Common Manual Interim Policy Updates
As you are aware, the Common Manual Governing Board periodically approves modifications to the Common Manual. Recently, several policies were approved to modify the Common Manual. These changes will be incorporated into the Common Manual when the next annual update is published in July 2001.
Attached are interim updates to the Common Manual which address policy revisions approved on April 19, 2001. Pay particular attention to the effective dates for these interim policy updates.
Any questions related to the attached Common Manual interim policy updates should be directed to the UHEAA Policy and Training Department at (801) 321-7166 or by e-mail at cjudd@utahsbr.edu.
Attachment
Common Manual Interim Policy Updates
Policy Changes Approved April 19, 2001
Batch 78 (Federal): Proposal numbers 489& 497
Batch 79 (Guarantor): Proposal numbers 501 - 503
Batch 80 (Federal): Proposal numbers 504 - 514
Batch 81 (Federal): Proposal numbers 515 - 525
Week of Instruction
The Common Manual has been revised to change the definition
of "a week of instruction" with respect to time for preparation for
final examination. Such periods of time counted toward "a week of instruction"
may include only preparation for final examination occurring after the
last scheduled day of classes for a payment period. In addition,
homework has been added to the list of activities that are not considered
as instructional time.
| Affected Sections: | 4.1.C., 5.7.B. |
| Effective Date: | "A week of instruction" as determined by the school for purposes of establishing or maintaining school program eligibility on or after July 1, 2001. |
| Basis: | Final Rules published in Part IX of the Federal Register, pages 65662-65676, dated November 1, 2000; §668.2(b)(2); §668.8(b)(2),(3), and (4). |
Suspension of Due Diligence for Death Claims
The Common Manual has been revised to include a lender option
to grant an additional 60-day suspension of due diligence activities, for
a total of up to 120 days, when reliable but unofficial notification is
received that a borrower or student has died. This additional 60-day
suspension may be applied only when the initial 60-day suspension has ended
and it is determined that additional time is required to obtain the required
death claim documentation.
| Affected Sections: | 7.11.B., 8.2.B., CCI8.2.B. |
| Effective Date: | Administrative forbearances granted by the lender on or after November 1, 1999. |
| Basis: | Final Rules published in Part X of the Federal Register, pages 65676-65694, dated November 1, 2000; §682.402(b)(3); DCL GEN-99-36/99-G-324/00-L-217. |
Default Aversion Assistance Time Frames Chart
The Common Manual has been revised to include a Default Aversion
Assistance Time Frames chart.
| Affected Sections: | 8.1.J., CCI8.1.J. |
| Effective Date: | For default aversion assistance (DAA) requests submitted on or after July 1, 2001, unless implemented earlier by the guarantor. |
| Basis: | None. |
Claim Recalls/Repurchase
The Common Manual Common Claim Initiative (CCI) policy has been
updated to reflect that, whether the lender is required to recall the claim
or the lender chooses to recall the claim, if a claim is later filed, the
lender must provide a complete history of the account from the out-of-school
date reported on the Claim Form. (Refer to subsection CCI8.3.B.
for documentation requirements.)
In addition, policy language and glossary language have been revised
to expand the definition of "recall" and to redefine the term "repurchase."
The definition of "recall" under the CCI now includes claims for which
the lender returns the claim payment amount within 30 days of the lender's
receipt. "Repurchase" has been redefined under the CCI as a transaction
that occurs more than 30 days after the date the lender receives the claim
payment.
| Affected Sections: | CCI8.5, CCI8.7, appendix G |
| Effective Date: | Claims recalled or repurchased on or after 18 months from publication of the Common Account Maintenance claim submittal records (CAM Chapter 11), unless implemented earlier by the guarantor. |
| Basis: | CAM Initiative. |
Claim Repurchase
The Common Manual Common Claim Initiative (CCI) policy has been
updated to reflect that a repayment schedule must be sent to the borrower
for rehabilitated and repurchased loans no more than 60 days and first
payment due date set no more than 75 days after the lender considers the
purchase to be complete (e.g., the date the repurchase check is sent to
the guarantor, the date the lender receives the loan file from the guarantor,
or the date the lender receives collateral from the guarantor).
| Affected Sections: | CCI8.7, CCI8.10 |
| Effective Date: | Loans rehabilitated or claims repurchased on or after 18 months from publication of the Common Account Maintenance claim submittal records (CAM Chapter 11), unless implemented earlier by the guarantor. |
| Basis: | §682.405; CAM Initiative. |
PLUS Interest Rate Change
Since July 1, 1987, PLUS and SLS loans have accrued interest based
on a variable interest rate. For PLUS loans disbursed on or after
July 1, 1998, the rates have been calculated based on a 91-day Treasury
bill rate which remains in effect for these loans. For loans first disbursed
prior to July 1, 1998, the variable rates have been determined based on
the 52-week Treasury bill rate. However, beginning July 1, 2001, the variable
interest rate for PLUS and SLS loans first disbursed during the period
beginning July 1, 1987 and ending June 30, 1998 will be adjusted annually
on July 1, and calculated by adding 3.1% or 3.25%, as applicable, to the
weekly average one-year constant maturity Treasury yield, as published
by the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, for the last calendar
week ending on or before June 26 of that year.
| Affected Sections: | 6.1.F. |
| Effective Date: | PLUS and SLS loan interest rates calculated on or after July 1, 2001. |
| Basis: | HEA 427A(c)(4)(B)(ii) as amended December 15, 2000. |
Mandatory Forbearance for Teacher Loan Forgiveness Program
The Common Manual has been revised to include the requirement
that a lender grant a mandatory forbearance annually, at the borrower's
request, while the borrower maintains eligibility for loan forgiveness
under the Teacher Loan Forgiveness Program. At the time of each annual
request, the lender must be reasonably sure that the cancellation amount
will satisfy the anticipated outstanding loan balance at the time of the
expected cancellation. Before granting a forbearance to a borrower,
the lender must require the borrower to submit the following:
| . | Documentation showing the beginning and anticipated ending dates of
the period during which the borrower expects to perform the qualifying
teacher service for that year.
|
| . | A self-certifying statement of the borrower's intent to satisfy the teacher loan forgiveness requirements. |
The lender also grants a forbearance, at the borrower's request, for
a period not to exceed 60 days while the lender is waiting for a completed
teacher loan forgiveness application from the borrower. In addition,
after receiving the application, and if requested by the borrower, the
lender grants a forbearance to cover the period needed by the guarantor
to determine the borrower's eligibility for discharge. The forbearance
begins on the date the lender receives the completed teacher loan forgiveness
application and ends on the date the lender receives a denial of the request
or the loan discharge amount from the guarantor. For this forbearance,
as with other forbearances, comakers of a consolidation loan must individually
qualify for the same, or a different forbearance in order for one to be
granted.
| Affected Sections: | 7.11.C. |
| Effective Date: | Forbearance requests granted by the lender on or after July 1, 2001, unless implemented earlier by the guarantor. |
| Basis: | Final Rules published in Part VI of the Federal Register, pages 65624-65630, dated November 1, 2000; §682.211(h)(2)(ii)(C); §682.211(h)(3)(iii); §682.215(e)(i), (ii), and (iii). |
Teacher Loan Forgiveness Program
The Common Manual has been revised to reflect the new requirements
for the Teacher Loan Forgiveness Program and eliminate references to the
previous Loan Forgiveness Program for Teachers. The Teacher Loan
Forgiveness Program is intended to encourage individuals to enter and continue
in the teaching profession in certain eligible elementary and secondary
schools that serve low-income families. Under this program, the Department
repays all or a portion of a borrower's Stafford loan obligations, and
Consolidation loan obligations to the extent that a Consolidation loan
repaid a borrower's Stafford loans(s). To be eligible for this forgiveness
program, borrowers must meet the following criteria:
| . | The borrower must be a "new borrower" on or after October 1, 1998.
|
| . | The borrower must have been employed as a full-time teacher for 5 consecutive, complete academic years in a qualified school, as certified by the chief administrative officer at that school. A qualified school is one that meets all of the following criteria: |
| - | Is in a school district that qualifies for funds under Title I of the
Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965, as amended.
|
| - | Has been selected by the Department based on a determination that more
than 30 percent of the school's total enrollment is made up of children
who qualify for services provided under Title I.
|
| - | Is listed in the Annual Directory of Designated Low-Income Schools
for Teacher Cancellation Benefits. (If this directory is not
available before May 1 of any year, the previous year's directory may be
used.)
|
| If the school where the borrower is employed meets the eligibility
criteria for any year of the borrower's employment, all subsequent years
continue to qualify the borrower even if the school is no longer eligible.
However, if the borrower is initially employed by a school that does not
meet the criteria and the school later qualifies, the borrower's 5 qualified
years of service begin when the school meets the eligibility criteria.
|
| . | If employed as an elementary school teacher, the borrower must have
demonstrated knowledge and teaching skills in reading, writing, mathematics,
and other areas of the school's curriculum, as certified by the chief administrative
officer of the school at which the borrower is employed.
|
| . | If employed as a secondary school teacher, the borrower must be teaching
a subject which is relevant to the borrower's academic major, as certified
by the chief administrative officer of the secondary school at which the
borrower is employed.
|
| . | One of the 5 years of qualifying service must be performed after the
1997-1998 academic year.
|
| . | A borrower who is in default on a loan(s) for which the borrower seeks forgiveness must have made satisfactory repayment arrangements on the defaulted loan(s) to reinstate Title IV aid eligibility. See section 8.9. |
The loan for which forgiveness is sought must have been made before the end of the 5th year of qualifying teaching service.
Completion of one-half of an academic year is considered to be 1 academic
year if the borrower's employer considers the borrower to have fulfilled
his or her contract requirements for the academic year for the purposes
of salary increases, tenure, and retirement, and the borrower is unable
to complete the academic year due to any one of the following:
| . | A return to postsecondary education on at least a half-time basis in
a program directly related to the borrower's teaching service.
|
| . | A condition covered under the Family and Medical Leave Act.
|
| . | An order to active duty status for more than 30 days. |
A break in the borrower's teaching service for any one of the above reasons, (even if not counted as part of an eligible academic year for the purpose of the discharge), along with the time required to return to qualifying teaching service at the beginning of the next regularly scheduled academic year, is not considered a break in the required 5 consecutive years of service.
For the purpose of the Teacher Loan Forgiveness Program, the following
definitions apply:
| . | An academic year means 1 complete school year at the same school, or
2 complete and consecutive half-years from different school years at either
the same or different schools. Half-years exclude summer and generally
fall within a 12-month period. For schools that have a year-round
program of instruction, a minimum of 9 months is considered to comprise
an academic year.
|
| . | Full-time means the standard used by a state in defining full-time
employment as a teacher. For a borrower teaching in more than one
school, the determination of full time is based on the combination of all
qualifying employment. A borrower may combine service at multiple
qualifying schools to equal full-time teaching service.
|
| . | Elementary school means a public or nonprofit private school that provides
elementary education as determined by state law or the Department if that
school is not in a state.
|
| . | Secondary school means a public or nonprofit private school that provides
secondary education as determined by state law or the Department if the
school is not in a state.
|
| . | Teacher means a person who provides direct classroom teaching or classroom-type
teaching in a non-classroom setting, including special education teachers.
|
The Department will repay, on behalf of a qualified borrower, no more than a combined total of $5,000 under both the FFELP and FDLP for outstanding principal and accrued interest on his or her qualifying Stafford loan(s) [or the outstanding portion of a Consolidation loan used to repay qualifying Stafford loan(s)] at the end of the 5th complete year of teaching. Receipt of a benefit under this program does not entitle the borrower to a refund of any payments made on the loan(s).
No borrower may, for the same service, receive benefit under both the Teacher Loan Forgiveness Program and subtitle D of Title I of the National and Community Service Act of 1990.
Procedures for applying for the Teacher Loan Forgiveness Program
have not been defined, but are being addressed by the community in its
discussions with the Department.
| Affected Sections: | 7.14 |
| Effective Date: | Teacher loan forgiveness applications received by the lender on or after July 1, 2001, from a new borrower on or after October 1, 1998, who has been employed as a full-time teacher for five consecutive complete years as long as one of the years is after the 1997-1998 academic year-unless implemented earlier by the guarantor. |
| Basis: | Final Rules published in Part VI of the Federal Register, pages 65624-65630, dated November 1, 2000; §682.215. |
False Certification Loan Discharges
The Common Manual has been revised to allow the guarantor or
Department to initiate the false certification discharge process if either
possesses knowledge of false certification eligibility. If the guarantor
or Department initiates the discharge process, the borrower may not be
required to complete a discharge request.
| Affected Sections: | 8.2.H., CCI8.2.H. |
| Effective Date: | Discharge eligibility determined by the guarantor or Department on or after July 1, 2001, unless implemented earlier by the guarantor. |
| Basis: | Final Rules published in Part V of the Federal Register, pages 65615-66522, dated November 1, 2000; §682.402(e)(14). |
False Certification Loan Discharges
The Common Manual has been revised to remove the borrower's
employment attempt conditions previously required for false certification
loan discharge requests. Borrowers are no longer required to certify
that a reasonable attempt was made to obtain employment in the occupation
for which the program was intended to provide training.
| Affected Sections: | 8.2.H., CCI8.2.H. |
| Effective Date: | False certification loan discharge requests received by the lender on or after July 1, 2000. |
| Basis: | Dear Guaranty Agency Partner Letter G-00-327 issued July 2000; §682.402(e)(13)(ii)(C). |
Cohort Default Rates
Common Manual chapter 10 has undergone major revisions to more
accurately reflect the actual cohort default rate process and mimic the
modified structure of federal regulations. In addition, new text
includes the substantive changes derived from new regulations published
November 1, 2000 and the budget bill signed into law in December.
While the structure of the chapter changes dramatically, the following
are the substantive regulatory and policy changes of which schools should
be aware:
| . | A school will lose eligibility to participate in the FFELP and the
FDLP 30 days after receiving notice that its official cohort default rate
for the most recent fiscal year exceeds 40%, unless the school appeals
or requests an adjustment to that rate. The loss of eligibility is
applicable to the remainder of the fiscal year in which the notice is received
and the next 2 fiscal years.
|
| . | A school will lose eligibility to participate in the FFELP, the FDLP,
and the Federal Pell Grant Program 30 days after receiving notice that
its 3 most recent official cohort default rates equal or exceed 25%, unless
the school appeals or requests an adjustment to that rate. The loss
of eligibility is applicable to the remainder of the fiscal year in which
the notice is received and the next 2 fiscal years.
|
| . | Any school may appeal its most recent cohort default rate based on
improper servicing and collection. A school subject to an initial
loss of eligibility may appeal any cohort default rate upon which the loss
of eligibility is based. This appeal alleges that improper servicing
and collection caused defaults on specific loans that were included in
the calculation of the cohort default rate. A school subject to an
extended loss of eligibility may appeal only its most recent official cohort
default rate.
|
| . | A school subject to provisional certification may appeal its cohort
default rate using the erroneous data appeal.
|
| . | The calculation of the Participation Rate Index (PRI) challenge or
appeal has been expanded to address schools with a single cohort default
rate over 40%. The PRI puts into perspective the impact of the school's
cohort default rate on the federal fiscal interest. Thus, a low PRI
indicates that the overall impact of the school's students who default
is not significant in terms of federal dollars.
|
| The PRI is the percentage of a school's students that obtain FFELP or FDLP loans multiplied by the school's cohort default rate. The calculation is accomplished as follows: |
| Step 1-Select a 12-month period that ends no more than 6 months
prior to the beginning of the fiscal year for which the cohort default
rate is calculated.
|
| Step 2-Determine the number of regular students enrolled on
at least a half-time basis during any part of the selected 12-month period.
|
| Step 3-Of those students identified in Step 2, determine
the number who received FFELP or FDLP loan funds to attend the school during
a loan period that overlaps with any part of the 12-month period selected
in Step 1.
|
| Step 4-Divide the result of Step 3 by the result of Step
2 to determine the percentage of students who received loans.
|
| Step 5-Multiply the result of Step 4 by the school's cohort default rate to obtain the PRI. |
|
A school that is subject to a loss of FFELP eligibility may use the PRI appeal based on either of the following conditions: |
| - | The school has one cohort default rate over 40% and the PRI for that
cohort's fiscal year is less than or equal to 0.06015.
|
| - | The school has three consecutive cohort default rates of 25% or more
and the PRI for any one of the three cohorts' fiscal years is less than
or equal to 0.0375.
|
| . | A school remains accountable for the consequences of a high official
cohort default rate after its merger with or acquisition of another school,
or after a branch campus becomes a separate, freestanding school. Rules
for calculating cohort default rates for schools affected by these structural
changes are explained in detail in the new regulations.
|
| . | Any school that merges with or acquires another school and that is otherwise eligible to participate in the FFELP loses FFELP eligibility based on a single official cohort default rate greater than 40% or equal to or greater than 25% for each of its 3 most recent official cohort rates if all of the following criteria apply: |
| - | Both schools are parties to a transaction that results in a change
in structure or identity.
|
| - | The FFELP-eligible school offers an educational program at substantially
the same address as that at which the FFELP-ineligible school offered programs
before the change in structure or identity.
|
| - | There is a commonality of ownership or management between the two schools.
|
| The Department will notify the school that it is subject to the same
loss of eligibility as the ineligible school. The loss applies to
all of the school's locations from the date the school receives the notice
until the end of the ineligible period applicable to the ineligible school.
A school subject to an applied loss of eligibility may submit a request
for adjustment or an appeal that would be applicable to the ineligible
school.
|
|
| . | A school subject to a loss of eligibility due to a single cohort default
rate exceeding 40% may submit an "average rate appeal" if at least 2 of
the school's 3 most recent cohort default rates of 25% or more are calculated
at an average rate, and at least 2 of those rates would be less than 25%
if calculated for the applicable fiscal year alone.
|
| . | A school subject to a loss of eligibility based on a total of thirty
or fewer borrowers in the 3 most recent cohorts of borrowers used to calculate
the school's cohort default rates may submit a "thirty-or-fewer borrowers"
appeal.
|
| . | HR 4577, signed by the President in December 2000, extends until July
1, 2004, the period during which historically black colleges and universities
(HBCUs) and tribally controlled and Navajo community colleges may qualify
for exemptions from loss of FFELP eligibility and other sanctions that
would otherwise result from high cohort default rates.
|
| . | All references to "days" in cohort default rate regulations refer to
calendar days. Previously, various time frames and deadlines carried
their own specific definition of days, sometimes "business days" and sometimes
"calendar days." The new time frames are comparable to the former
ones in most cases.
|
| . | All references to the "weighted average cohort default rate" have been
changed to the "dual-program cohort default rate," as the latter term is
the one used by the Department in its publications.
|
| . | References to the Department's Draft Cohort Default Rate Guide
and Official Cohort Default Rate Guide have been revised to refer
simply to the Cohort Default Rate Guide. It is the Department's
intention to consolidate both the draft and official information into a
single publication that will be updated annually.
|
| . | Minor changes have been made to the text in section 10.6, addressing
lender cohort default rates. These changes remove reference to the
Guarantor and Lender Oversight (GLOS) division of the Department and replace
those references with the new name of that division, Financial Partners.
Additional changes remove references to guarantor activities from the text
as convention dictates that guarantor activities are not detailed in the
Common Manual.
|
| . | Appendix G has been updated to replace the term, "Weighted Average
Cohort Rate" with the tern now in use by the Department, the "Dual-Program
Cohort Default Rate." The definition of "Cohort Default Rate has
also been updated.
|
| Affected Sections: | Chapter 10, in its entirety |
| Effective Date: | Cohort default rates calculated on or after July 1, 2001. |
| Basis: | Final Rules published in Part VII of the Federal Register, pages 65631-65651, dated November 1, 2000; §668.192 through §668.198. |
Written Agreements Between Schools
The Common Manual has been updated to reflect recent changes
in federal regulations that allow a school to enter into a single written
agreement with a study-abroad organization representing one or more foreign
schools rather than a separate agreement with each individual foreign school
that its students attend. The clarification that a study-abroad organization
may represent one or more foreign institutions is included on page 65663
in the preamble language of the Federal Register referenced below.
| Affected Sections: | 4.1.B. |
| Effective Date: | Written agreements consummated by schools on or after July 1, 2001, or implemented at the school's discretion on or after November 1, 2000. |
| Basis: | Final Rules published in Part IX of the Federal Register, pages 65662-65676, dated November 1, 2000; §668.5. |
School Reporting Requirements
The Common Manual has been revised to contain school "reporting"
rather than "notification" requirements for maintaining eligibility.
Changes include addition of the requirements to report decreases in levels
of program offering or change in governance of a public school, and the
addition of a reference to 34 CFR 600.21.
| Affected Sections: | 4.1.C. |
| Effective Date: | School reporting of changes for the purpose of maintaining eligibility on or after July 1, 2001. |
| Basis: | Final Rules published in Part IX of the Federal Register, pages 65662-65676, dated November 1, 2000; §600.21. |
Change in Ownership or Status
The Common Manual now includes the revised requirements regarding
private nonprofit, private for-profit, and public schools that experience
a change of ownership resulting in a change of control and schools that
change status as nonprofit, for-profit, or public schools.
Such schools may continue eligibility by submitting an application to the
Department.
In response to a school's application, the Department may approve a
provisional Program Participation Agreement (PPA) (previously referred
to as a TPPPA). The time frames applicable to the expiration of a
provisional PPA are the same as those previously applicable to the TPPPA.
To obtain an extension of the provisional PPA prior to its expiration,
the school must provide to the Department a "same day" balance sheet, required
documentation of accrediting agency and state licensing approval, and a
default management plan (unless the school is exempt from providing the
plan).
| Affected Sections: | 4.1.C. |
| Effective Date: | Private nonprofit, private for-profit, or public schools that experience a change of ownership resulting in a change of control or schools that change status as nonprofit, for-profit, or public schools on or after July 1, 2001, unless implemented earlier. |
| Basis: | Final Rules published in Part IX of the Federal Register, pages 65662-65676, dated November 1, 2000; §600.20(b)(2)(ii) and (iii). |
Change in Governance for a Public School
The Common Manual has been revised to state that a change in
governance for a public school is not considered to be a change of ownership
that results in a change in control, if the school remains a public school
after the change and the new governing authority is in the same State and
has acknowledged the school's continued responsibilities under its Program
Participation Agreement (PPA). A public school must, within 10 days
of a change in governance, report the change to the Department and each
applicable guarantor.
| Affected Sections: | 4.1.C. |
| Effective Date: | School reporting of changes for the purpose of maintaining eligibility on or after July 1, 2001. |
| Basis: | Final Rules published in Part IX of the Federal Register, pages 65662-65676, dated November 1, 2000; §600.21. |
Delivery of Title IV Funds
The Common Manual has been revised to state that a school may
be prohibited from delivering Title IV funds to students if the school's
Program Participation Agreement (PPA) expires, the school undergoes a change
in ownership resulting in a change of control, or the school changes status
as a non-profit, for-profit, or public school. The school may deliver
Title IV funds if it has submitted a timely, materially complete application
to continue certification to participate in Title IV programs. In
addition, the school must receive a provisional Program Participation Agreement
(PPA), submit any additional required information in a timely manner, and
be awaiting a final determination from the Department. If a school
does not comply with these requirements and continues to deliver Title
IV funds, the school is liable for those Title IV funds delivered after
the expiration of the school's eligibility. The Common Manual has
also been updated to delete subsection 4.1.E. because this information
was duplicated in section 6.4. A reference to section 6.4 was added
at the end of subsection 4.1.D.
| Affected Sections: | 4.1.D., 4.1.E., 6.4 |
| Effective Date: | Provisions regarding the expiration of the school's Program Participation Agreement are effective retroactively to the implementation of the Common Manual. Provisions relating to a change of ownership resulting in a change of control are effective for Program Participation Agreements initiated on or after July 1, 2000, and Provisional Certifications granted by the Department on or after October 29, 1999. |
| Basis: | HEA 487(a)and 498(i); §600.31, §668.12, §668.14-as updated in the Federal Register dated October 29, 1999.; Final Rules published in Part IX of the Federal Register, pages 65661-65676, dated November 1, 2000; §600.20(f) and (h); §600.40; §668.13(a) and (b); §668.26. |
Prior Overpayment or Default Documentation Requirements
The Common Manual is being revised to include clarifications
provided by the Department in its Dear Partner Letter (DPL) GEN-00-18 published
November 8, 2000. The Department clarified the procedures a school
should use to ensure that it does not deliver FFELP loan funds to students
who are ineligible due to an unresolved prior overpayment of Title IV funds
or an unresolved prior default on a Title IV loan. In all cases,
the school must retain documentation that clearly substantiates its determination
that a prior overpayment or default has been resolved. The Department
specifically notes that documentation that the reporting entity has "no
record" of the prior overpayment or default is not considered adequate
for the release of FFELP funds. Specific procedural guidance is provided
in the DPL and schools are encouraged to ensure their staff is familiar
with the Department's recommendations.
| Affected Sections: | 5.2.E. |
| Effective Date: | Loans certified by the school on or after November 8, 2000. |
| Basis: | Dear Partner Letter GEN-00-18, published November 8, 2000. |
Financial Aid Histories and the Delivery of Loan Proceeds
Revised Common Manual policy states that schools may not deliver
Stafford or PLUS loan proceeds to a student or parent of a student who
previously attended another eligible school until the school determines
from information obtained from NSLDS or its successor system, that the
student meets eligibility requirements pertaining to his or her financial
aid history. The school must determine (1) whether the student is
in default or owes an overpayment to any Title IV program; (2) the amount
of the student's scheduled Federal Pell Grant disbursement and the amount
of any Federal Pell Grant funds already disbursed to the student; (3) the
outstanding principal balance of Title IV loans made to the student; and
(4) the amount of, and period of enrollment for, Title IV loans made to
the student for the academic year for which Title IV aid is requested.
For a student who transfers from one school to another during the same award year (i.e., a current-year transfer student), the school the student is attending must request or access through NSLDS updated information about that student in order to determine the student's eligibility for Stafford or PLUS loan proceeds. The school must wait for 7 days following a request to NSLDS before delivering Stafford or PLUS loan proceeds. However, if before the end of 7 days, the school receives the information from NSLDS in response to its request or obtains that information itself by directly accessing NSLDS, the school may deliver the loan proceeds as long as the student is otherwise eligible. Schools may no longer delay delivery of loan proceeds by 45 days while waiting for paper financial aid transcripts to arrive.
Schools are no longer required to respond to paper financial aid transcript
requests for prior-year or current-year transfer students.
| Affected Sections: | 6.3.E., 5.2.E. and 6.3.I. |
| Effective Date: | Stafford and PLUS loan funds delivered by the school on or after July
1, 2001.
The elimination of paper financial aid transcripts is effective for requests received by the school on or after July 1, 2001. |
| Basis: | Final Rules published in Part IX of the Federal Register, pages 65662-65676, dated November 1, 2000; §668.19; Dear Partner Letter GEN-00-12 dated August 2000. |
FFELP Delivery Requirements for Non-Standard Term Credit Hour Programs
Revised policy clarifies that a program measuring academic progress
in credit hours but not using a standard semester, trimester, or quarter
system may deliver second or subsequent disbursements no earlier than 10
days before the first day of any payment period if the terms are substantially
equal in length throughout the loan period. Terms within a loan period
will be considered substantially equal in length if no term in the loan
period is more than two weeks longer than any other term in the loan period.
Schools with credit hour programs that do not use terms, or use terms that
are not substantially equal in length, are still required to wait until
the later of the calendar midpoint of the loan period or the date that
the student has completed half of the academic coursework in the loan period
before delivering the second disbursement of the loan.
| Affected Sections: | 6.3.E. |
| Effective Date: | Stafford and PLUS loan funds delivered by the school on or after July 1, 2001. |
| Basis: | Final Rules published in Part V of the Federal Register, pages 65616-65622, dated November 1, 2000; §682.604(c)(6) and (7). |
Economic Hardship Deferment
The Common Manual has been revised to update the economic hardship
deferment information. Revised policy and regulation require
the lender to use evidence of the borrower's "monthly income," rather than
"total monthly gross income." "Monthly income" is defined as the
gross amount of income received by the borrower from employment and other
sources, or one-twelfth of the borrower's adjusted gross income, as recorded
on the borrower's most recently filed federal income tax return.
There is no longer a difference in required documentation for an initial
and a subsequent economic hardship deferment. The revised policy
and regulation allow a lender to grant the deferment for periods that,
collectively, do not exceed 3 years. Any retroactive period of economic
hardship granted under this revised policy must include July 1, 2000, or
a later date. In all cases, the lender must ensure that the borrower's
required documentation supports the begin date of the economic hardship
period.
| Affected Sections: | 7.10.P. |
| Effective Date: | Economic hardship deferments granted by the lender on or after July 1, 2001. |
| Basis: | Final Rules published in Part V of the Federal Register, pages 65616-65622, dated November 1, 2000; §682.210(s)(6). |
Forbearance Eligibility Chart
The Common Manual is revised to add a Forbearance Eligibility
Chart. This chart is a reference tool that may be used to identify
general information about discretionary, administrative, mandatory, and
mandatory administrative forbearances, including situations in which these
forbearance types may be used by a borrower and an endorser, if applicable.
The chart also provides information about the length of the forbearance
and general information about required documentation. For detailed
information about each forbearance, see the applicable subsection.
| Affected Sections: | 7.11 |
| Effective Date: | Each forbearance detailed on the chart is effective as specified in applicable statute, regulation, Dear Colleague Letter, private letter, or approved guarantor policy. |
| Basis: | Final Rules published in Part X of the Federal Register, pages 65678-65695, and Part VI of the Federal Register, pages 65624-65630, on November 1, 2000; §682.211; §682.215(e); §682.402. |
Ineligibility Borrower Claims
The Common Manual has been revised to reflect guidance provided
by the Department in an Office of Student Financial Assistance Dear Financial
Partner Letter published October 17, 2000. Guarantors will now pay
ineligible borrower claims at 98% rather than 100%.
| Affected Sections: | 8.6.A., CCI 8.6.A. |
| Effective Date: | Ineligible borrower claims received by the guarantor on or after July 1, 2001, unless implemented earlier by the guarantor. |
| Basis: | Office of Student Financial Assistance Dear Financial Partner Letter published October 17, 2000. |