Federal Student Aid Programs (Student Assistance General Provisions, Federal Perkins Loan Program, Federal Family Education Loan Program, and the Federal Direct Loan Program), 45465-45471 [2017-20844]
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Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 188 / Friday, September 29, 2017 / Rules and Regulations
the North Atlantic Ocean, Ocean City,
NJ, safety zone from 9:00 p.m. through
11:59 p.m. on October 10, 2017. The
purpose of this document is to
announce a change in the enforcement
date. The zone will be enforced on
October 7, 2017, instead of October 10,
2017.
DATES: The regulations in 33 CFR
165.506 will be enforced from 9 p.m. to
11:59 p.m. on October 7, 2017, for the
safety zone listed as (a.)11 in the Table
to § 165.506.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: If
you have questions about this notice of
enforcement, you may call or email
MST2 Amanda Boone, Sector Delaware
Bay Waterways Management Division,
U.S. Coast Guard; telephone 215–271–
4889, email Amanda.N.Boone@
USCG.mil.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Please
refer to the notice of enforcement
published in the Federal Register on
August 7, 2017 (82 FR 36688), FR Doc.
2017–16506.
Dated: September 22, 2017.
Scott E. Anderson,
Captain, U.S. Coast Guard, Captain of the
Port Delaware Bay.
[FR Doc. 2017–20900 Filed 9–28–17; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 9110–04–P
DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION
34 CFR Parts 668, 674, 682, and 685
Federal Student Aid Programs
(Student Assistance General
Provisions, Federal Perkins Loan
Program, Federal Family Education
Loan Program, and the Federal Direct
Loan Program)
Office of Postsecondary
Education, Department of Education.
ACTION: Updated waivers and
modifications of statutory and
regulatory requirements.
AGENCY:
The Secretary is issuing
updated waivers and modifications of
statutory and regulatory requirements
governing the Federal student financial
aid programs under the authority of the
Higher Education Relief Opportunities
for Students Act of 2003 (HEROES Act).
The HEROES Act requires the Secretary
to publish a document in the Federal
Register announcing the waivers or
modifications of statutory or regulatory
requirements applicable to the student
financial assistance programs under title
IV of the Higher Education Act of 1965,
as amended (HEA), to assist individuals
who are performing qualifying military
service, and individuals who are
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SUMMARY:
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affected by a disaster, war or other
military operation, or national
emergency, as described in the
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section of
this document.
DATES: The waivers and modifications
begin on September 29, 2017. The
waivers and modifications in this
document expire on September 30,
2022.
For
provisions related to the title IV loan
programs (Federal Perkins Loan
Program, Federal Family Education
Loan (FFEL) Program, and Federal
Direct Loan (Direct Loan) Program):
Barbara Hoblitzell, U.S. Department of
Education, 400 Maryland Ave. SW.,
Room 6W253, Washington, DC 20202.
Telephone: (202) 453–7583 or by email:
Barbara.Hoblitzell@ed.gov or Brian
Smith, U.S. Department of Education,
400 Maryland Ave. SW., Room 7E222,
Washington, DC 20202. Telephone:
(202) 453–7440 or by email:
Brian.Smith@ed.gov. For other
provisions: Wendy Macias, U.S.
Department of Education, 400 Maryland
Ave. SW., Room 6C111, Washington, DC
20202. Telephone: (202) 203–9155 or by
email: Wendy.Macias@ed.gov.
If you use a telecommunications
device for the deaf (TDD) or text
telephone (TTY), call the Federal Relay
Service (FRS), toll free, at 1–800–877–
8339.
Individuals with disabilities can
obtain this document in an accessible
format (e.g., Braille, large print,
audiotape, or compact disc) by
contacting Wendy Macias, U.S.
Department of Education, 400 Maryland
Ave. SW., Room 6C111, Washington, DC
20202. Telephone: (202) 203–9155 or by
email: Wendy.Macias@ed.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: In a
document published in the Federal
Register on December 12, 2003 (68 FR
69312), the Secretary exercised the
authority under the HEROES Act
(Pub. L. 108–76, 20 U.S.C. 1098bb(b))
and announced waivers and
modifications of statutory and
regulatory provisions designed to assist
‘‘affected individuals.’’ Under 20 U.S.C.
1098ee(2), the term ‘‘affected
individual’’ means an individual who:
• Is serving on active duty during a
war or other military operation or
national emergency;
• Is performing qualifying National
Guard duty during a war or other
military operation or national
emergency;
• Resides or is employed in an area
that is declared a disaster area by any
Federal, State, or local official in
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
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connection with a national emergency;
or
• Suffered direct economic hardship
as a direct result of a war or other
military operation or national
emergency, as determined by the
Secretary.
Please note that these waivers and
modifications do not apply to an
individual who resides or is employed
in an area declared a disaster area by
any Federal, State, or local official
unless that declaration has been made
in connection with a national
emergency.
Under the HEROES Act, the
Secretary’s authority to provide the
waivers and modifications would have
expired on September 30, 2005.
However, Public Law 109–78, enacted
on September 30, 2005, extended the
expiration date of the Secretary’s
authority to September 30, 2007.
Accordingly, in a document in the
Federal Register published on October
20, 2005 (70 FR 61037), the Secretary
extended the expiration of the waivers
and modifications published on
December 12, 2003, to September 30,
2007.
Public Law 110–93, enacted on
September 30, 2007, eliminated the
September 30, 2007, expiration date of
the HEROES Act, thereby making
permanent the Secretary’s authority to
issue waivers and modifications of
statutory and regulatory provisions.
On December 26, 2007, the Secretary
published a document in the Federal
Register (72 FR 72947) extending the
waivers and modifications published on
December 12, 2003, to September 30,
2012. In that document, the Secretary
also indicated an intent to review the
waivers and modifications published on
December 12, 2003, in light of statutory
and regulatory changes and to consider
whether to change some or all of the
published waivers and modifications.
In a document in the Federal Register
published on September 27, 2012 (77 FR
59311), the Secretary published updated
waivers and modifications to reflect the
results of the review. Under that
document, the updated waivers and
modifications expire on September 30,
2017.
The Secretary is updating the waivers
and modifications to reflect statutory
and regulatory changes that have
occurred since the September 27, 2012,
document was published. The waivers
and modifications in this document will
expire on September 30, 2022. With a
few limited exceptions, the waivers and
modifications in this document are the
same waivers and modifications
published in the September 27, 2012,
Federal Register document. However,
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the 2012 waivers and modifications
have been updated in the following
areas:
(1) The Secretary updated the need
analysis modification to reflect the
change in which tax year’s information
is collected on the Free Application for
Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) and used
to calculate the applicant’s expected
family contribution (EFC). Previously
when completing a FAFSA, a student
provided income information from the
most recently completed tax year prior
to the beginning of the financial aid
application cycle (e.g., 2015 income
information for the 2016–2017 FAFSA).
Beginning with the 2017–2018 FAFSA,
income information is collected from
one tax year earlier—referred to as the
‘‘prior-prior year.’’ This change was
made under the authority of section
480(a)(1)(B) of the HEA. This
modification was also updated to make
it consistent with the modification to
professional judgment included in this
document, which provides three options
that a financial aid administrator (FAA)
may use to make adjustments to the
values of the items used to calculate the
EFC to reflect a student’s special
circumstances.
(2) For the professional judgment
modification, the Secretary clarified that
in addition to using income information
from the first or second calendar year of
the award year, an institution may use
another annual income that more
accurately reflects the family’s current
financial circumstances.
(3) The Secretary updated the
modifications related to verification of
adjusted gross income (AGI) and U.S.
income tax paid so that affected
individuals under this category are no
longer required to provide a signature
on the statement certifying that he or
she has not filed an income tax return
or a request for a filing extension
because he or she was called up for
active duty or for qualifying National
Guard duty during a war or other
military operation or national
emergency; or certifying the amount of
AGI and U.S. income tax paid for the
specified year.
(4) The Secretary extended the waiver
assisting affected individuals with
regard to the annual reevaluation
requirements for FFEL and Direct Loan
borrowers who are repaying loans under
the Income-Based Repayment (IBR)
plan, and Direct Loan borrowers who
are repaying loans under the IncomeContingent Repayment (ICR) plan to
include borrowers who are repaying
Direct Loans under the Pay As You Earn
(PAYE) or Revised Pay As You Earn
(REPAYE) repayment plans.
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(5) For the fourth category of affected
individuals to which waivers and
modifications apply, as described later
in this document, the Secretary removed
the reference to spouses of affected
individuals who are serving on active
duty or performing qualifying National
Guard duty during a war or other
military operation or national
emergency, since the waivers under this
category only pertain to the dependent
student of such affected individuals.
(6) The Secretary updated the waiver
related to verification signature
requirements to waive the requirement
for a parental signature on any
verification documentation required for
title IV eligibility for a dependent
student because of the parent’s status as
an affected individual.
(7) The Secretary made a technical
change to the waiver related to the
section on required signatures on the
FAFSA, the Student Aid Report (SAR),
and the Institutional Student
Information Record (ISIR), replacing the
reference to ‘‘ISIR’’ with ‘‘or submitting
corrections electronically’’. The
Secretary also changed the reference to
‘‘responsible parent’’ to ‘‘relevant
parent’’ to mean the parent whose
information is reported on the FAFSA.
The Secretary is issuing these waivers
and modifications under the authority
of the HEROES Act, 20 U.S.C.
1098bb(a). In accordance with the
HEROES Act, the Secretary is providing
the waivers and modifications of
statutory and regulatory requirements
applicable to the student financial
assistance programs under title IV of the
HEA that the Secretary believes are
appropriate to ensure that:
• Affected individuals who are
recipients of student financial assistance
under title IV are not placed in a worse
position financially in relation to that
financial assistance because they are
affected individuals;
• Affected individuals who are
recipients of student financial assistance
are not unduly subject to administrative
burden or inadvertent, technical
violations or defaults;
• Affected individuals are not
penalized when a determination of need
for student financial assistance is
calculated;
• Affected individuals are not
required to return or repay an
overpayment of grant funds based on
the HEA’s Return of Title IV Funds
provision; and
• Entities that participate in the
student financial assistance programs
under title IV of the HEA and that are
located in areas that are declared
disaster areas by any Federal, State, or
local official in connection with a
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national emergency, or whose
operations are significantly affected by
such a disaster, receive temporary relief
from administrative requirements.
In 20 U.S.C. 1098bb(b)(1), the
HEROES Act further provides that
section 437 of the General Education
Provisions Act (20 U.S.C. 1232) and
section 553 of the Administrative
Procedure Act (5 U.S.C. 553) do not
apply to the contents of this document.
The following terms used in this
document are defined in 20 U.S.C.
1098ee: Active duty, military operation,
national emergency, qualifying National
Guard duty during a war or other
military operation or national
emergency, and serving on active duty
during a war or other military operation
or national emergency.
The following waivers and
modifications are grouped into four
categories, according to the affected
individuals to whom they apply.
Category 1: The Secretary is waiving
or modifying the following requirements
of title IV of the HEA and the
Department of Education’s
(Department’s) regulations for ALL
affected individuals.
Need Analysis
Section 480 of the HEA provides that,
in the calculation of an applicant’s EFC,
the term ‘‘total income,’’ which is used
in the determination of ‘‘annual
adjusted family income’’ and ‘‘available
income,’’ is equal to the applicant’s, the
applicant’s spouse’s, or the applicant’s
parent’s AGI plus untaxed income and
benefits for the second preceding tax
year minus excludable income. The
HEROES Act allows an institution to
substitute AGI plus untaxed income and
benefits received in the first calendar
year of the award year for which such
determination is made for any affected
individual, and for his or her spouse
and dependents, if applicable, in order
to reflect more accurately the financial
condition of an affected individual and
his or her family. The Secretary has
determined that an institution has the
option of using the applicant’s original
EFC (the EFC based on the income and
tax information reported on the
FAFSA), the EFC based on the data from
the first calendar year of the award year,
or the EFC based on another annual
income that more accurately reflects the
family’s current financial
circumstances.
If an institution chooses to use
anything other than the original EFC, it
should use the administrative
professional judgment options
discussed in the following section.
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Professional Judgment
Section 479A of the HEA specifically
gives the FAA at an institution the
authority to use professional judgment
to make, on a case-by-case basis,
adjustments to the cost of attendance or
to the values of the items used in
calculating the EFC to reflect a student’s
special circumstances. The Secretary is
modifying this provision by removing
the requirement that adjustments be
made on a case-by-case basis for affected
individuals. The use of professional
judgment in Federal need analysis is
discussed in the Federal Student Aid
Handbook available at www.ifap.ed.gov.
The Secretary encourages FAAs to use
professional judgment to reflect more
accurately the financial need of affected
individuals. To that end, the Secretary
encourages institutions to determine an
affected individual’s need using one of
the options listed below:
• Using the AGI plus untaxed income
and benefits received in the first
calendar year of the award year;
• Using another annual income that
more accurately reflects the family’s
current financial circumstances; or
• Making no modifications.
The FAA must clearly document the
reasons for any adjustment and the facts
supporting the decision. In almost all
cases, the FAA should have
documentation from a third party with
knowledge of the student’s special
circumstances. As usual, any
professional judgment decisions made
by an FAA that affect a student’s
eligibility for a subsidized student
financial assistance program must be
reported to the Central Processing
System.
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Return of Title IV Funds—Grant
Overpayments Owed by the Student
Section 484B(b)(2) of the HEA and 34
CFR 668.22(h)(3)(ii) require a student to
return or repay, as appropriate,
unearned grant funds for which the
student is responsible under the Return
of Title IV Funds calculation. For a
student who withdraws from an
institution because of his or her status
as an affected individual, the Secretary
is waiving these statutory and regulatory
requirements so that a student is not
required to return or repay any
overpayment of grant funds based on
the Return of Title IV Funds provisions.
For these students, the Secretary also
waives 34 CFR 668.22(h)(4), which:
• Requires an institution to notify a
student of a grant overpayment and the
actions the student must take to resolve
the overpayment;
• Denies eligibility to a student who
owes a grant overpayment and does not
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take an action to resolve the
overpayment; and
• Requires an institution to refer a
grant overpayment to the Secretary
under certain conditions.
Therefore, an institution is not
required to contact the student, notify
the National Student Loan Data System,
or refer the overpayment to the
Secretary. However, the institution must
document in the student’s file the
amount of any overpayment as part of
the documentation of the application of
this waiver.
The student is not required to return
or repay an overpayment of grant funds
based on the Return of Title IV Funds
provision. Therefore, an institution
must not apply any title IV credit
balance to the grant overpayment prior
to: Using a credit balance to pay
authorized charges; paying any amount
of the title IV credit balance to the
student or parent, in the case of a parent
PLUS loan; or using the credit balance
to reduce the student’s title IV loan debt
(with the student’s authorization) as
provided in Dear Colleague Letter GEN–
04–03 (February 2004; revised
November 2004).
Verification of AGI and U.S. Income
Tax Paid
Pursuant to 34 CFR 668.57(a)(3)(ii),
for an individual who is required to file
a U.S. income tax return and has been
granted a filing extension by the Internal
Revenue Service (IRS), an institution
must accept, in lieu of an income tax
return for verification of AGI or U.S.
income tax paid:
• A copy of IRS Form 4868,
‘‘Application for Automatic Extension
of Time to File U.S. Individual Income
Tax Return,’’ that the individual filed
with the IRS for the specified year, or a
copy of the IRS’s approval of an
extension beyond the automatic sixmonth extension if the individual
requested an additional extension of the
filing time; and
• A copy of each IRS Form W–2 that
the individual received for the specified
year or, for a self-employed individual,
a statement signed by the individual
certifying the amount of AGI and U.S.
income tax paid for the specified year.
The Secretary is modifying the
requirement of this provision so that the
submission of a copy of IRS Form 4868
or a copy of the IRS’s approval of an
extension beyond the six-month
extension is not required if an affected
individual has not filed an income tax
return by the filing deadline.
For these individuals, an institution
must accept, in lieu of an income tax
return for verification of AGI and U.S.
income tax paid:
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• A statement from the individual
certifying that he or she has not filed an
income tax return or a request for a
filing extension because he or she was
called up for active duty or for
qualifying National Guard duty during a
war or other military operation or
national emergency; and
• A copy of each W–2 received for the
specified year or, for a self-employed
individual, a statement by the
individual certifying the amount of AGI
and U.S. income tax paid for the
specified year.
An institution may request that an
individual granted a filing extension
submit tax information using the IRS
Data Retrieval Tool, or by obtaining a
tax return transcript from the IRS that
lists tax account information for the
specified year after the income tax
return is filed. If an institution receives
the tax information, it must verify the
income information of the tax filer(s).
Category 2: The Secretary is waiving
or modifying requirements in the
following provisions of title IV of the
HEA and the Department’s regulations
for affected individuals who are serving
on active duty or performing qualifying
National Guard duty during a war or
other military operation or national
emergency, or who reside or are
employed in a disaster area.
Return of Title IV Funds—PostWithdrawal Disbursements of Loan
Funds
Under 34 CFR 668.22(a)(6)(iii)(A)(5)
and (D), a student (or parent for a parent
PLUS loan) must be provided a postwithdrawal disbursement of a title IV
loan if the student (or parent) responds
to an institution’s notification of the
post-withdrawal disbursement within
14 days of the date that the institution
sent the notice, or a later deadline set by
the institution. If a student or parent
submits a late response, an institution
may, but is not required to, make the
post-withdrawal disbursement.
The Secretary is modifying this
requirement so that, for a student who
withdraws because of his or her status
as an affected individual in this category
and who is eligible for a postwithdrawal disbursement, the 14-day
time period in which the student (or
parent) must normally respond to the
offer of the post-withdrawal
disbursement is extended to 45 days, or
to a later deadline set by the institution.
If the student or parent submits a
response after the designated period, the
institution may, but is not required to,
make the post-withdrawal
disbursement. As required under the
current regulations, if the student or
parent submits the timely response
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instructing the institution to make all or
a portion of the post-withdrawal
disbursement, or the institution chooses
to make a post-withdrawal
disbursement based on receipt of a late
response, the institution must disburse
the funds within 180 days of the date of
the institution’s determination that the
student withdrew.
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Leaves of Absence
Under 34 CFR 668.22(d)(3)(iii)(B), a
student is required to provide a written,
signed, and dated request, which
includes the reason for that request, for
an approved leave of absence prior to
the leave of absence. However, if
unforeseen circumstances prevent a
student from providing a prior written
request, the institution may grant the
student’s request for a leave of absence
if the institution documents its decision
and collects the written request at a later
date. It may be appropriate in certain
limited cases for an institution to
provide an approved leave of absence to
a student who must interrupt his or her
enrollment because he or she is an
affected individual in this category.
Therefore, the Secretary is waiving the
requirement that the student provide a
written request for affected individuals
who have difficulty providing a written
request as a result of being an affected
individual in this category. The
institution’s documentation of its
decision to grant the leave of absence
must include, in addition to the reason
for the leave of absence, the reason for
waiving the requirement that the leave
of absence be requested in writing.
Treatment of Title IV Credit Balances
When a Student Withdraws
Under 34 CFR 668.164(h)(2), an
institution must pay any title IV credit
balance to the student, or parent in the
case of a parent PLUS loan, as soon as
possible, but no later than: 14 days after
the balance occurred if the balance
occurred after the first day of class of a
payment period; or 14 days after the
first day of class of a payment period if
the balance occurred on or before the
first day of class of that payment period.
If the student (or parent) has provided
authorization, an institution may use a
title IV credit balance to reduce the
borrower’s total title IV loan debt, not
just the title IV loan debt for the period
for which the Return of Title IV Funds
calculation is performed.
For students who withdraw because
they are affected individuals in this
category, the Secretary finds that the
institution has met the 14-day
requirement under 34 CFR 668.164(h)(2)
if, within that timeframe, the institution
attempts to contact the student (or
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parent) to suggest that the institution be
authorized to return the credit balance
to the loan program(s).
Based upon the instructions of the
student (or parent), the institution must
promptly return the funds to the title IV
loan programs or pay the credit balance
to the student (or parent).
In addition, if an institution chooses
to attempt to contact the student (or
parent) for authorization to apply the
credit balance to reduce the student’s
title IV loan debt, it must allow the
student (or parent) 45 days to respond.
If there is no response within 45 days,
the institution must promptly pay the
credit balance to the student (or parent)
or return the funds to the title IV
programs if the student (or parent)
cannot be located.
Consistent with the guidance
provided in Dear Colleague Letter GEN–
04–03 (February 2004; revised
November 2004), the institution may
also choose to pay the credit balance to
the student (or parent) without first
requesting permission to apply the
credit balance to reduce the student’s
title IV loan debt.
Cash Management—Student or Parent
Request for Loan or TEACH Grant
Cancellation
Under 34 CFR 668.165(a)(4)(ii), an
institution must return loan or TEACH
Grant proceeds, cancel the loan or
TEACH Grant, or do both, if the
institution receives a loan or TEACH
Grant cancellation request from a
student or parent:
• By the later of the first day of a
payment period or 14 days after the date
the institution notifies the student or
parent of his or her right to cancel all
or a portion of a loan or TEACH Grant,
if the institution obtains affirmative
confirmation from the student under 34
CFR 668.165(a)(6)(i); or
• Within 30 days of the date the
institution notifies the student or parent
of his or her right to cancel all or a
portion of a loan, if the institution does
not obtain affirmative confirmation from
the student under 34 CFR
668.165(a)(6)(i).
Under 34 CFR 668.165(a)(4)(iii), if an
institution receives a loan cancellation
request from a borrower after the period
specified in 34 CFR 668.165(a)(4)(ii), the
institution may, but is not required to,
comply with the request. For a student
or parent who is an affected individual
in this category, the Secretary is
modifying this requirement so that an
institution must allow at least 60 days
for the student or parent to request the
cancellation of all or a portion of a loan
or TEACH Grant for which proceeds
have been credited to the account at the
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institution. If an institution receives a
loan or TEACH Grant cancellation
request after the 60-day period, the
institution may, but is not required to,
comply with the request.
Cash Management—Student and Parent
Authorizations
Under 34 CFR 668.165(b)(1), an
institution must obtain a written
authorization from a student or parent,
as applicable, to:
• Use title IV funds to pay for
educationally related charges incurred
by the student at the institution other
than charges for tuition and fees and, as
applicable, room and board; and
• Hold on behalf of the student or
parent any title IV funds that would
otherwise be paid directly to the student
or parent.
The Secretary is modifying these
requirements to permit an institution to
accept an authorization provided by a
student (or parent for a parent PLUS
loan) orally, rather than in writing, if the
student or parent is prevented from
providing a written authorization
because of his or her status as an
affected individual in this category. The
institution must document the oral
consent or authorization.
Satisfactory Academic Progress
Institutions may, in cases where a
student failed to meet the institution’s
satisfactory academic progress standards
as a direct result of being an affected
individual in this category, apply the
exception provision of ‘‘other special
circumstances’’ contained in 34 CFR
668.34(a)(9)(ii).
Borrowers in a Grace Period
Sections 428(b)(7)(D) and 464(c)(7) of
the HEA and 34 CFR 674.31(b)(2)(i)(C),
682.209(a)(5), and 685.207(b)(2)(ii) and
(c)(2)(ii) exclude from a Federal Perkins
Loan, FFEL, or Direct Loan borrower’s
(title IV borrower’s) initial grace period
any period during which a borrower
who is a member of an Armed Forces
reserve component is called or ordered
to active duty for a period of more than
30 days. The statutory and regulatory
provisions further require that any
single excluded period may not exceed
three years and must include the time
necessary for the borrower to resume
enrollment at the next available regular
enrollment period. Lastly, any borrower
who is in a grace period when called or
ordered to active duty is entitled to
another six- or nine-month grace period,
as applicable, upon completion of the
excluded period of service.
The Secretary is modifying these
statutory and regulatory requirements to
exclude from a title IV borrower’s initial
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grace period, any period, not to exceed
three years, during which a borrower is
an affected individual in this category.
Any excluded period must include the
time necessary for an affected
individual in this category to resume
enrollment at the next available
enrollment period.
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Borrowers in an ‘‘In-School’’ Period
A title IV borrower is considered to be
in an ‘‘in-school’’ status and is not
required to make payments on a title IV
loan that has not entered repayment as
long as the borrower is enrolled at an
eligible institution on at least a half-time
basis. Under sections 428(b)(7) and
464(c)(1)(A) of the HEA and 34 CFR
674.31(b)(2), 682.209(a), and 685.207(b),
(c), and (e)(2) and (3), when a title IV
borrower ceases to be enrolled at an
eligible institution on at least a half-time
basis, the borrower is obligated to begin
repayment of the loan after a six- or
nine-month grace period, depending on
the title IV loan program and the terms
of the borrower’s promissory note. The
Secretary is modifying the statutory and
regulatory requirements that obligate an
‘‘in-school’’ borrower who has dropped
below half-time status to begin
repayment if the borrower is an affected
individual in this category, by requiring
the holder of the loan to maintain the
loan in an ‘‘in-school’’ status for a
period not to exceed three years,
including the time necessary for the
borrower to resume enrollment in the
next regular enrollment period, if the
borrower is planning to go back to
school. The Secretary will pay interest
that accrues on a subsidized Stafford
Loan as a result of the extension of a
borrower’s in-school status under this
modification.
Borrowers in an In-School, Graduate
Fellowship, or Rehabilitation Training
Program Deferment
Under sections 427(a)(2)(C)(i),
428(b)(1)(M)(i), 428B(a)(2) and (d)(1),
428C(b)(4)(C), 455(f)(2)(A), and
464(c)(2)(A)(i) of the HEA and 34 CFR
674.34(b)(1), 682.210(b)(1)(i), (ii), and
(iii), 682.210(s)(2), (3), and (4),
685.204(b), 685.204(d), and 685.204(e), a
title IV borrower is eligible for a
deferment on the loan during periods
after the commencement or resumption
of the repayment period on the loan
when the borrower is enrolled and in
attendance as a regular student on at
least a half-time basis (or full-time, if
required by the terms of the borrower’s
promissory note) at an eligible
institution; enrolled and in attendance
as a regular student in a course of study
that is part of a graduate fellowship
program; engaged in an eligible
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rehabilitation training program; or, for
Federal Perkins Loan borrowers,
engaged in graduate or post-graduate
fellowship-supported study outside the
United States. The borrower’s deferment
period ends when the borrower no
longer meets one of the above
conditions.
The Secretary is waiving the statutory
and regulatory eligibility requirements
for this deferment for title IV borrowers
who were required to interrupt a
graduate fellowship or rehabilitation
training program deferment, or who
were in an in-school deferment but who
left school, because of their status as an
affected individual in this category. The
holder of the loan is required to
maintain the loan in the graduate
fellowship, rehabilitation training
program, or in-school deferment status
for a period not to exceed three years
during which the borrower is an
affected individual in this category. This
period includes the time necessary for
the borrower to resume his or her
graduate fellowship program, resume a
rehabilitation training program, or
resume enrollment in the next regular
enrollment period if the borrower
returns to school. The Secretary will pay
interest that accrues on a FFEL
subsidized Stafford Loan or not charge
interest on a Direct subsidized Stafford
Loan as a result of extending a
borrower’s eligibility for deferment
under this waiver.
Forbearance
Under section 464(e) of the HEA and
34 CFR 674.33(d)(2), there is a threeyear cumulative limit on the length of
forbearances that a Federal Perkins Loan
borrower can receive. To assist Federal
Perkins Loan borrowers who are
affected individuals in this category, the
Secretary is waiving these statutory and
regulatory requirements so that any
forbearance based on a borrower’s status
as an affected individual in this category
is excluded from the three-year
cumulative limit.
Under section 464(e) of the HEA and
34 CFR 674.33(d)(2) and (3), a school
must receive a request and supporting
documentation from a Federal Perkins
Loan borrower before granting the
borrower a forbearance, the terms of
which must be in the form of a written
agreement. The Secretary is waiving
these statutory and regulatory
requirements to require an institution to
grant forbearance based on the
borrower’s status as an affected
individual in this category for a oneyear period, including a three-month
‘‘transition period’’ immediately
following, without supporting
documentation or a written agreement,
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based on the written or oral request of
the borrower, a member of the
borrower’s family, or another reliable
source. The purpose of the three-month
transition period is to assist borrowers
so that they will not be required to
reenter repayment immediately after
they are no longer affected individuals
in this category. In order to grant the
borrower forbearance beyond the initial
twelve- to fifteen-month period,
supporting documentation from the
borrower, a member of the borrower’s
family, or another reliable source is
required.
Under 34 CFR 682.211(i)(1), a FFEL
borrower who requests forbearance
because of a military mobilization must
provide the loan holder with
documentation showing that he or she
is subject to a military mobilization. The
Secretary is waiving this requirement to
allow a borrower who is not otherwise
eligible for the military service
deferment under 34 CFR 682.210(t),
685.204(h), and 674.34(h) to receive
forbearance at the request of the
borrower, a member of the borrower’s
family, or another reliable source for a
one-year period, including a threemonth transition period that
immediately follows, without providing
the loan holder with documentation. To
grant the borrower forbearance beyond
this period, documentation supporting
the borrower’s military mobilization
must be submitted to the loan holder.
The Secretary will apply the
forbearance waivers and modifications
in this section to loans held by the
Department.
Collection of Defaulted Loans
In accordance with 34 CFR part 674,
subpart C—Due Diligence, and
682.410(b)(6), schools and guaranty
agencies must attempt to recover
amounts owed from defaulted Federal
Perkins Loan and FFEL borrowers,
respectively. The Secretary is waiving
the regulatory provisions that require
schools and guaranty agencies to
attempt collection on defaulted loans for
the time period during which the
borrower is an affected individual in
this category and for a three-month
transition period. The school or
guaranty agency may stop collection
activities upon notification by the
borrower, a member of the borrower’s
family, or another reliable source that
the borrower is an affected individual in
this category. Collection activities must
resume after the borrower has notified
the school or guaranty agency that he or
she is no longer an affected individual
and the three-month transition period
has expired. The loan holder must
document in the loan file why it has
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suspended collection activities on the
loan, and the loan holder is not required
to obtain evidence of the borrower’s
status while collection activities have
been suspended. The Secretary will
apply the waivers described in this
paragraph to loans held by the
Department.
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Loan Cancellation
Depending on the loan program,
borrowers may qualify for loan
cancellation if they are employed
fulltime in specified occupations, such
as teaching or in law enforcement,
pursuant to sections 428J, 460(b)(1), and
465(a)(2)(A)–(M) and (3) of the HEA,
and 34 CFR 674.53, 674.55, 674.55(b),
674.56, 674.57, 674.58, 674.60, 682.216,
and 685.217. Generally, to qualify for
loan cancellation, borrowers must
perform uninterrupted, otherwise
qualifying service for a specified length
of time (for example, one year) or for
consecutive periods of time, such as five
consecutive years.
For borrowers who are affected
individuals in this category, the
Secretary is waiving the requirements
that apply to the various loan
cancellations that such periods of
service be uninterrupted or consecutive,
if the reason for the interruption is
related to the borrower’s status as an
affected individual in this category.
Therefore, the service period required
for the borrower to receive or retain a
loan cancellation for which he or she is
otherwise eligible will not be
considered interrupted by any period
during which the borrower is an
affected individual in this category,
including the three-month transition
period. The Secretary will apply the
waivers described in this paragraph to
loans held by the Department.
Rehabilitation of Defaulted Loans
A borrower of a Direct Loan or FFEL
Loan must make nine voluntary ontime, monthly payments over ten
consecutive months to rehabilitate a
defaulted loan in accordance with
section 428F(a) of the HEA and 34 CFR
682.405 and 685.211(f). Federal Perkins
Loan borrowers must make nine
consecutive, on-time monthly payments
to rehabilitate a defaulted Federal
Perkins Loan in accordance with section
464(h)(1)(A) of the HEA and 34 CFR
674.39. To assist title IV borrowers who
are affected individuals in this category,
the Secretary is waiving the statutory
and regulatory requirements that
payments made to rehabilitate a loan
must be consecutive or made over no
more than ten consecutive months. Loan
holders should not treat any payment
missed during the time that a borrower
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is an affected individual in this
category, or during the three-month
transition period, as an interruption in
the number of monthly, on-time
payments required to be made
consecutively, or the number of
consecutive months in which payment
is required to be made, for loan
rehabilitation. If there is an arrangement
or agreement in place between the
borrower and loan holder and the
borrower makes a payment during this
period, the loan holder must treat the
payment as an eligible payment in the
required series of payments. When the
borrower is no longer an affected
individual in this category, and the
three-month transition period has
expired, the required sequence of
qualifying payments may resume at the
point they were discontinued as a result
of the borrower’s status. The Secretary
will apply the waivers described in this
paragraph to loans held by the
Department.
Reinstatement of Title IV Eligibility
Under sections 428F(b) and 464(h)(2)
of the HEA and under the definition of
‘‘satisfactory repayment arrangement’’
in 34 CFR 668.35(a)(2), 674.2(b),
682.200(b), and 685.102(b), a defaulted
title IV borrower may make six
consecutive, on-time, voluntary, full,
monthly payments to reestablish
eligibility for title IV student financial
assistance. To assist title IV borrowers
who are affected individuals in this
category, the Secretary is waiving
statutory and regulatory provisions that
require the borrower to make
consecutive payments to reestablish
eligibility for title IV student financial
assistance. Loan holders should not
treat any payment missed during the
time that a borrower is an affected
individual in this category as an
interruption in the six consecutive, ontime, voluntary, full, monthly payments
required for reestablishing title IV
eligibility. If there is an arrangement or
agreement in place between the
borrower and loan holder and the
borrower makes a payment during this
period, the loan holder must treat the
payment as an eligible payment in the
required series of payments. When the
borrower is no longer an affected
individual or in the three-month
transition period for purposes of this
document, the required sequence of
qualifying payments may resume at the
point they were discontinued as a result
of the borrower’s status. The Secretary
will apply the waivers described in this
paragraph to loans held by the
Department.
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Consolidation of Defaulted Loans
Under the definition of ‘‘satisfactory
repayment arrangement’’ in 34 CFR
685.102(b), a defaulted FFEL or Direct
Loan borrower may establish eligibility
to consolidate a defaulted loan in the
Direct Consolidation Loan Program by
making three consecutive, voluntary,
on-time, monthly, full payments on the
loan. The Secretary is waiving the
regulatory requirement that such
payments be consecutive. FFEL loan
holders should not treat any payment
missed during the time that a borrower
is an affected individual in this category
as an interruption in the three
consecutive, voluntary, monthly, full,
on-time payments required for
establishing eligibility to consolidate a
defaulted loan in the Direct
Consolidation Loan Program. If there is
an arrangement or agreement in place
between the borrower and loan holder
and the borrower makes a payment
during this period, the loan holder must
treat the payment as an eligible payment
in the required series of payments.
When the borrower is no longer an
affected individual in this category or in
the three-month transition period, the
required sequence of qualifying
payments may resume at the point they
were discontinued as a result of the
borrower’s status as an affected
individual. The Secretary will apply the
waivers described in this paragraph to
loans held by the Department.
Annual Income Documentation
Requirements for Direct Loan and FFEL
Borrowers Under the IBR, PAYE,
REPAYE, and ICR Plans
Section 493C(c) of the HEA requires
the Secretary to establish procedures for
annually determining a borrower’s
eligibility for the IBR plan, including
verification of a borrower’s annual
income and the annual amount due on
the total amount of the borrower’s loans.
Section 455(e)(1) of the HEA provides
that the Secretary may obtain such
information as is reasonably necessary
regarding the income of a borrower for
the purpose of determining the annual
repayment obligation of the borrower
under an income-contingent repayment
plan. Under 34 CFR 682.215(e),
685.209(a)(5), (b)(3), and (c)(4), and
685.221(e), borrowers repaying under
the IBR, PAYE, REPAYE, or ICR plans
must annually provide their loan holder
with documentation of their income and
family size so that the loan holder may,
if necessary, adjust the borrower’s
monthly payment amount based on
changes in the borrower’s income or
family size. Borrowers are required to
provide information about their annual
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income and family size to the loan
holder each year by a deadline specified
by the holder. If a borrower who is
repaying his or her loans under the IBR,
PAYE, or ICR plans fails to provide the
required information by the specified
deadline, the borrower’s monthly
payment amount is adjusted and is no
longer based on the borrower’s income.
This adjusted monthly payment amount
is generally higher than the payment
amount that was based on the
borrower’s income.
The Secretary is waiving these
statutory and regulatory provisions to
require loan holders to maintain an
affected borrower’s payment at the most
recently calculated IBR, PAYE,
REPAYE, or ICR monthly payment
amount for up to a three-year period,
including a three-month transition
period immediately following the threeyear period, if the borrower’s status as
an affected individual in this category
has prevented the borrower from
providing documentation of updated
income and family size by the specified
deadline.
Category 3: The Secretary is waiving
or modifying the following provisions of
title IV of the HEA and the Department’s
regulations for affected individuals who
are serving on active duty or performing
qualifying National Guard duty during a
war or other military operation or
national emergency.
Institutional Charges and Refunds
The HEROES Act encourages
institutions to provide a full refund of
tuition, fees, and other institutional
charges for the portion of a period of
instruction that a student was unable to
complete, or for which the student did
not receive academic credit, because he
or she was called up for active duty or
for qualifying National Guard duty
during a war or other military operation
or national emergency. Alternatively,
the Secretary encourages institutions to
provide a credit in a comparable amount
against future charges.
The HEROES Act also recommends
that institutions consider providing easy
and flexible reenrollment options to
students who are affected individuals in
this category. At a minimum, an
institution must comply with the
requirements of 34 CFR 668.18, which
addresses the readmission requirements
for service members serving for a period
of more than 30 consecutive days under
certain conditions. Some institutions
must also abide by the protections
provided by the Principles of Excellence
(Executive Order 13607, issued April
27, 2012) to service members who are
absent for shorter periods of service.
Institutions agree to comply with the
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16:55 Sep 28, 2017
Jkt 241001
Principles of Excellence through
arrangements with the Department of
Defense and the Department of Veterans
Affairs. Executive Order 13607 is
available at www.whitehouse.gov/thepress-office/2012/04/27/executiveorder-establishing-principlesexcellence-educational-instituti.
Of course, an institution may provide
such treatment to affected individuals
other than those who are called up to
active duty or for qualifying National
Guard duty during a war or other
military operation or national
emergency.
Before an institution makes a refund
of institutional charges, it must perform
the required Return of Title IV Funds
calculations based upon the originally
assessed institutional charges. After
determining the amount that the
institution must return to the title IV
Federal student aid programs, any
reduction of institutional charges may
take into account the funds that the
institution is required to return. In other
words, we do not expect that an
institution would both return funds to
the Federal programs and also provide
a refund of those same funds to the
student.
Category 4: The Secretary is waiving
or modifying the following provisions of
the HEA and the Department’s
regulations for dependents of affected
individuals who are serving on active
duty or performing qualifying National
Guard duty during a war or other
military operation or national
emergency.
Verification Signature Requirements
The Department’s regulations in 34
CFR 668.57(b), (c), and (d) require
signatures to verify the number of
family members in the household, the
number of family members enrolled in
postsecondary institutions, or other
information specified in the annual
Federal Register document that
announces the FAFSA information that
an institution and an applicant may be
required to verify, as well as the
acceptable documentation for verifying
that FAFSA information. The Secretary
is waiving the requirement for a parent’s
signature on any verification
documentation required for title IV
eligibility for a dependent student when
no relevant parent can provide the
required signature because of the
parent’s status as an affected individual
in this category.
Required Signatures on the FAFSA,
SAR, or in Connection With Submitting
Corrections Electronically
Generally, when a dependent
applicant for title IV aid submits the
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45471
FAFSA or submits corrections to a
previously submitted FAFSA, at least
one parent’s signature is required on the
FAFSA, SAR, or in connection with
submitting corrections electronically.
The Secretary is waiving this
requirement so that an applicant need
not provide a parent’s signature when
there is no relevant parent who can
provide the required signature because
of the parent’s status as an affected
individual in this category. In these
situations, a student’s high school
counselor or the FAA may sign on
behalf of the parent as long as the
applicant provides adequate
documentation concerning the parent’s
inability to provide a signature due to
the parent’s status as an affected
individual in this category.
Electronic Access to This Document:
The official version of this document is
the document published in the Federal
Register. Free internet access to the
official edition of the Federal Register
and the Code of Federal Regulations is
available via the Federal Digital System
at: www.gpo.gov/fdsys. At this site you
can view this document, as well as all
other documents of this Department
published in the Federal Register, in
text or Portable Document Format
(PDF). To use PDF you must have
Adobe Acrobat Reader, which is
available free at the site. You may also
access documents of the Department
published in the Federal Register by
using the article search feature at:
www.federalregister.gov. Specifically,
through the advanced search feature at
this site, you can limit your search to
documents published by the
Department.
(Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance
Numbers: 84.007 Federal Supplemental
Educational Opportunity Grant Program;
84.032 Federal Family Education Loan
Program; 84.032 Federal PLUS Program;
84.033 Federal Work Study Program; 84.038
Federal Perkins Loan Program; 84.063
Federal Pell Grant Program; and 84.268
William D. Ford Federal Direct Loan
Program.)
Program Authority: 20 U.S.C. 1071, 1082,
1087a, 1087aa, Part F–1.
Kathleen A. Smith,
Acting Assistant Secretary for Postsecondary
Education.
[FR Doc. 2017–20844 Filed 9–28–17; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4000–01–P
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 82, Number 188 (Friday, September 29, 2017)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 45465-45471]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2017-20844]
=======================================================================
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DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION
34 CFR Parts 668, 674, 682, and 685
Federal Student Aid Programs (Student Assistance General
Provisions, Federal Perkins Loan Program, Federal Family Education Loan
Program, and the Federal Direct Loan Program)
AGENCY: Office of Postsecondary Education, Department of Education.
ACTION: Updated waivers and modifications of statutory and regulatory
requirements.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Secretary is issuing updated waivers and modifications of
statutory and regulatory requirements governing the Federal student
financial aid programs under the authority of the Higher Education
Relief Opportunities for Students Act of 2003 (HEROES Act). The HEROES
Act requires the Secretary to publish a document in the Federal
Register announcing the waivers or modifications of statutory or
regulatory requirements applicable to the student financial assistance
programs under title IV of the Higher Education Act of 1965, as amended
(HEA), to assist individuals who are performing qualifying military
service, and individuals who are affected by a disaster, war or other
military operation, or national emergency, as described in the
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section of this document.
DATES: The waivers and modifications begin on September 29, 2017. The
waivers and modifications in this document expire on September 30,
2022.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For provisions related to the title IV
loan programs (Federal Perkins Loan Program, Federal Family Education
Loan (FFEL) Program, and Federal Direct Loan (Direct Loan) Program):
Barbara Hoblitzell, U.S. Department of Education, 400 Maryland Ave.
SW., Room 6W253, Washington, DC 20202. Telephone: (202) 453-7583 or by
email: Barbara.Hoblitzell@ed.gov or Brian Smith, U.S. Department of
Education, 400 Maryland Ave. SW., Room 7E222, Washington, DC 20202.
Telephone: (202) 453-7440 or by email: Brian.Smith@ed.gov. For other
provisions: Wendy Macias, U.S. Department of Education, 400 Maryland
Ave. SW., Room 6C111, Washington, DC 20202. Telephone: (202) 203-9155
or by email: Wendy.Macias@ed.gov.
If you use a telecommunications device for the deaf (TDD) or text
telephone (TTY), call the Federal Relay Service (FRS), toll free, at 1-
800-877-8339.
Individuals with disabilities can obtain this document in an
accessible format (e.g., Braille, large print, audiotape, or compact
disc) by contacting Wendy Macias, U.S. Department of Education, 400
Maryland Ave. SW., Room 6C111, Washington, DC 20202. Telephone: (202)
203-9155 or by email: Wendy.Macias@ed.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: In a document published in the Federal
Register on December 12, 2003 (68 FR 69312), the Secretary exercised
the authority under the HEROES Act (Pub. L. 108-76, 20 U.S.C.
1098bb(b)) and announced waivers and modifications of statutory and
regulatory provisions designed to assist ``affected individuals.''
Under 20 U.S.C. 1098ee(2), the term ``affected individual'' means an
individual who:
Is serving on active duty during a war or other military
operation or national emergency;
Is performing qualifying National Guard duty during a war
or other military operation or national emergency;
Resides or is employed in an area that is declared a
disaster area by any Federal, State, or local official in connection
with a national emergency; or
Suffered direct economic hardship as a direct result of a
war or other military operation or national emergency, as determined by
the Secretary.
Please note that these waivers and modifications do not apply to an
individual who resides or is employed in an area declared a disaster
area by any Federal, State, or local official unless that declaration
has been made in connection with a national emergency.
Under the HEROES Act, the Secretary's authority to provide the
waivers and modifications would have expired on September 30, 2005.
However, Public Law 109-78, enacted on September 30, 2005, extended the
expiration date of the Secretary's authority to September 30, 2007.
Accordingly, in a document in the Federal Register published on October
20, 2005 (70 FR 61037), the Secretary extended the expiration of the
waivers and modifications published on December 12, 2003, to September
30, 2007.
Public Law 110-93, enacted on September 30, 2007, eliminated the
September 30, 2007, expiration date of the HEROES Act, thereby making
permanent the Secretary's authority to issue waivers and modifications
of statutory and regulatory provisions.
On December 26, 2007, the Secretary published a document in the
Federal Register (72 FR 72947) extending the waivers and modifications
published on December 12, 2003, to September 30, 2012. In that
document, the Secretary also indicated an intent to review the waivers
and modifications published on December 12, 2003, in light of statutory
and regulatory changes and to consider whether to change some or all of
the published waivers and modifications.
In a document in the Federal Register published on September 27,
2012 (77 FR 59311), the Secretary published updated waivers and
modifications to reflect the results of the review. Under that
document, the updated waivers and modifications expire on September 30,
2017.
The Secretary is updating the waivers and modifications to reflect
statutory and regulatory changes that have occurred since the September
27, 2012, document was published. The waivers and modifications in this
document will expire on September 30, 2022. With a few limited
exceptions, the waivers and modifications in this document are the same
waivers and modifications published in the September 27, 2012, Federal
Register document. However,
[[Page 45466]]
the 2012 waivers and modifications have been updated in the following
areas:
(1) The Secretary updated the need analysis modification to reflect
the change in which tax year's information is collected on the Free
Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) and used to calculate the
applicant's expected family contribution (EFC). Previously when
completing a FAFSA, a student provided income information from the most
recently completed tax year prior to the beginning of the financial aid
application cycle (e.g., 2015 income information for the 2016-2017
FAFSA). Beginning with the 2017-2018 FAFSA, income information is
collected from one tax year earlier--referred to as the ``prior-prior
year.'' This change was made under the authority of section
480(a)(1)(B) of the HEA. This modification was also updated to make it
consistent with the modification to professional judgment included in
this document, which provides three options that a financial aid
administrator (FAA) may use to make adjustments to the values of the
items used to calculate the EFC to reflect a student's special
circumstances.
(2) For the professional judgment modification, the Secretary
clarified that in addition to using income information from the first
or second calendar year of the award year, an institution may use
another annual income that more accurately reflects the family's
current financial circumstances.
(3) The Secretary updated the modifications related to verification
of adjusted gross income (AGI) and U.S. income tax paid so that
affected individuals under this category are no longer required to
provide a signature on the statement certifying that he or she has not
filed an income tax return or a request for a filing extension because
he or she was called up for active duty or for qualifying National
Guard duty during a war or other military operation or national
emergency; or certifying the amount of AGI and U.S. income tax paid for
the specified year.
(4) The Secretary extended the waiver assisting affected
individuals with regard to the annual reevaluation requirements for
FFEL and Direct Loan borrowers who are repaying loans under the Income-
Based Repayment (IBR) plan, and Direct Loan borrowers who are repaying
loans under the Income-Contingent Repayment (ICR) plan to include
borrowers who are repaying Direct Loans under the Pay As You Earn
(PAYE) or Revised Pay As You Earn (REPAYE) repayment plans.
(5) For the fourth category of affected individuals to which
waivers and modifications apply, as described later in this document,
the Secretary removed the reference to spouses of affected individuals
who are serving on active duty or performing qualifying National Guard
duty during a war or other military operation or national emergency,
since the waivers under this category only pertain to the dependent
student of such affected individuals.
(6) The Secretary updated the waiver related to verification
signature requirements to waive the requirement for a parental
signature on any verification documentation required for title IV
eligibility for a dependent student because of the parent's status as
an affected individual.
(7) The Secretary made a technical change to the waiver related to
the section on required signatures on the FAFSA, the Student Aid Report
(SAR), and the Institutional Student Information Record (ISIR),
replacing the reference to ``ISIR'' with ``or submitting corrections
electronically''. The Secretary also changed the reference to
``responsible parent'' to ``relevant parent'' to mean the parent whose
information is reported on the FAFSA.
The Secretary is issuing these waivers and modifications under the
authority of the HEROES Act, 20 U.S.C. 1098bb(a). In accordance with
the HEROES Act, the Secretary is providing the waivers and
modifications of statutory and regulatory requirements applicable to
the student financial assistance programs under title IV of the HEA
that the Secretary believes are appropriate to ensure that:
Affected individuals who are recipients of student
financial assistance under title IV are not placed in a worse position
financially in relation to that financial assistance because they are
affected individuals;
Affected individuals who are recipients of student
financial assistance are not unduly subject to administrative burden or
inadvertent, technical violations or defaults;
Affected individuals are not penalized when a
determination of need for student financial assistance is calculated;
Affected individuals are not required to return or repay
an overpayment of grant funds based on the HEA's Return of Title IV
Funds provision; and
Entities that participate in the student financial
assistance programs under title IV of the HEA and that are located in
areas that are declared disaster areas by any Federal, State, or local
official in connection with a national emergency, or whose operations
are significantly affected by such a disaster, receive temporary relief
from administrative requirements.
In 20 U.S.C. 1098bb(b)(1), the HEROES Act further provides that
section 437 of the General Education Provisions Act (20 U.S.C. 1232)
and section 553 of the Administrative Procedure Act (5 U.S.C. 553) do
not apply to the contents of this document.
The following terms used in this document are defined in 20 U.S.C.
1098ee: Active duty, military operation, national emergency, qualifying
National Guard duty during a war or other military operation or
national emergency, and serving on active duty during a war or other
military operation or national emergency.
The following waivers and modifications are grouped into four
categories, according to the affected individuals to whom they apply.
Category 1: The Secretary is waiving or modifying the following
requirements of title IV of the HEA and the Department of Education's
(Department's) regulations for ALL affected individuals.
Need Analysis
Section 480 of the HEA provides that, in the calculation of an
applicant's EFC, the term ``total income,'' which is used in the
determination of ``annual adjusted family income'' and ``available
income,'' is equal to the applicant's, the applicant's spouse's, or the
applicant's parent's AGI plus untaxed income and benefits for the
second preceding tax year minus excludable income. The HEROES Act
allows an institution to substitute AGI plus untaxed income and
benefits received in the first calendar year of the award year for
which such determination is made for any affected individual, and for
his or her spouse and dependents, if applicable, in order to reflect
more accurately the financial condition of an affected individual and
his or her family. The Secretary has determined that an institution has
the option of using the applicant's original EFC (the EFC based on the
income and tax information reported on the FAFSA), the EFC based on the
data from the first calendar year of the award year, or the EFC based
on another annual income that more accurately reflects the family's
current financial circumstances.
If an institution chooses to use anything other than the original
EFC, it should use the administrative professional judgment options
discussed in the following section.
[[Page 45467]]
Professional Judgment
Section 479A of the HEA specifically gives the FAA at an
institution the authority to use professional judgment to make, on a
case-by-case basis, adjustments to the cost of attendance or to the
values of the items used in calculating the EFC to reflect a student's
special circumstances. The Secretary is modifying this provision by
removing the requirement that adjustments be made on a case-by-case
basis for affected individuals. The use of professional judgment in
Federal need analysis is discussed in the Federal Student Aid Handbook
available at www.ifap.ed.gov.
The Secretary encourages FAAs to use professional judgment to
reflect more accurately the financial need of affected individuals. To
that end, the Secretary encourages institutions to determine an
affected individual's need using one of the options listed below:
Using the AGI plus untaxed income and benefits received in
the first calendar year of the award year;
Using another annual income that more accurately reflects
the family's current financial circumstances; or
Making no modifications.
The FAA must clearly document the reasons for any adjustment and
the facts supporting the decision. In almost all cases, the FAA should
have documentation from a third party with knowledge of the student's
special circumstances. As usual, any professional judgment decisions
made by an FAA that affect a student's eligibility for a subsidized
student financial assistance program must be reported to the Central
Processing System.
Return of Title IV Funds--Grant Overpayments Owed by the Student
Section 484B(b)(2) of the HEA and 34 CFR 668.22(h)(3)(ii) require a
student to return or repay, as appropriate, unearned grant funds for
which the student is responsible under the Return of Title IV Funds
calculation. For a student who withdraws from an institution because of
his or her status as an affected individual, the Secretary is waiving
these statutory and regulatory requirements so that a student is not
required to return or repay any overpayment of grant funds based on the
Return of Title IV Funds provisions.
For these students, the Secretary also waives 34 CFR 668.22(h)(4),
which:
Requires an institution to notify a student of a grant
overpayment and the actions the student must take to resolve the
overpayment;
Denies eligibility to a student who owes a grant
overpayment and does not take an action to resolve the overpayment; and
Requires an institution to refer a grant overpayment to
the Secretary under certain conditions.
Therefore, an institution is not required to contact the student,
notify the National Student Loan Data System, or refer the overpayment
to the Secretary. However, the institution must document in the
student's file the amount of any overpayment as part of the
documentation of the application of this waiver.
The student is not required to return or repay an overpayment of
grant funds based on the Return of Title IV Funds provision. Therefore,
an institution must not apply any title IV credit balance to the grant
overpayment prior to: Using a credit balance to pay authorized charges;
paying any amount of the title IV credit balance to the student or
parent, in the case of a parent PLUS loan; or using the credit balance
to reduce the student's title IV loan debt (with the student's
authorization) as provided in Dear Colleague Letter GEN-04-03 (February
2004; revised November 2004).
Verification of AGI and U.S. Income Tax Paid
Pursuant to 34 CFR 668.57(a)(3)(ii), for an individual who is
required to file a U.S. income tax return and has been granted a filing
extension by the Internal Revenue Service (IRS), an institution must
accept, in lieu of an income tax return for verification of AGI or U.S.
income tax paid:
A copy of IRS Form 4868, ``Application for Automatic
Extension of Time to File U.S. Individual Income Tax Return,'' that the
individual filed with the IRS for the specified year, or a copy of the
IRS's approval of an extension beyond the automatic six-month extension
if the individual requested an additional extension of the filing time;
and
A copy of each IRS Form W-2 that the individual received
for the specified year or, for a self-employed individual, a statement
signed by the individual certifying the amount of AGI and U.S. income
tax paid for the specified year.
The Secretary is modifying the requirement of this provision so
that the submission of a copy of IRS Form 4868 or a copy of the IRS's
approval of an extension beyond the six-month extension is not required
if an affected individual has not filed an income tax return by the
filing deadline.
For these individuals, an institution must accept, in lieu of an
income tax return for verification of AGI and U.S. income tax paid:
A statement from the individual certifying that he or she
has not filed an income tax return or a request for a filing extension
because he or she was called up for active duty or for qualifying
National Guard duty during a war or other military operation or
national emergency; and
A copy of each W-2 received for the specified year or, for
a self-employed individual, a statement by the individual certifying
the amount of AGI and U.S. income tax paid for the specified year.
An institution may request that an individual granted a filing
extension submit tax information using the IRS Data Retrieval Tool, or
by obtaining a tax return transcript from the IRS that lists tax
account information for the specified year after the income tax return
is filed. If an institution receives the tax information, it must
verify the income information of the tax filer(s).
Category 2: The Secretary is waiving or modifying requirements in
the following provisions of title IV of the HEA and the Department's
regulations for affected individuals who are serving on active duty or
performing qualifying National Guard duty during a war or other
military operation or national emergency, or who reside or are employed
in a disaster area.
Return of Title IV Funds--Post-Withdrawal Disbursements of Loan Funds
Under 34 CFR 668.22(a)(6)(iii)(A)(5) and (D), a student (or parent
for a parent PLUS loan) must be provided a post-withdrawal disbursement
of a title IV loan if the student (or parent) responds to an
institution's notification of the post-withdrawal disbursement within
14 days of the date that the institution sent the notice, or a later
deadline set by the institution. If a student or parent submits a late
response, an institution may, but is not required to, make the post-
withdrawal disbursement.
The Secretary is modifying this requirement so that, for a student
who withdraws because of his or her status as an affected individual in
this category and who is eligible for a post-withdrawal disbursement,
the 14-day time period in which the student (or parent) must normally
respond to the offer of the post-withdrawal disbursement is extended to
45 days, or to a later deadline set by the institution. If the student
or parent submits a response after the designated period, the
institution may, but is not required to, make the post-withdrawal
disbursement. As required under the current regulations, if the student
or parent submits the timely response
[[Page 45468]]
instructing the institution to make all or a portion of the post-
withdrawal disbursement, or the institution chooses to make a post-
withdrawal disbursement based on receipt of a late response, the
institution must disburse the funds within 180 days of the date of the
institution's determination that the student withdrew.
Leaves of Absence
Under 34 CFR 668.22(d)(3)(iii)(B), a student is required to provide
a written, signed, and dated request, which includes the reason for
that request, for an approved leave of absence prior to the leave of
absence. However, if unforeseen circumstances prevent a student from
providing a prior written request, the institution may grant the
student's request for a leave of absence if the institution documents
its decision and collects the written request at a later date. It may
be appropriate in certain limited cases for an institution to provide
an approved leave of absence to a student who must interrupt his or her
enrollment because he or she is an affected individual in this
category. Therefore, the Secretary is waiving the requirement that the
student provide a written request for affected individuals who have
difficulty providing a written request as a result of being an affected
individual in this category. The institution's documentation of its
decision to grant the leave of absence must include, in addition to the
reason for the leave of absence, the reason for waiving the requirement
that the leave of absence be requested in writing.
Treatment of Title IV Credit Balances When a Student Withdraws
Under 34 CFR 668.164(h)(2), an institution must pay any title IV
credit balance to the student, or parent in the case of a parent PLUS
loan, as soon as possible, but no later than: 14 days after the balance
occurred if the balance occurred after the first day of class of a
payment period; or 14 days after the first day of class of a payment
period if the balance occurred on or before the first day of class of
that payment period. If the student (or parent) has provided
authorization, an institution may use a title IV credit balance to
reduce the borrower's total title IV loan debt, not just the title IV
loan debt for the period for which the Return of Title IV Funds
calculation is performed.
For students who withdraw because they are affected individuals in
this category, the Secretary finds that the institution has met the 14-
day requirement under 34 CFR 668.164(h)(2) if, within that timeframe,
the institution attempts to contact the student (or parent) to suggest
that the institution be authorized to return the credit balance to the
loan program(s).
Based upon the instructions of the student (or parent), the
institution must promptly return the funds to the title IV loan
programs or pay the credit balance to the student (or parent).
In addition, if an institution chooses to attempt to contact the
student (or parent) for authorization to apply the credit balance to
reduce the student's title IV loan debt, it must allow the student (or
parent) 45 days to respond. If there is no response within 45 days, the
institution must promptly pay the credit balance to the student (or
parent) or return the funds to the title IV programs if the student (or
parent) cannot be located.
Consistent with the guidance provided in Dear Colleague Letter GEN-
04-03 (February 2004; revised November 2004), the institution may also
choose to pay the credit balance to the student (or parent) without
first requesting permission to apply the credit balance to reduce the
student's title IV loan debt.
Cash Management--Student or Parent Request for Loan or TEACH Grant
Cancellation
Under 34 CFR 668.165(a)(4)(ii), an institution must return loan or
TEACH Grant proceeds, cancel the loan or TEACH Grant, or do both, if
the institution receives a loan or TEACH Grant cancellation request
from a student or parent:
By the later of the first day of a payment period or 14
days after the date the institution notifies the student or parent of
his or her right to cancel all or a portion of a loan or TEACH Grant,
if the institution obtains affirmative confirmation from the student
under 34 CFR 668.165(a)(6)(i); or
Within 30 days of the date the institution notifies the
student or parent of his or her right to cancel all or a portion of a
loan, if the institution does not obtain affirmative confirmation from
the student under 34 CFR 668.165(a)(6)(i).
Under 34 CFR 668.165(a)(4)(iii), if an institution receives a loan
cancellation request from a borrower after the period specified in 34
CFR 668.165(a)(4)(ii), the institution may, but is not required to,
comply with the request. For a student or parent who is an affected
individual in this category, the Secretary is modifying this
requirement so that an institution must allow at least 60 days for the
student or parent to request the cancellation of all or a portion of a
loan or TEACH Grant for which proceeds have been credited to the
account at the institution. If an institution receives a loan or TEACH
Grant cancellation request after the 60-day period, the institution
may, but is not required to, comply with the request.
Cash Management--Student and Parent Authorizations
Under 34 CFR 668.165(b)(1), an institution must obtain a written
authorization from a student or parent, as applicable, to:
Use title IV funds to pay for educationally related
charges incurred by the student at the institution other than charges
for tuition and fees and, as applicable, room and board; and
Hold on behalf of the student or parent any title IV funds
that would otherwise be paid directly to the student or parent.
The Secretary is modifying these requirements to permit an
institution to accept an authorization provided by a student (or parent
for a parent PLUS loan) orally, rather than in writing, if the student
or parent is prevented from providing a written authorization because
of his or her status as an affected individual in this category. The
institution must document the oral consent or authorization.
Satisfactory Academic Progress
Institutions may, in cases where a student failed to meet the
institution's satisfactory academic progress standards as a direct
result of being an affected individual in this category, apply the
exception provision of ``other special circumstances'' contained in 34
CFR 668.34(a)(9)(ii).
Borrowers in a Grace Period
Sections 428(b)(7)(D) and 464(c)(7) of the HEA and 34 CFR
674.31(b)(2)(i)(C), 682.209(a)(5), and 685.207(b)(2)(ii) and (c)(2)(ii)
exclude from a Federal Perkins Loan, FFEL, or Direct Loan borrower's
(title IV borrower's) initial grace period any period during which a
borrower who is a member of an Armed Forces reserve component is called
or ordered to active duty for a period of more than 30 days. The
statutory and regulatory provisions further require that any single
excluded period may not exceed three years and must include the time
necessary for the borrower to resume enrollment at the next available
regular enrollment period. Lastly, any borrower who is in a grace
period when called or ordered to active duty is entitled to another
six- or nine-month grace period, as applicable, upon completion of the
excluded period of service.
The Secretary is modifying these statutory and regulatory
requirements to exclude from a title IV borrower's initial
[[Page 45469]]
grace period, any period, not to exceed three years, during which a
borrower is an affected individual in this category. Any excluded
period must include the time necessary for an affected individual in
this category to resume enrollment at the next available enrollment
period.
Borrowers in an ``In-School'' Period
A title IV borrower is considered to be in an ``in-school'' status
and is not required to make payments on a title IV loan that has not
entered repayment as long as the borrower is enrolled at an eligible
institution on at least a half-time basis. Under sections 428(b)(7) and
464(c)(1)(A) of the HEA and 34 CFR 674.31(b)(2), 682.209(a), and
685.207(b), (c), and (e)(2) and (3), when a title IV borrower ceases to
be enrolled at an eligible institution on at least a half-time basis,
the borrower is obligated to begin repayment of the loan after a six-
or nine-month grace period, depending on the title IV loan program and
the terms of the borrower's promissory note. The Secretary is modifying
the statutory and regulatory requirements that obligate an ``in-
school'' borrower who has dropped below half-time status to begin
repayment if the borrower is an affected individual in this category,
by requiring the holder of the loan to maintain the loan in an ``in-
school'' status for a period not to exceed three years, including the
time necessary for the borrower to resume enrollment in the next
regular enrollment period, if the borrower is planning to go back to
school. The Secretary will pay interest that accrues on a subsidized
Stafford Loan as a result of the extension of a borrower's in-school
status under this modification.
Borrowers in an In-School, Graduate Fellowship, or Rehabilitation
Training Program Deferment
Under sections 427(a)(2)(C)(i), 428(b)(1)(M)(i), 428B(a)(2) and
(d)(1), 428C(b)(4)(C), 455(f)(2)(A), and 464(c)(2)(A)(i) of the HEA and
34 CFR 674.34(b)(1), 682.210(b)(1)(i), (ii), and (iii), 682.210(s)(2),
(3), and (4), 685.204(b), 685.204(d), and 685.204(e), a title IV
borrower is eligible for a deferment on the loan during periods after
the commencement or resumption of the repayment period on the loan when
the borrower is enrolled and in attendance as a regular student on at
least a half-time basis (or full-time, if required by the terms of the
borrower's promissory note) at an eligible institution; enrolled and in
attendance as a regular student in a course of study that is part of a
graduate fellowship program; engaged in an eligible rehabilitation
training program; or, for Federal Perkins Loan borrowers, engaged in
graduate or post-graduate fellowship-supported study outside the United
States. The borrower's deferment period ends when the borrower no
longer meets one of the above conditions.
The Secretary is waiving the statutory and regulatory eligibility
requirements for this deferment for title IV borrowers who were
required to interrupt a graduate fellowship or rehabilitation training
program deferment, or who were in an in-school deferment but who left
school, because of their status as an affected individual in this
category. The holder of the loan is required to maintain the loan in
the graduate fellowship, rehabilitation training program, or in-school
deferment status for a period not to exceed three years during which
the borrower is an affected individual in this category. This period
includes the time necessary for the borrower to resume his or her
graduate fellowship program, resume a rehabilitation training program,
or resume enrollment in the next regular enrollment period if the
borrower returns to school. The Secretary will pay interest that
accrues on a FFEL subsidized Stafford Loan or not charge interest on a
Direct subsidized Stafford Loan as a result of extending a borrower's
eligibility for deferment under this waiver.
Forbearance
Under section 464(e) of the HEA and 34 CFR 674.33(d)(2), there is a
three-year cumulative limit on the length of forbearances that a
Federal Perkins Loan borrower can receive. To assist Federal Perkins
Loan borrowers who are affected individuals in this category, the
Secretary is waiving these statutory and regulatory requirements so
that any forbearance based on a borrower's status as an affected
individual in this category is excluded from the three-year cumulative
limit.
Under section 464(e) of the HEA and 34 CFR 674.33(d)(2) and (3), a
school must receive a request and supporting documentation from a
Federal Perkins Loan borrower before granting the borrower a
forbearance, the terms of which must be in the form of a written
agreement. The Secretary is waiving these statutory and regulatory
requirements to require an institution to grant forbearance based on
the borrower's status as an affected individual in this category for a
one-year period, including a three-month ``transition period''
immediately following, without supporting documentation or a written
agreement, based on the written or oral request of the borrower, a
member of the borrower's family, or another reliable source. The
purpose of the three-month transition period is to assist borrowers so
that they will not be required to reenter repayment immediately after
they are no longer affected individuals in this category. In order to
grant the borrower forbearance beyond the initial twelve- to fifteen-
month period, supporting documentation from the borrower, a member of
the borrower's family, or another reliable source is required.
Under 34 CFR 682.211(i)(1), a FFEL borrower who requests
forbearance because of a military mobilization must provide the loan
holder with documentation showing that he or she is subject to a
military mobilization. The Secretary is waiving this requirement to
allow a borrower who is not otherwise eligible for the military service
deferment under 34 CFR 682.210(t), 685.204(h), and 674.34(h) to receive
forbearance at the request of the borrower, a member of the borrower's
family, or another reliable source for a one-year period, including a
three-month transition period that immediately follows, without
providing the loan holder with documentation. To grant the borrower
forbearance beyond this period, documentation supporting the borrower's
military mobilization must be submitted to the loan holder.
The Secretary will apply the forbearance waivers and modifications
in this section to loans held by the Department.
Collection of Defaulted Loans
In accordance with 34 CFR part 674, subpart C--Due Diligence, and
682.410(b)(6), schools and guaranty agencies must attempt to recover
amounts owed from defaulted Federal Perkins Loan and FFEL borrowers,
respectively. The Secretary is waiving the regulatory provisions that
require schools and guaranty agencies to attempt collection on
defaulted loans for the time period during which the borrower is an
affected individual in this category and for a three-month transition
period. The school or guaranty agency may stop collection activities
upon notification by the borrower, a member of the borrower's family,
or another reliable source that the borrower is an affected individual
in this category. Collection activities must resume after the borrower
has notified the school or guaranty agency that he or she is no longer
an affected individual and the three-month transition period has
expired. The loan holder must document in the loan file why it has
[[Page 45470]]
suspended collection activities on the loan, and the loan holder is not
required to obtain evidence of the borrower's status while collection
activities have been suspended. The Secretary will apply the waivers
described in this paragraph to loans held by the Department.
Loan Cancellation
Depending on the loan program, borrowers may qualify for loan
cancellation if they are employed fulltime in specified occupations,
such as teaching or in law enforcement, pursuant to sections 428J,
460(b)(1), and 465(a)(2)(A)-(M) and (3) of the HEA, and 34 CFR 674.53,
674.55, 674.55(b), 674.56, 674.57, 674.58, 674.60, 682.216, and
685.217. Generally, to qualify for loan cancellation, borrowers must
perform uninterrupted, otherwise qualifying service for a specified
length of time (for example, one year) or for consecutive periods of
time, such as five consecutive years.
For borrowers who are affected individuals in this category, the
Secretary is waiving the requirements that apply to the various loan
cancellations that such periods of service be uninterrupted or
consecutive, if the reason for the interruption is related to the
borrower's status as an affected individual in this category.
Therefore, the service period required for the borrower to receive or
retain a loan cancellation for which he or she is otherwise eligible
will not be considered interrupted by any period during which the
borrower is an affected individual in this category, including the
three-month transition period. The Secretary will apply the waivers
described in this paragraph to loans held by the Department.
Rehabilitation of Defaulted Loans
A borrower of a Direct Loan or FFEL Loan must make nine voluntary
on-time, monthly payments over ten consecutive months to rehabilitate a
defaulted loan in accordance with section 428F(a) of the HEA and 34 CFR
682.405 and 685.211(f). Federal Perkins Loan borrowers must make nine
consecutive, on-time monthly payments to rehabilitate a defaulted
Federal Perkins Loan in accordance with section 464(h)(1)(A) of the HEA
and 34 CFR 674.39. To assist title IV borrowers who are affected
individuals in this category, the Secretary is waiving the statutory
and regulatory requirements that payments made to rehabilitate a loan
must be consecutive or made over no more than ten consecutive months.
Loan holders should not treat any payment missed during the time that a
borrower is an affected individual in this category, or during the
three-month transition period, as an interruption in the number of
monthly, on-time payments required to be made consecutively, or the
number of consecutive months in which payment is required to be made,
for loan rehabilitation. If there is an arrangement or agreement in
place between the borrower and loan holder and the borrower makes a
payment during this period, the loan holder must treat the payment as
an eligible payment in the required series of payments. When the
borrower is no longer an affected individual in this category, and the
three-month transition period has expired, the required sequence of
qualifying payments may resume at the point they were discontinued as a
result of the borrower's status. The Secretary will apply the waivers
described in this paragraph to loans held by the Department.
Reinstatement of Title IV Eligibility
Under sections 428F(b) and 464(h)(2) of the HEA and under the
definition of ``satisfactory repayment arrangement'' in 34 CFR
668.35(a)(2), 674.2(b), 682.200(b), and 685.102(b), a defaulted title
IV borrower may make six consecutive, on-time, voluntary, full, monthly
payments to reestablish eligibility for title IV student financial
assistance. To assist title IV borrowers who are affected individuals
in this category, the Secretary is waiving statutory and regulatory
provisions that require the borrower to make consecutive payments to
reestablish eligibility for title IV student financial assistance. Loan
holders should not treat any payment missed during the time that a
borrower is an affected individual in this category as an interruption
in the six consecutive, on-time, voluntary, full, monthly payments
required for reestablishing title IV eligibility. If there is an
arrangement or agreement in place between the borrower and loan holder
and the borrower makes a payment during this period, the loan holder
must treat the payment as an eligible payment in the required series of
payments. When the borrower is no longer an affected individual or in
the three-month transition period for purposes of this document, the
required sequence of qualifying payments may resume at the point they
were discontinued as a result of the borrower's status. The Secretary
will apply the waivers described in this paragraph to loans held by the
Department.
Consolidation of Defaulted Loans
Under the definition of ``satisfactory repayment arrangement'' in
34 CFR 685.102(b), a defaulted FFEL or Direct Loan borrower may
establish eligibility to consolidate a defaulted loan in the Direct
Consolidation Loan Program by making three consecutive, voluntary, on-
time, monthly, full payments on the loan. The Secretary is waiving the
regulatory requirement that such payments be consecutive. FFEL loan
holders should not treat any payment missed during the time that a
borrower is an affected individual in this category as an interruption
in the three consecutive, voluntary, monthly, full, on-time payments
required for establishing eligibility to consolidate a defaulted loan
in the Direct Consolidation Loan Program. If there is an arrangement or
agreement in place between the borrower and loan holder and the
borrower makes a payment during this period, the loan holder must treat
the payment as an eligible payment in the required series of payments.
When the borrower is no longer an affected individual in this category
or in the three-month transition period, the required sequence of
qualifying payments may resume at the point they were discontinued as a
result of the borrower's status as an affected individual. The
Secretary will apply the waivers described in this paragraph to loans
held by the Department.
Annual Income Documentation Requirements for Direct Loan and FFEL
Borrowers Under the IBR, PAYE, REPAYE, and ICR Plans
Section 493C(c) of the HEA requires the Secretary to establish
procedures for annually determining a borrower's eligibility for the
IBR plan, including verification of a borrower's annual income and the
annual amount due on the total amount of the borrower's loans. Section
455(e)(1) of the HEA provides that the Secretary may obtain such
information as is reasonably necessary regarding the income of a
borrower for the purpose of determining the annual repayment obligation
of the borrower under an income-contingent repayment plan. Under 34 CFR
682.215(e), 685.209(a)(5), (b)(3), and (c)(4), and 685.221(e),
borrowers repaying under the IBR, PAYE, REPAYE, or ICR plans must
annually provide their loan holder with documentation of their income
and family size so that the loan holder may, if necessary, adjust the
borrower's monthly payment amount based on changes in the borrower's
income or family size. Borrowers are required to provide information
about their annual
[[Page 45471]]
income and family size to the loan holder each year by a deadline
specified by the holder. If a borrower who is repaying his or her loans
under the IBR, PAYE, or ICR plans fails to provide the required
information by the specified deadline, the borrower's monthly payment
amount is adjusted and is no longer based on the borrower's income.
This adjusted monthly payment amount is generally higher than the
payment amount that was based on the borrower's income.
The Secretary is waiving these statutory and regulatory provisions
to require loan holders to maintain an affected borrower's payment at
the most recently calculated IBR, PAYE, REPAYE, or ICR monthly payment
amount for up to a three-year period, including a three-month
transition period immediately following the three-year period, if the
borrower's status as an affected individual in this category has
prevented the borrower from providing documentation of updated income
and family size by the specified deadline.
Category 3: The Secretary is waiving or modifying the following
provisions of title IV of the HEA and the Department's regulations for
affected individuals who are serving on active duty or performing
qualifying National Guard duty during a war or other military operation
or national emergency.
Institutional Charges and Refunds
The HEROES Act encourages institutions to provide a full refund of
tuition, fees, and other institutional charges for the portion of a
period of instruction that a student was unable to complete, or for
which the student did not receive academic credit, because he or she
was called up for active duty or for qualifying National Guard duty
during a war or other military operation or national emergency.
Alternatively, the Secretary encourages institutions to provide a
credit in a comparable amount against future charges.
The HEROES Act also recommends that institutions consider providing
easy and flexible reenrollment options to students who are affected
individuals in this category. At a minimum, an institution must comply
with the requirements of 34 CFR 668.18, which addresses the readmission
requirements for service members serving for a period of more than 30
consecutive days under certain conditions. Some institutions must also
abide by the protections provided by the Principles of Excellence
(Executive Order 13607, issued April 27, 2012) to service members who
are absent for shorter periods of service. Institutions agree to comply
with the Principles of Excellence through arrangements with the
Department of Defense and the Department of Veterans Affairs. Executive
Order 13607 is available at www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2012/04/27/executive-order-establishing-principles-excellence-educational-instituti.
Of course, an institution may provide such treatment to affected
individuals other than those who are called up to active duty or for
qualifying National Guard duty during a war or other military operation
or national emergency.
Before an institution makes a refund of institutional charges, it
must perform the required Return of Title IV Funds calculations based
upon the originally assessed institutional charges. After determining
the amount that the institution must return to the title IV Federal
student aid programs, any reduction of institutional charges may take
into account the funds that the institution is required to return. In
other words, we do not expect that an institution would both return
funds to the Federal programs and also provide a refund of those same
funds to the student.
Category 4: The Secretary is waiving or modifying the following
provisions of the HEA and the Department's regulations for dependents
of affected individuals who are serving on active duty or performing
qualifying National Guard duty during a war or other military operation
or national emergency.
Verification Signature Requirements
The Department's regulations in 34 CFR 668.57(b), (c), and (d)
require signatures to verify the number of family members in the
household, the number of family members enrolled in postsecondary
institutions, or other information specified in the annual Federal
Register document that announces the FAFSA information that an
institution and an applicant may be required to verify, as well as the
acceptable documentation for verifying that FAFSA information. The
Secretary is waiving the requirement for a parent's signature on any
verification documentation required for title IV eligibility for a
dependent student when no relevant parent can provide the required
signature because of the parent's status as an affected individual in
this category.
Required Signatures on the FAFSA, SAR, or in Connection With Submitting
Corrections Electronically
Generally, when a dependent applicant for title IV aid submits the
FAFSA or submits corrections to a previously submitted FAFSA, at least
one parent's signature is required on the FAFSA, SAR, or in connection
with submitting corrections electronically. The Secretary is waiving
this requirement so that an applicant need not provide a parent's
signature when there is no relevant parent who can provide the required
signature because of the parent's status as an affected individual in
this category. In these situations, a student's high school counselor
or the FAA may sign on behalf of the parent as long as the applicant
provides adequate documentation concerning the parent's inability to
provide a signature due to the parent's status as an affected
individual in this category.
Electronic Access to This Document: The official version of this
document is the document published in the Federal Register. Free
internet access to the official edition of the Federal Register and the
Code of Federal Regulations is available via the Federal Digital System
at: www.gpo.gov/fdsys. At this site you can view this document, as well
as all other documents of this Department published in the Federal
Register, in text or Portable Document Format (PDF). To use PDF you
must have Adobe Acrobat Reader, which is available free at the site.
You may also access documents of the Department published in the
Federal Register by using the article search feature at:
www.federalregister.gov. Specifically, through the advanced search
feature at this site, you can limit your search to documents published
by the Department.
(Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance Numbers: 84.007 Federal
Supplemental Educational Opportunity Grant Program; 84.032 Federal
Family Education Loan Program; 84.032 Federal PLUS Program; 84.033
Federal Work Study Program; 84.038 Federal Perkins Loan Program;
84.063 Federal Pell Grant Program; and 84.268 William D. Ford
Federal Direct Loan Program.)
Program Authority: 20 U.S.C. 1071, 1082, 1087a, 1087aa, Part F-
1.
Kathleen A. Smith,
Acting Assistant Secretary for Postsecondary Education.
[FR Doc. 2017-20844 Filed 9-28-17; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4000-01-P