Exclusive: Education Department data details struggle for students who feel defrauded

Education Department (ED) data obtained by Yahoo Finance details a backlog of claims from U.S. college students who felt defrauded, underscoring the Trump administration's deregulatory actions toward U.S. higher education and the regulatory issues inherited by the Biden administration.

U.S. citizens and eligible non-citizens with federally-backed student debt can apply for borrower defense if their college or career school education misled them "or engaged in other misconduct in violation of certain state laws," according to the ED's Federal Student Aid office.

Borrower defense applications surged after the Obama administration cracked down on predatory for-profit colleges in 2015 and created new regulations, but the mechanism for defrauded borrowers seeking debt relief broke down during the Trump administration.

In this March 11, 2016 photo, Shane Satterfield, a roofer who owes more than $30,000 in debt for an associate’s degree in computer science from one of the country’s largest for-profit college companies that failed in 2014, holds his diploma in Atlanta.
Shane Satterfield, a roofer who owes more than $30,000 in debt for an associate’s degree in computer science from Everest University, a now-defunct for-profit college, holds his diploma in Atlanta on March 11, 2016. (AP Photo/David Goldman) · ASSOCIATED PRESS

An analysis of the new ED data by Yahoo Finance and The Century Foundation (TCF), a progressive think tank that previously obtained and analyzed borrower defense application data, found:

  • Students who believed they had been defrauded filed a total of 337,190 borrower defense claims as of December 2020, according to ED data obtained through a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request.

  • The vast majority of 267 institutions subject to at least 100 borrower defense claims were for-profit schools, despite for-profits comprising less than 10% of U.S. higher education enrollment.

  • More than half of all borrower defense claims were filed against now-defunct for-profit schools, and 33% of all "unresolved" claims were filed by students of a for-profit school that shut down in 2015.

  • While 208,486 (or about 62%) of all borrower defense applications listed were "resolved," meaning that the applications "are closed in system or in which the applicant has been notified of a decision on their application (eligible or ineligible)," many were systematically denied during the Trump administration — including nearly 130,000 in 2020 alone.

  • There are several for-profit schools on the borrower defense claim list that are still operating, with access to federal financial aid funding, despite concerns about allegedly predatory marketing.

ED confirmed to Yahoo Finance that the data comprises "all borrower defense claims submitted through December 2020" and did not clarify whether the agency would re-adjudicate any "resolved" claims that were found to be improperly denied.

“In a period of just a few months, the DeVos administration, after not letting borrowers know anything, basically churned through about 125,000 applications," Eileen Connor, the legal director for the Project on Predatory Lending, which represents various borrowers in lawsuits against ED over the claims, told Yahoo Finance. "And 'resolved' [in those cases] means denied."