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Top federal student loan official in US resigns amid controversy
By Naomi Spencer
12 May 2007
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On May 8, the US Department of Education announced that its
top student loan official is stepping down. According to a statement
from Education Secretary Margaret Spellings, Theresa Shaw, chief
operating officer of the Federal Student Aid office, will leave
her position on June 1.
Before her appointment in 2002, Shaw was senior vice president
of Sallie Mae, the largest for-profit student loan company in
the US, with $127 billion in loan assets. She worked at the company
for two decades, then served as CEO of eNumerate Solutions, a
technology firm with a client base including Sallie Mae and other
major banking and lending companies.
Department officials have not given reasons for her departure
and have maintained it is unrelated to the investigations. In
an email obtained by the Washington Post, Shaw claimed
that she was leaving the Education department to pursue
other career opportunities.
Nevertheless, Shaws resignation is clearly aimed at containing
a burgeoning scandal that has exposed the way in which the federal
agency responsible for regulating student loans has been turned
over to the lending companies. The resignation came just three
days after the Inspector Generals office at the Education
Department opened an inquiry into conflicts of interest and improper
financial arrangements between student aid officials, schools
and lenders. It came two days before Spellings was scheduled to
testify before Congress.
The Education Department, and particularly its Student Aid
office, has come under pressure by outside investigations to appear
uncompromised, despite its intimate ties to the $85 billion a
year loan industry. Congressional Democrats, seeking to posture
as opponents of the corrupt lending procedures, requested personnel
records of Shaw and 26 other employees in the department last
month. The House of Representatives overwhelmingly passed a bill
May 9 that calls for an end to the practice in which lenders provide
gifts to school personnel in exchange for a spot on a schools
preferred lender list.
At least half a dozen other Bush appointees in the department
were also former employees of Sallie Mae, and many more officials
have ties to other major lenders. A manager in the office directly
under Shaw, Matteo Fontana, had come from Sallie Mae, to eNumerate
Solutions, then to the Education Department, where he was put
in charge of a database containing the borrowing patterns and
personal information of 60 million students.
Last month, Fontana was placed on leave after New York Attorney
General Andrew Cuomos office discovered he had sold shares
worth $100,000 in student loan stock in 2003. The database was
also briefly closed to lenders, which had been mining the system
for information and soliciting students based on their borrowing
histories. It was reopened May 3.
Disclosure of Fontanas improper stock holdings came a
month after former Deputy Secretary of Education Eugene Hickok
admitted holding Bank of America stock during his tenure. The
government reached a $50,000 settlement agreement with Hickok,
who continued to hold 800 shares in the lender after ethics officials
in the department told him to sell.
A number of other revelations have emerged in recent weeks
that, taken together, describe conflicts of interest endemic to
the revolving door between regulatory agencies and the private
sector.
On May 1, the Washington Post reported that a 2001 proposal
aimed at curbing financial inducements from lenders to schools
and administrators was quashed by new Bush appointees in the Department
of Education. In addition, hundreds of millions of dollars in
federal loan subsidies were collected by loan companies by means
of loopholes left open by department officials.
On May 9, the New York Times reported that repeated
warnings about student loan companies abusing rules on federal
subsidies and improperly collecting hundreds of millions in government
payments were also scuttled by the Bush administration. The subsidies,
set aside by Congress in a worsening economic situation in the
1980s, were intended to ensure the availability of low-cost student
loans by guaranteeing lenders a 9.5 percent rate of return on
loans financed by tax-exempt bonds, which would shield private
lenders from loss and excess cost.
When interest rates had dropped in the early 1990s, Congress
cut back parts of the program. Lenders, eager to collect on the
interest rate difference, began finding ways to push their loans
into the program by reclassifying them in superficial ways. A
long-time researcher in the Education Department, Jon Oberg, discovered
that several large lenders were fleecing the program for hundreds
of millions of federal dollars, claiming higher loan amounts as
eligible. He told the Times that when he informed his supervisor
in 2003, he was told to drop it.
His supervisor, a Bush appointee, told Oberg in an email that
the department does not have an intramural program of research
on postsecondary education finance. In the 18 months you have
remaining, I will expect your time and talents to be directed
primarily to our business of conceptualizing, competing and monitoring
research grants. Obergs job description was subsequently
rewritten in order to prohibit further research into the subsidies.
On May 10, Education Secretary Spellings delivered some defensive
remarks before a House committee about the loan investigations
and alleged lender abuse of federal subsidies. Spellings said
that the student aid system was crying out for reform.
The system is redundant, its byzantine and its
broken, she said, essentially presenting the departments
relations with the for-profit loan industry as a progressive streamlining.
House Education and Labor chairman George Miller, a California
Democrat, disagreed, pointing out that regarding alleged conflicts
of interest, The department hasnt acted on this with
any haste or urgency.
Miller also criticized Spellings for declining to recover $278
million in federal subsidies that a 2006 Education Department
audit had found were overpaid to student lender Nelnet, a major
Republican Party campaign contributor. Rather than pay back the
$278 million, Nelnet agreed not to pursue $900 million in federal
subsidies the company insisted the department owed it.
The department gallowed somebody to get away essentially
with theft, Democratic Representative John Tierney noted.
In 2005, Spellings overruled an inspector general recommendation
that $36 million be recovered from another lender.
When I look at the whole body of evidence that has been
amassed, Miller said, it is clear that, at a minimum,
the Education Departments oversight failures have been monumental.
Spellings bristled, pointing out that Congress owned some of the
blame for failings in the student aid program by neglecting to
reauthorize the Higher Education Act, expired in 2003, which established
federally funded scholarships and low-interest rate loans.
Congress also bears blame for repeatedly denying an increase
in the federal Pell Grant while tuition rose substantially. Whatever
the Democrats posturing, they have not taken any serious
steps to address the problems confronting American students since
gaining control of Congress in January.
The cost of attending college, which has risen by more than
a third in the past five years, has left students and their families
with little choice but to finance part of educational expenses
with loans. The lending industry has grown exponentially during
this period, driven mainly by a 730 percent spike in private loan
volume.
Investigations into the relationships between loan companies
and university student aid offices have uncovered extensive corruption.
Scores of schools and nearly 100 alumni associations are being
investigated for receiving financial inducements and gifts in
exchange for endorsement of and promotion of lenders, who may
or may not offer the best loans or interest rates for students.
On May 10, New York Attorney General Cuomos office announced
it had reached a $3 million settlement agreement with financial
company CIT Group and its subsidiary Student Loan Xpress following
revelations of lavish gifts and stock deals with university and
federal officials. CIT Group agreed to adopt Cuomos code
of conduct, and to cooperate with his investigation into the Education
Department official Matteo Fontana, who had held Student Loan
Xpress shares.
Separately, New Jersey Attorney General Stuart Rabner announced
that his office was subpoenaing 61 universities in the state and
17 student loan companies and banks, including Student Loan Xpress,
Sallie Mae, Wachovia, Education Finance Partners, JP Morgan Chase,
and Nelnet.
See Also:
US: Circle of corruption widens in student
loan investigation
[7 May 2007]
US: Investigation exposes
extensive corruption in student loan dealings
[11 April 2007]
US: Threadbare college
affordability bill passes in the House
[26 January 2007]
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