and social.

So, yes, stop behaving so counterproductively, so stupidly, if I may say it that way.  For good advice, seek out people who have the highest Bad Guy credentials but have overcome them.  We're out there. Will you pitch in?

 










Is It Racketeering?

August, 2023

Washington — A few years ago, a Philadelphia newspaper reporter called me to validate, if possible, what he thought was an outrageous statement from a board member of the federal student loan servicer PHEAA.  The board member had told him that PHEAA did not cancel federal student loans even if borrowers qualified by law, because holding onto the loans was how PHEAA made money, not by canceling them.

I told him it was all too true and he had an obligation to report it publicly for the sake of the integrity of the federal student loan program.  Not to mention how PHEAA was adding to ever-higher debts for many who will never be able to pay them off.   

The call came around the same time a PHEAA employee asked me for advice on how to fight his dismissal for objecting to how PHEAA was misleading borrowers through its call-center operations.

It was not long until the attorneys general of Massachusetts and New York both sued PHEAA on behalf of their states' borrowers.  

The U.S. Department of Education, however, took the side of PHEAA.  In a March, 2018, notice from Secretary Betsy DeVos, the Department claimed that neither states nor borrowers could bring actions against PHEAA because of "federal preemption" under the Higher Education Act.  (Talk about federal overreach!) The Department also ended its cooperation with another federal agency, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, with regard to student loan borrower complaints.  The Department of Justice even attempted to intervene against the Massachusetts lawsuit. 

These actions were led and coordinated by former PHEAA employees who rotated through the Department of Education.

Fast forward to 2023.  Several state and federal judges have knocked down the "preemption" attempt to bilk borrowers and the Department of Education has, appropriately, begun to make remediations to those victimized. 

In the Federal Register of July 24, 2023, Secretary Miguel Cardona finally reversed the bizarre attempt to protect servicers from borrowers, and from states acting on behalf of borrowers.  He announced the return to "cooperative federalism," the foundation of the Higher Education Act of 1965.  This follows his action earlier in the month to cancel $39 billion of student debt that was the result of improper servicer actions.

An experienced attorney with considerable federal experience is now asking, in part on behalf of family members who have been borrower victims, if PHEAA's willful behavior is an example of illegal conduct under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations act (RICO).   It certainly seems to be.  If this isn't racketeering, it's hard to imagine what would be.   

PHEAA is no longer a federal loan servicer; much of its portfolio has been transferred to MOHELA, a servicer with its own set of credibility problems.  But that does not mean a RICO lawsuit against PHEAA could not be brought.  

Moreover, at what point should colleges have been obligated to warn potential borrowers of the risks involved in taking out student loans, that servicers could and would undermine the terms and conditions of the loans, and that consumer protections would be erased in the process?  Would the FTC and SEC permit the marketing of such products in other sectors of the economy?  Surely not.    

I regret that I was never able to help the PHEAA employee who was fired.

To my knowledge, the Philadelphia newspaper reporter never made public what the PHEAA board member told him.  Had he done so, perhaps that $39 billion — and counting — figure would have been much lower.