He was called 2,000 times about his student loans. Now, it could get worse for borrowers

In This Article:

  • Many of the millions of robocalls Americans recieve each month are about debt.

  • Student loan borrowers are increasingly a target of these calls.

  • And advocates worry the situation could soon get worse if servicers aren't regulated enough.

When the phone rang, James Hunter's legs burned in pain.

Ever since an accident when he was 30, he's been paralyzed from the waist down, and the relentless calls from Navient about his student loans triggered his nerves.

"Any time my phone would ring, I would get an anxiety attack," Hunter, 44, said.

His $60,000 in federal student loans have been canceled due to his severe disability, but Navient NAVI , one of the country's largest student loan servicers, is still collecting on his $40,000 in private loans. He sent the company notes from his doctor, and explained to them that he's in a wheelchair and unable to put his film degree to use, but to no avail. The calls continued.

"They had my back against the wall with no remedy," Hunter said. "I felt hopeless."

Now he's suing the company for damages from the harassment.

Navient called Hunter nearly 2,000 times, according to his lawyer Billy Peerce Howard , from The Consumer Protection Firm in Tampa, Florida. Peerce Howard is currently working on around a dozen other cases, in addition to Hunter's, against Navient over its robocall practices.

Nikki A. Lavoie, director of corporate communications at Navient, said many borrowers require one-on-one support to fully understand their options.

"Direct communication is critical to address, resolve, and avoid delinquent and defaulted loans," Lavoie said.

Many robocalls are about debt

While a lot of the conversation around robocalls centers on scams, many of these calls are actually from companies collecting debt. In fact, 9 out of the top 10 robocallers in June were calling about people's arrears, according to YouMail, a robocall blocking service.

Robocalls employ an automatic telephone dialer system, and when you pick up it can be a live person or a prerecorded message. The calls usually come in from different, and sometimes familiar, phone numbers so that you're more likely to pick them up.

As student debt in the country balloons, former students are increasingly the target of these calls.

Outstanding student loan debt in the U.S. is now over $1.5 trillion, surpassing auto and credit card debt and only behind housing debt. Around 1 in 5 student loan borrowers in the main, federal direct loan program are currently delinquent, according to Mark Kantrowitz, publisher of SavingForCollege.com.