AG Curtis Hill enforces consumer protection laws to not exploit student loan borrowers

Indiana Attorney General Curtis Hill joined a bipartisan coalition of 32 attorneys general on Friday in defending the states’ ability to enforce state and federal consumer protection laws against student loan servicers.

Hill

In an amicus brief filed in the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit, the attorneys general argue that the case brought by the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania against student loan servicer Navient for exploiting student loan borrowers should be permitted to go forward in the federal courts.

“Americans are more burdened by student loan debt than ever before,” Hill said. “The next generation of leaders is being preyed upon and misguided on lending practices. This lawsuit holds accountable one of the nation’s largest student loan providers for their misinformation.”

More than 92 percent of the $1.5 trillion in outstanding student loan debt is owned or guaranteed by the federal government, the day-to-day management of student loans is administered by a variety of private student loan servicing companies that are responsible for collecting payments, enrolling borrowers in specific repayment plans, facilitating the loan’s payoff, collecting on delinquent loans and otherwise assisting borrowers as issues arise over the lifetime of a loan.

In 2017, Navient was sued by Pennsylvania, in the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Pennsylvania, for engaging in various unfair and deceptive business practices in servicing student loans. These practices included steering borrowers into forbearance rather than more favorable income-based repayment plans, misleading borrowers about when they needed to file annual certifications to remain enrolled in certain repayment plans and consistently making payment processing errors that resulted in unnecessary fees and penalties.

In December of 2017, Navient moved to dismiss Pennsylvania’s lawsuit arguing that the federal Higher Education Act preempted Pennsylvania’s state-law claims and that Pennsylvania could not bring claims under the federal CFPA because the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) had already sued Navient. After the district court denied the motion, Navient appealed to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit.

The 32 attorneys general are supporting Pennsylvania’s lawsuit, which seeks penalties, injunctive relief, disgorgement and other relief by arguing that states have a substantial interest in protecting their residents from all unfair and deceptive business practices committed by businesses operating within their borders, including federal student loan servicers.

Additionally, because consumer protection is and has always been an area of traditional state enforcement and the federal government has for decades welcomed the states’ unique expertise on this matter, Congress never intended to remove the states from their traditional role in protecting their residents from misconduct in the student loan industry. Navient is also wrong to argue that the CFPA limits the states’ authority to bring federal claims in cases where the CFPB has already sued.