Washington State

House of Representatives

Office of Program Research

BILL

ANALYSIS

Higher Education Committee

SSB 5022

This analysis was prepared by non-partisan legislative staff for the use of legislative members in their deliberations. This analysis is not a part of the legislation nor does it constitute a statement of legislative intent.

Brief Description: Providing information to students about education loans.

Sponsors: Senate Committee on Ways & Means (originally sponsored by Senators Bailey, Rolfes, Liias, Keiser, Conway, Wellman, Hasegawa, Mullet, Frockt and Kuderer; by request of Attorney General).

Brief Summary of Substitute Bill

  • Requires a postsecondary institution to send a notification with education loan information, including the estimated total payoff and monthly repayment amounts, to an enrolled student who has education loans the institution has certified.

  • Requires the notification to be provided to an enrolled student anytime the student is offered a financial aid package that includes a new or revised student loan.

  • Requires organizations representing the postsecondary institutions to report compliance with the notification requirement to the Legislature on a biannual basis beginning December 1, 2019.

Hearing Date: 3/15/17

Staff: Megan Mulvihill (786-7304).

Background:

The Federal Student Loan Process.

Federal student loans can be used to attend eligible postsecondary institutions to receive certificates and associate, bachelor, master, professional, and doctorate degrees. To receive a federal student loan, a student must fill out the Free Application for Federal Student Aid annually. If a student has never received a federal student loan before, the student must complete entrance counseling. This is completed online in a 30-minute segment and includes information about the types of federal student loans available, loan terms, and loan limits, such as interest rates and the maximum amount a student is allowed to borrow per loan type. Entrance counseling also includes information about managing spending during college, repayment, the different options available for repayment, and how to avoid default if the student has trouble repaying their student loan. Once entrance counseling is completed, the student must sign a Master Promissory Note, which is the legal contract for the federal student loan.

While in school, the federal student loans that a student qualifies for and decides to receive are dispersed on a term-by-term basis. If a student is eligible for a Federal Perkins Loan, in which the postsecondary institution is the lender, then the institution must provide the student with a disclosure statement prior to the loan being disbursed. The disclosure must include the terms of the loan, such as the principal balance, the interest rate, additional charges incurred, the minimum and maximum repayment term, and an explanation of when repayment will occur. These disclosures are also required prior to repayment, and may be provided to the student in the application form, as part of the promissory note, or on a separate form.

If a student drops below half-time enrollment, leaves their postsecondary institution, or graduates, he or she must complete exit counseling to prepare them for repaying their federal student loan. Exit counseling is similar to entrance counseling.

Similar State Legislation.

Recently, Indiana, Nebraska, and Wisconsin have enacted legislation that requires postsecondary institutions to send annual notices to enrolled students regarding their student loan debt. The notices include information on a student's debt, such as the total amount of student loan debt accrued, the interest rate or rates, standard repayment terms, and total projected amount to be repaid with principal and interest.

Student Loan Debt in Washington.

According to the Institute for College Access and Success' Project on Student Debt, 58 percent of 2015 Washington graduates of four-year public and private nonprofit institutions had student loan debt with an average balance of $24,804.

Summary of Bill:

Subject to appropriation, postsecondary institutions that receive student loan information for an enrolled student must provide the student with a notification about the student loans the institution has certified. The notification must include an estimate, based on the information available at the time the notification is provided, of the:

In addition, the notification must provide information about the differences between federal and private student loans, including the availability of income-based repayment options for federal student loans and that repayment plans may limit the monthly repayment amount based on a student's income. The notification must also include a statement that the estimates and ranges provided are general in nature and not meant as a guarantee of the actual projected amount. Lastly, the notification must include information on federal or state resources for student loan borrowers.

The postsecondary institutions may provide the notifications to students in writing, in an electronic format, or in person by July 1, 2018, each time a student is offered a financial aid package that includes a new or revised student loan. The postsecondary institutions do not incur liability for any good faith representations made in the notifications.

Subject to appropriation, an organization representing the public four-year colleges and universities, an organization representing the private nonprofit institutions, the State Board for Community and Technical Colleges, the Workforce Training and Education Coordinating Board, and the Department of Licensing must develop a form for the institutions to use to report compliance by July 1, 2018. Beginning December 1, 2019, and biannually thereafter until December 25, 2025, the organizations that developed the form must submit a report to the Legislature that details how the postsecondary institutions are in compliance.

The act is known as the Washington Student Loan Transparency Act.

Appropriation: None.

Fiscal Note: Available.

Effective Date: The bill takes effect 90 days after adjournment of the session in which the bill is passed.