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Who qualifies for $6 billion student loan class-action settlement


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The Supreme Court last week declined to block a class-action lawsuit brought by student loan borrowers who say they’ve been defrauded by their schools. Now, the U.S. Department of Education will be able to continue delivering on a $6 billion in loan forgiveness settlement.

More than 150 schools, mostly for-profit institutions, were involved in the settlement.

Three of those institutions — Lincoln Educational Services Corporation, American National University, and Everglades College, Inc. — had petitioned the highest court. They’ve argued that they were denied due process with the settlement and that it harms their reputation.

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Consumer advocates applauded the justices’ decision.

“Today’s swift and decisive action from the highest court should end, once and for all, any ongoing debate about the legitimacy of this settlement,” said Eileen Connor, president and director of the Project on Predatory Student Lending.

Career Education Colleges and Universities, a trade association representing for-profit colleges, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Here’s what borrowers need to know about the settlement.

Relief is a result of class-action lawsuit by borrowers

Starting around 2015, the U.S. Department of Education was flooded with requests for loan forgiveness from students who said their school had misled them. The government has the authority to cancel federal student loan debt when a borrower’s school is found to have engaged in misconduct.

A large backlog of applications led a group of borrowers to file a class-action lawsuit against the Department in 2019, demanding speedier relief.

The litigation played out over years, with the Trump administration at one point issuing notices denying the requested relief to some 128,000 borrowers.

Shady for-profit schools targeting vets

By June 2022, however, borrowers and the government reached a settlement. Under its terms, tens of thousands of borrowers were entitled to debt relief. These students attended one of 151 schools accused of misconduct.

The government also agreed to consider and make a decision on the applications of thousands of other borrowers within a set timeframe.

The justices’ decision last week means that settlement will now stay in effect.

Eligible borrowers will get refunds, debt erased

Case unrelated to Biden’s student loan forgiveness

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