The Office of Federal Student Aid (FSA) faces unprecedented challenges over the coming months. This includes the end of the almost three-year moratorium on most federal student loans and the transition of millions of borrowers back into repayment, ongoing loan transfers across servicers, implementation of the Fresh Start initiative to bring borrowers’ defaulted loans back into good repayment standing, rolling out debt cancellation for eligible borrowers, and the implementation of a new income-driven repayment plan.
In a letter to FSA Chief Operating Officer Richard Cordray, The Pew Charitable Trusts’ student loan research and student borrower success teams draw insights from new data on how borrowers who have experienced default perceived communication with their servicers. The letter is intended to help FSA and its servicing contractors—who often correspond directly with borrowers—provide effective and consistent communication about these upcoming events and initiatives with the goal of promoting borrowers’ long-term repayment success.
Pew’s takeaways for FSA, which come from a recent nationally representative survey of student loan borrowers, include: