Student Assistance General Provisions, Federal Perkins Loan Program, Federal Family Education Loan Program, William D. Ford Federal Direct Loan Program, and Teacher Education Assistance for College and Higher Education Grant Program, 6458-6470 [2018-03090]
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Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 31 / Wednesday, February 14, 2018 / Rules and Regulations
subject to the Paperwork Reduction Act,
44 U.S.C. Chapter 35.
PART 126—GENERAL POLICIES AND
PROVISIONS
List of Subjects in 22 CFR Part 126
■
1. The authority citation for part 126
continues to read as follows:
Arms and munitions, Exports.
Authority: Secs. 2, 38, 40, 42, and 71, Pub.
L. 90–629, 90 Stat. 744 (22 U.S.C. 2752, 2778,
2780, 2791, and 2797); 22 U.S.C. 2651a; 22
U.S.C. 287c; E.O. 12918, 59 FR 28205; 3 CFR,
1994 Comp., p. 899; Sec. 1225, Pub. L. 108–
375; Sec. 7089, Pub. L. 111–117; Pub. L. 111–
266; Sections 7045 and 7046, Pub. L. 112–74;
E.O. 13637, 78 FR 16129.
Accordingly, for the reasons set forth
above, 22 CFR part 126 is amended as
follows:
2. Section 126.1 is amended by
revising the table in paragraph (d)(2),
and adding paragraph (w), and by
removing the Note to 126.1.
The revision and addition read as
follows:
■
§ 126.1 Prohibited exports, imports, and
sales to or from certain countries.
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(d) * * *
(2) * * *
Country
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(w) South Sudan. It is the policy of
the United States to deny licenses or
other approvals for exports of defense
articles and defense services destined
for South Sudan, except that a license
or other approval may be issued, on a
case-by-case basis, for:
(1) Defense articles and defense
services for monitoring, verification, or
peacekeeping support operations,
including those authorized by the
United Nations or operating with the
consent of the relevant parties;
(2) Defense articles and defense
services intended solely for the support
of, or use by, African Union Regional
Task Force (AU–RTF) or United Nations
entities operating in South Sudan,
including but not limited to the United
Nations Mission in the Republic of
South Sudan (UNMISS), the United
Nations Mine Action Service (UNMAS),
the United Nations Police (UNPOL), or
the United Nations Interim Security
Force for Abyei (UNISFA);
(3) Defense articles and defense
services intended solely for the support
of or use by non-governmental
organizations in furtherance of
conventional weapons destruction or
humanitarian demining activities;
(4) Non-lethal defense articles
intended solely for humanitarian or
protective use and related technical
training and assistance;
(5) Personal protective equipment
including flak jackets and helmets,
temporarily exported to South Sudan by
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United Nations personnel, human rights
monitors, representatives of the media,
and humanitarian and development
workers and associated personnel, for
their personal use only; or
(6) Any defense articles and defense
services provided in support of
implementation of the Comprehensive
Peace Agreement, the Agreement on the
Resolution of the Conflict in the
Republic of South Sudan, or any
successor agreement.
Michael Miller,
Office Director, Office of Regional Security
and Arms Transfers, Bureau of PoliticalMilitary Affairs, U.S. Department of State.
[FR Doc. 2018–02995 Filed 2–13–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4710–25–P
DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE
§ 706 .2
paragraph
paragraph
paragraph
paragraph
paragraph
paragraph
paragraph
paragraph
paragraph
paragraph
paragraph
paragraph
paragraph
Correction
In rule document 2018–02554
appearing on pages 5536–5537 in the
issue of February 8, 2018, make the
following correction:
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(g) of this section.
(u) of this section.
(r) of this section.
(i) of this section.
(h) of this section.
(j) of this section.
(f) of this section.
(t) of this section.
(k) of this section.
(m) of this section.
(w) of this section.
(v) of this section.
(s) of this section.
[Corrected]
On page 5537, in Table Four, in the
second column, ‘‘DDG 115’’ should read
‘‘DDG 116’’.
■
[FR Doc. C1–2018–02554 Filed 2–13–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 1301–00–P
DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION
34 CFR Parts 668, 674, 682, and 685
[Docket ID ED–2017–OPE–0112]
RIN 1840–AD28
Student Assistance General
Provisions, Federal Perkins Loan
Program, Federal Family Education
Loan Program, William D. Ford Federal
Direct Loan Program, and Teacher
Education Assistance for College and
Higher Education Grant Program
The Secretary delays, until
July 1, 2019, the effective date of
selected provisions of the final
regulations entitled Student Assistance
General Provisions, Federal Perkins
Loan Program, Federal Family
Education Loan (FFEL) Program,
William D. Ford Federal Direct Loan
Program, and Teacher Education
Assistance for College and Higher
Education Grant Program (the 2016 final
regulations), published in the Federal
SUMMARY:
Certifications and Exemptions Under
the International Regulations for
Preventing Collisions at Sea, 1972
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also
also
also
also
also
also
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also
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also
Office of Postsecondary
Education, Department of Education.
ACTION: Final regulations.
32 CFR Part 706
Frm 00008
See
See
See
See
See
See
See
See
See
See
See
See
See
AGENCY:
Department of the Navy
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Afghanistan ..........................................................................................................................................
Central African Republic ......................................................................................................................
Cyprus ..................................................................................................................................................
Democratic Republic of Congo ............................................................................................................
Eritrea ..................................................................................................................................................
Haiti ......................................................................................................................................................
Iraq .......................................................................................................................................................
Lebanon ...............................................................................................................................................
Libya ....................................................................................................................................................
Somalia ................................................................................................................................................
South Sudan ........................................................................................................................................
Sudan ...................................................................................................................................................
Zimbabwe ............................................................................................................................................
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Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 31 / Wednesday, February 14, 2018 / Rules and Regulations
Register on November 1, 2016. The
Secretary is delaying the 2016 final
regulations to ensure that there is
adequate time to conduct negotiated
rulemaking and develop revised
regulations. The provisions for which
the effective date is being delayed are
listed in the SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION section of this document.
The original effective date of the 2016
final regulations, published November
1, 2016, was July 1, 2017. The effective
date was delayed by a document issued
under section 705 of the Administrative
Procedure Act (the 705 Document). The
Department announced in an interim
final rule (IFR) issued on October 24,
2017, that, under the Department’s
interpretation of the Higher Education
Act, the effective date could be no
earlier than July 1, 2018.
DATES: As of February 14, 2018, the
effective date for the amendments to or
additions of: §§ 668.14(b)(30), (31), and
(32); 668.41(h) and (i); 668.71(c);
668.90(a)(3); 668.93(h), (i), (j); 668.171;
668.175 (c) and (d) and (f) and (h);
Appendix C to Subpart L of Part 668;
674.33(g)(3) and (g)(8); 682.202(b)(1);
682.211(i)(7); 682.402(d)(3),
(d)(6)(ii)(B)(1) and (2), (d)(6)(ii)(F)
introductory text, (d)(6)(ii)(F)(5),
(d)(6)(ii)(G), (d)(6)(ii)(H) through (K),
(d)(7)(ii) and (iii), (d)(8), and (e)(6)(iii);
682.405(b)(4); 682.410(b)(4) and
(b)(6)(viii); 685.200(f)(3)(v) and
(f)(4)(iii); 685.205(b)(6); 685.206(c);
685.212(k); 685.214(c)(2), (f)(4) through
(7); 685.215(a)(1), (c)(1) through (c)(8),
and (d); 685.222; Appendix A to
Subpart B of Part 685; and 685.308(a),
published November 1, 2016, at 81 FR
75926, and delayed on June 16, 2017 (82
FR 27621) and October 24, 2017 (82 FR
49114), is further delayed until July 1,
2019.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
George Alan Smith, U.S. Department of
Education, 400 Maryland Ave. SW, Mail
Stop 294–34, Washington, DC 20202.
Telephone: (202) 453–7757 or by email
at: George.Alan.Smith@ed.gov.
If you use a telecommunications
device for the deaf (TDD) or a text
telephone (TTY), call the Federal Relay
Service (FRS), toll free, at 1–800–877–
8339.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: On
October 24, 2017 (82 FR 49114), the
Department of Education (Department)
published an IFR giving notice that
under its interpretation of section 482 of
the Higher Education Act of 1965, as
amended (HEA) (20 U.S.C. 1089), also
known as the ‘‘master calendar
requirement,’’ selected provisions of the
2016 final regulations would have an
effective date of July 1, 2018. (82 FR
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49114) The original effective date of the
2016 final regulations (November 1,
2016 at 81 FR 75926) was July 1, 2017.
On June 16, 2017, a 705 Document (82
FR 27621) delayed the effective date of
certain provisions of the 2016 final
regulations until a legal challenge by the
California Association of Private
Postsecondary Schools (CAPPS) is
resolved. See Complaint and Prayer for
Declaratory and Injunctive Relief,
California Association of Private
Postsecondary Schools v. DeVos, Civil
Action No. 1:17–cv–00999 (D.D.C. May
24, 2017). As explained in the IFR,
because the 2016 final regulations have
been postponed by the 705 Document
beyond July 1, 2017, they cannot
become effective earlier than July 1,
2018, to comply with the master
calendar requirement. (82 FR 49115–
49116).
Also on June 16, 2017, the
Department announced its intent to
convene a committee to develop
proposed regulations to revise the
existing regulations on borrower defense
to repayment of Federal student loans
and other matters (82 FR 27640), the
same topics addressed in the 2016 final
regulations. Under the master calendar
requirement, a regulatory change that
has been published in final form on or
before November 1 of the year prior to
the start of an award year—which
begins on July 1 of any given year—may
take effect only at the beginning of the
next award year, or in other words, on
July 1 of the next year. In light of this
requirement, the regulations resulting
from negotiated rulemaking could not
be effective before, at the earliest, July
1, 2019.
Accordingly, the Department
published a notice of proposed
rulemaking (NPRM) proposing to delay
the effective date of the 2016 final
regulations until July 1, 2019 (October
24, 2017 at 82 FR 49155). This notice
adopts that proposal, delaying the
effective date of the 2016 final
regulations, to continue to preserve the
regulatory status quo, until July 1, 2019.
The Department will continue to
process borrower defense claims under
the existing regulations that will remain
in effect during the delay so that
borrowers may continue to apply for the
discharge of all or a part of their loans.
Based on the above considerations,
the Department delays until July 1,
2019, the effective date of the following
provisions of the final regulations in
title 34 of the Code of Federal
Regulations (CFR):
§ 668.14(b)(30), (31), and (32) Program
participation agreement.
§ 668.41(h) and (i) Reporting and
disclosure of information.
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§ 668.71(c) Scope and special
definitions.
§ 668.90(a)(3) Initial and final
decisions.
§ 668.93(h), (i), and (j) Limitation.
§ 668.171 General.
§ 668.175(c), (d), (f), and (h)
Alternative standards and requirements.
Part 668 subpart L, Appendix C.
§ 674.33(g)(3) and (g)(8) Repayment.
§ 682.202(b)(1) Permissible charges by
lenders to borrowers.
§ 682.211(i)(7) Forbearance.
§ 682.402(d)(3), (d)(6)(ii)(B)(1) and (2),
(d)(6)(ii)(F) introductory text,
(d)(6)(ii)(F)(5), (d)(6)(ii)(G), (d)(6)(ii)(H)
through (K), (d)(7)(ii) and (iii), (d)(8),
and (e)(6)(iii) Death, disability, closed
school, false certification, unpaid
refunds, and bankruptcy payments.
§ 682.405(b)(4)(ii) Loan rehabilitation
agreement.
§ 682.410(b)(4) and (b)(6)(viii) Fiscal,
administrative, and enforcement
requirements.
§ 685.200(f)(3)(v) and (f)(4)(iii)
Borrower eligibility.
§ 685.205(b)(6) Forbearance.
§ 685.206(c) Borrower responsibilities
and defenses.
§ 685.212(k) Discharge of a loan
obligation.
§ 685.214(c)(2) and (f)(4) through (7)
Closed school discharge.
§ 685.215(a)(1), (c)(1) through (c)(8),
and (d) Discharge for false certification
of student eligibility or unauthorized
payment.
§ 685.222 Borrower defenses.
Part 685 subpart B, Appendix A
Examples of borrower relief.
§ 685.300(b)(11), (b)(12), and (d)
through (i) Agreements between an
eligible school and the Secretary for
participation in the Direct Loan
Program.
§ 685.308(a) Remedial actions.
Note: Section 668.90 has been redesignated
as § 668.91 and § 668.93 has been
redesignated as § 668.94 pursuant to the
borrower defense procedural rule, published
January 19, 2017 at 82 FR 6253 (the borrower
defense procedural rule).
As noted in the IFR, the Department
interprets all references to ‘‘July 1,
2017’’ in the text of the abovereferenced regulations to mean the
effective date of those regulations. The
regulatory text included references to
the specific July 1, 2017, date in part to
provide clarity to readers in the future
as to when the regulations had taken
effect. Because the regulations did not
take effect on July 1, 2017, we would,
in connection with this delay of the
effective date, read those regulations as
referring to the new effective date
established by this rule, i.e., July 1,
2019.
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Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 31 / Wednesday, February 14, 2018 / Rules and Regulations
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This delay of the effective date of the
2016 final regulations does not delay the
effective dates of the regulatory
provisions published in 81 FR 75926
which: (1) Expand the types of
documentation that may be used for the
granting of a discharge based on the
death of the borrower; (2) amend the
regulations governing the consolidation
of Nursing Student Loans and Nurse
Faculty Loans so that they align with
the statutory requirements of section
428C(a)(4)(E) of the HEA; (3) amend the
regulations governing Direct
Consolidation Loans to allow a borrower
to obtain a Direct Consolidation Loan
regardless of whether the borrower is
also seeking to consolidate a Direct Loan
Program or FFEL Program loan, if the
borrower has a loan type identified in
34 CFR 685.220(b); (4) address
severability; and (5) make technical
corrections. In the 2016 final
regulations, 34 CFR 682.211(i)(7) and
682.410(b)(6)(viii) were designated for
early implementation, at the discretion
of each lender or guaranty agency. That
designation remains effective.
Public Comment: In response to our
invitation in the NPRM, 14 parties
submitted comments on the delay of the
effective date. We do not discuss
comments or recommendations that are
beyond the scope of this regulatory
action or that would require statutory
change.
Analysis of Comments and Changes
An analysis of the comments and of
any changes to this regulatory action
since publication of the NPRM follows.
A number of commenters opposed the
proposed rule to delay the effective date
of selected provisions of the 2016 final
regulations until July 1, 2019, stating
that such delay (1) would harm student
loan borrowers and, in some cases,
taxpayers; (2) is unnecessary and
unaligned with the mission of the
Department of Education; (3) is not
justifiable on the grounds that there is
pending litigation as referenced in the
NPRM; and (4) would not be compliant
with the Administrative Procedure Act
(APA). However, several commenters
supported the delay because they
believed, collectively, that a further
delay would (1) relieve the regulatory
burden on institutions; (2) mitigate
uncertainty about the potential impact
of the current regulations; and (3)
prevent unnecessary harm and
disruption to postsecondary educational
institutions. We discuss and respond to
these comments in greater detail below.
Comments: Several commenters
stated that a further delay of the 2016
final regulations would harm borrowers
because they would continue to be
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subject to the predatory practices of
certain institutions without those
institutions being held accountable
through the financial responsibility
standards and disclosures and student
warnings contained in the 2016 final
regulations. The commenters argued
that the Secretary should protect and
provide relief to borrowers who
attended institutions of higher
education that misrepresented their
program offerings, or that employed
deceptive marketing or recruiting
tactics, instead of delaying the 2016
final regulations. The commenters
claimed that a further delay would
ensure that borrowers who apply or
have applied for a loan discharge based
on a borrower defense would be
required to wait for new rules to go into
effect before receiving consideration of
their claims under the process
established by the 2016 final regulations
while interest, collection costs and
financial distress continued to mount.
The commenters also stated that a
further delay of the pre-dispute
arbitration and class action waiver
provisions of the 2016 final regulations
would leave students without access to
the courts, while statutes of limitation
run. Several commenters also argued
that a further delay of the rule would
harm student loan borrowers because
borrowers would be denied access to the
many provisions in the 2016 final
regulations that are beneficial to
borrowers, including provisions that
provide:
—Automatic closed school discharges
for borrowers who were enrolled in
schools that closed on or after
November 13, 2013, and who did not
enroll in another school within three
years of their school’s closure;
—A second level of Departmental
review for closed school discharge
claims that were denied by a guaranty
agency;
—An expansion of the conditions under
which a FFEL or Direct Loan borrower
may qualify for a false certification
discharge;
—A clear process, based on new Federal
standards, that establishes a
borrower’s procedural rights and
describes how the Department will
consider individual and group
borrower defense discharge claims
and pending requests for forbearance
or suspension of collection on loans
that are subject to borrower defense
claims;
—Prohibitions on schools’ ability to
enforce pre-dispute arbitration
agreements and class action waivers
as to borrower defense-related claims
for students receiving Direct Loans;
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—Institutional financial responsibility
triggers to protect the Federal
government from losses that may arise
from borrower defense claims and
sudden school closures; and,
—Institutional financial protection
disclosures for prospective and
enrolled students to assist students in
making informed choices about where
to matriculate.
One commenter asserted that further
delaying the 2016 final regulations
would perpetuate existing harms
experienced by borrowers, such as poor
credit ratings resulting from debt that
borrowers accumulated that the
borrower may be able to discharge based
on a borrower defense.
One commenter argued that further
delay in the effective date harms
borrowers because the delay creates
uncertainty in how the Department will
treat future borrower defense claims.
The commenter asserted that while
borrowers can wait for the outcome of
the new rulemaking effort for clarity on
the process, waiting has risks for
borrowers as well, including the
application of statutes of limitations
which may limit the loan amount that
may be discharged. The same
commenter noted that Direct Loan
borrowers with loans issued during the
delay cannot avail themselves of the
Federal standard in the 2016 final
regulations; these borrowers will be
limited to the State law standard.
Finally, this commenter stated that
although the Department claimed that
borrowers would not be harmed by the
further delay of the effective date of the
2016 final regulations because borrower
defense claims would continue to be
processed under existing regulations,
the Department’s own impact analysis
estimates a reduction in student loan
discharges of nearly two billion as a
result of the further delay. Citing a July
2017 letter from the Department’s
Acting Under Secretary to Senator
Richard Durbin, the commenter stated
that the Department had not approved
borrower defense applications since
January 20, 2017, and that there were at
least 64,000 outstanding borrower
defense applications as of the date of the
letter. The commenter noted that the
number of unprocessed claims has since
risen to 95,000, and that a further delay
of the 2016 final regulations will
exacerbate the lack of expediency in the
Department’s borrower defense
discharge process to the detriment of
borrowers who continue to wait for
relief.
Discussion: The Department does not
agree that borrowers will be
significantly harmed by changing the
effective date of the 2016 final
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Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 31 / Wednesday, February 14, 2018 / Rules and Regulations
regulations to July 1, 2019. While the
Department acknowledges that certain
benefits of the 2016 final regulations
will be delayed, it has determined that
those benefits are outweighed by the
administrative and transaction costs for
regulated entities and borrowers of
having those regulations go into effect
only to be changed a short while later.
First, the 2016 final regulations did not
create the borrower defense regime but
modified the pre-existing borrower
defense regulations, in place since 1995.
Those pre-existing regulations remain in
effect, as does the statute that allows
borrowers to assert defenses to
repayment. Therefore, borrowers can
continue to apply for relief from
payment of loans under this existing
process, and the Department is
committed to processing those
applications in a timely manner.
Second, the instant rule merely delays
the marginal benefits of the 2016 final
regulations for a brief period of time (an
additional year), it does not revoke
them.
The Department does not share the
commenters’ concern that borrowers
will be subject to certain institutions’
predatory practices absent the 2016 final
regulations. Because the current
borrower defense regulations will
remain in effect, borrowers will
continue to be able to submit claims to
the Department and have their claims
processed in accordance with the HEA
and those current regulations.
Borrowers will not need to wait for new
rules to go into effect to have a borrower
defense claim considered. We do not
anticipate that borrowers will be
harmed by the current process because
we routinely grant forbearances, and
stop collection activities on defaulted
loans, to borrowers while their
discharge claims are under review. We
acknowledge the commenter’s concern
regarding the number of pending claims
before the Department. However, in the
time since the commenter submitted the
comment, the Department has issued
decisions on borrower defense claims
and we will continue to accept and
process borrower defense claims.
In the event that the borrower defense
regulations currently being negotiated
result in discharge standards for a
borrower defense claim different from
the current standards, the new
standards would apply only to loans
first disbursed on or after the effective
date of those regulations. Claims filed as
to loans first disbursed before July 1,
2019, which would include currently
pending claims and claims filed
between the date of this final rule and
July 1, 2019, will continue to be
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processed under the current standard
for borrower defense claims.
We further disagree with commenters
who claimed that the July 1, 2019
effective date would harm borrowers
because the Federal standard
established in the 2016 final regulations
would not be in effect. As we noted in
the 2016 final regulations, the Federal
standard was designed to address much
of the conduct covered by the State lawbased standard so the vast majority of
claims made by borrowers whose loans
were first disbursed between July 1,
2017, and July 1, 2019, could be
evaluated and discharges provided
under the current State law-based
standard. (81 FR 75937–75941). Any
benefits to borrowers associated with
having the Federal standard in place
during that time period are outweighed
by the confusion and disruption that
would result from allowing the 2016
final regulations to take effect during a
time when they are subject to a legal
challenge and when the Department is
reevaluating its borrower defense
regulations generally. In addition to
causing confusion for borrowers,
implementing a different standard for a
potentially short period of time could
delay the processing of claims. One of
the goals of the 2016 final regulations
was to provide borrowers with more
consistency and clarity about their
borrower defense claims. (81 FR 39339–
39340). Under the circumstances, the
delay of the effective date of the 2016
final regulations provides greater clarity
and consistency for borrowers, as well
as a more streamlined process, than
implementation of the rule under the
current schedule.
With respect to the comment about a
two billion dollar reduction in claims
based on the difference in the primary
and baseline scenarios from the net
budget impact in the 2016 final
regulations, as noted in the Regulatory
Impact Analysis (RIA), the Department
estimates the savings resulting from the
delay to be much less. The savings
resulting from the delay are mainly
driven by slight differences between the
State law-based standards in the current
regulations and the Federal standards
from the 2016 final regulations if they
were applicable to loans disbursed
between July 1, 2018, and July 1, 2019.
Since we have always maintained that
there would be significant overlap
between the State law-based and
Federal standards from the 2016 final
regulations, the differences are
estimated to be minor. The provisions of
the 2016 final regulations pertaining to
the process for review and
determination of claims were not
limited to specific cohorts designated by
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6461
the effective date so the delay will not
result in specific cohorts of borrowers
being excluded from the process in
effect when the claim is made.
Additionally, the figures in the
Accounting Statement for the 2016 final
regulations would more appropriately
be characterized as the costs associated
with a single cohort and not the costs
associated with a fiscal year. As part of
its ongoing efforts to improve the utility
of student loan information, the
Department has updated its Accounting
Statement presentation to better align
with OMB Circular A–4, so the effects
presented in this document do show the
impact on the affected cohorts by fiscal
year. The Net Budget Impact section of
the RIA presents the assumptions about
the effect of the delay.
With regard to the financial protection
disclosures, the 2016 final regulations
provided that before the disclosures
would be required, the Secretary would
conduct consumer testing to inform the
identification of events for which
disclosure would be required and to
determine the form of the disclosure. In
light of the fact that the 2016 final
regulations provided for a future process
before the disclosure requirement could
be implemented, we do not believe a
delayed effective date would
significantly change what would occur
in this regard during the period of the
delay. In other words, because we did
not anticipate the financial protection
disclosures having a significant impact
immediately following the 2016 final
regulations’ effective date, we believe
the incremental effect of delaying those
provisions is minimal. We address the
comments related to institutional
financial responsibility triggers in more
detail in the RIA.
Moreover, there are other existing
protections for borrowers, including
periodic reviews and site visits by
Department employees to title IV
participating institutions to monitor
regulatory compliance; and the
activities of the enforcement unit within
FSA charged with taking actions against
parties participating in title IV, HEA
programs to enforce compliance. In
addition to the Department, other
entities also act to protect students,
borrowers, and taxpayers, such as the
States through State law enforcement
activities and other Federal agencies
whose jurisdictions may overlap with,
or affect, the higher education sector.
Finally, we note that borrowers may
continue to apply for closed school and
false certification discharges under the
current regulations. With regard to the
comments relating to the grounds for
false certification discharge, as we
stated in the notice of proposed
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rulemaking that preceded the 2016 final
regulations, these changes reflect
statutory changes relating to false
certification discharges for the lack of a
high school diploma or its equivalent
and for a disqualifying status. As a
result, the Department’s authority for
false certification discharges on these
grounds remains unchanged. (81 FR
39377–39378). In addition, under the
current regulations, the Secretary has
the authority to provide false
certification discharges without an
application based on information in the
Secretary’s possession. The 2016 final
regulations explicitly provided that
such information may include evidence
that the school has falsified the
Satisfactory Academic Progress of its
students. Because the current regulation
does not limit the information that may
be considered by the Secretary to
provide a false certification discharge
without an application, we do not
believe a delay of the 2016 revision to
this provision will harm borrowers.
With regard to a second level of review
of a guaranty agency’s determinations
on closed school discharge requests,
borrowers may raise any dispute with a
guaranty agency to the Department’s
Federal Student Aid Ombudsman
Group.
The Department acknowledges the
commenters’ concern that the window
under applicable statutes of limitation
for some borrowers to file lawsuits may
end during the period covered by the
delay of the 2016 final regulations’
prohibitions on institutions’ use of predispute arbitration and class action
waiver contractual provisions. However,
as acknowledged in the 705 Document,
serious questions regarding the legality
of these provisions of the final
regulations exist and these provisions
are among the regulations directly
challenged in the CAPPS litigation. The
Department thinks that it is likely that
the arbitration and class action waiver
provisions will be overturned. Should
the Department’s regulations prohibiting
schools from enforcing pre-dispute
arbitration agreements and class action
waivers be invalidated by the court,
there would be significant confusion
from borrowers and schools who may
have engaged in court litigation on the
basis of the prohibitions as to the
enforceability of those agreements. We
believe the harm from having these
provisions take effect in the face of the
CAPPS challenge is too great and
outweigh any benefits these provisions
would have. Further, we note that a
borrower may continue to apply for
relief, from the Department under the
current, State-law based borrower
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defense to repayment regulations,
irrespective of whether the borrower has
a pre-dispute arbitration agreement with
the school or an agreement to waive
involvement in class action lawsuits.
We also note that the pre-dispute
arbitration and class action waiver
provisions of the 2016 final regulations
would require some institutions to
change their policies and procedures
and to amend their enrollment
agreements. In addition, re-training staff
and sending notices to borrowers
informing them of the changed class
action waivers and pre-dispute
arbitration provisions would impose
administrative costs on institutions. If
pre-dispute arbitration requirements
and class action waivers are addressed
through the current rulemaking process,
institutions would need to repeat or
reverse these steps to address any
requirements that would go into effect
on July 1, 2019. Maintaining the
regulatory status quo with respect to
pre-dispute arbitration agreements and
class action waivers will reduce the
administrative burden on schools and
lessen confusion for borrowers who
would be affected by these changes.
The Department further believes that
implementing the 2016 final regulations
at this time would cause significant
confusion around borrower defenses
generally that would be unfair to
students and schools. Without a delay,
if the current rulemaking process results
in a different standard for borrower
defense claims, there would be three
separate sets of standards for borrower
defense claims: the State-law based
standard that is currently in effect;
standards for loans disbursed between
July 1, 2018, and July 1, 2019; and
standards for loans disbursed on or after
July 1, 2019. This would be more
confusing for borrowers than the
potential for two different standards—
one for loans disbursed before July 1,
2019, and one for loans disbursed on or
after July 1, 2019. Providing for an
effective date of July 1, 2019, will allow
the Department and the negotiating
committee to develop new borrower
defense regulations that would protect
students from the most serious
predatory practices, provide clear and
evenhanded rules for students, colleges
and universities to follow, and constrain
the costs to taxpayers.
The Department’s processing of
borrower defense claims is not affected
by the effective date of the 2016 final
regulations, as the current regulations
remain in effect. While the process for
reviewing claims and the standard
under which they are reviewed would
have changed under the 2016 final
regulations, the Department does not
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expect that the length of time required
to review individual claims would have
changed significantly if the 2016 final
regulations had gone into effect as
originally scheduled. With regard to
group claims, the Department has
granted group claims under the existing
regulations. While the 2016 final
regulations provided a regulatory
process for granting group borrower
defense claims, the Secretary had and
continues to have the authority, and has
exercised that authority, to grant group
claims under the borrower defense
regulations currently in effect.
Changes: None.
Comment: Some commenters claimed
that the delay hurts American taxpayers
because the 2016 final regulations
would hold institutions that commit
fraud monetarily accountable for their
actions in cases of student loan
discharges, rather than requiring
taxpayers to absorb the costs of
borrower defense discharges.
Discussion: As noted earlier in this
section, the delay of the effective date of
the 2016 final regulations will allow the
Department to develop new borrower
defense regulations that may be more
beneficial to American taxpayers than
the 2016 final regulations. We do not
believe the delay will harm American
taxpayers because the Department may
assess liability for borrower defense
claims on schools now, under the
current regulations in effect. The
financial protection triggers in the 2016
final rule were designed to increase the
likelihood of recovering funds from
institutions as claims come in over the
life of the cohort, especially from
institutions that might have significant
exposure or that end up closing as a
result of the financial risks identified by
the triggers. The Department estimated
that recovery activity would ramp up as
the triggers were implemented, as
reflected in the recovery assumption in
the 2016 final rule (81 FR 76057), so a
delay in the early years of recovery
activity is not estimated to have a
significant effect, as indicated by the
change in the recovery assumption
presented in this RIA. With the
Department’s authority to seek
recoveries unchanged because of the
change in effective date, we believe the
possibility of slightly reduced recovery
rates for a short period is warranted to
further the goals of providing clarity by
maintaining the regulatory status quo
during this interim period. We note that
the borrower defense procedural rule,
which provided a regulatory framework
for assessing liabilities against schools
for which a borrower defense claim was
successful, was published in the
Federal Register on January 19, 2017,
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and those regulations have been
effective since that date.
Changes: None.
Comment: One commenter asserted
that the data provided for the impact of
the delays in the effective date of the
2016 final regulations were inadequate
because the cost of providing financial
protection was not quantified in the RIA
of the 2016 final regulations and the
NPRM preceding this final rule; and
there is no additional data to estimate
the costs institutions may avoid from
the delayed effective date of the
financial protection provisions.
Another commenter pointed out that
if the effective date of the 2016 final
regulations was not delayed, the
Department estimated that $381 million
in loans would be forgiven between July
1, 2017, and July 1, 2019. The
commenter noted that the Department
does point out that the Federal
government will save this money by
delaying the effective date but does not
point out that borrowers will end up
absorbing the cost. The commenter
noted that the Department could change
the current regulations and not include
the new closed school discharge
provisions, and noted that even a
temporary delay causes financial stress
that can trap some borrowers in poverty.
Moreover, borrowers who default on
their loans because they are not
discharged would not be eligible for
further financial aid.
Discussion: The Department
appreciates the comments about the RIA
for the NPRM preceding this final rule.
In that RIA, the Department
acknowledged that the costs of
providing financial protection were not
quantified in the RIA for the 2016 final
regulations and that there is no
additional data to estimate those costs.
That fact, however, does not mean that
we have not sufficiently justified this
delay.
As discussed in the RIA for this final
rule with respect to the delay of the
financial protection provisions, several
factors will affect the cost for individual
institutions, including: the level of
institutional conduct giving rise to
borrower defense claims, the
applicability of certain financial
protection triggers, the financial
strength of the institution, the manner
in which the institution provides
financial protection to the Department,
and the potential development of
financial products aimed at providing
this protection. The Department
believes that individual institutions are
best positioned to evaluate their
potential exposure to borrower defense
claims, their financial relationships
with parties who could provide
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financial protection, and the cost of
providing protection. Along with the
uncertainty about the projected amount
of claims as recognized in the different
sensitivity runs presented in the RIA for
the 2016 final regulations, the
Department believes that quantifying
the cost of providing financial
protection would provide a false sense
of precision. Rather than producing a
number that would be inapplicable to
most institutions, the Department
focused on explaining the regulations
and providing data about the provisions
for which it had information such as the
cohort default rate (CDR), 90/10 revenue
requirement, fluctuation in title IV aid,
withdrawal rate, and accreditor action
triggers. The 2016 final regulations did
not present information about the
provisions related to U.S. Securities and
Exchange Commission or stock
exchange actions, gainful employment,
the withdrawal of owner’s equity from
an institution, teach-outs, State
licensing, financial stress tests, an
institution’s violation of a loan
agreement, or pending borrower defense
claims. Additionally, given that the
known borrower defense claims at the
time were from a small number of
institutions and many had not been
approved or disapproved, it is unclear
how the distribution of successful
borrower defense claims at institutions
would match up with the distribution of
institutions’ performance on the
financial responsibility triggers for
which the Department had some
information.
As is further discussed in the RIA for
this final rule, the Department
recognizes that the delayed effective
date will postpone the impact of the
financial protection provisions on
institutions. This impact was not
quantified for the same reasons
described above, but would be a fraction
of the total protection expected to be
generated under the rule as some of the
triggers are tied to the production of
certain performance measures and
would not have kicked in immediately
under the 2016 regulations. Successful
claims made by borrowers will be paid
regardless of the limited delay in the
date for requiring institutions to provide
financial protection, and the
Department believes the cost to
taxpayers of the slightly reduced
recoveries described in the Net Budget
Impact in the RIA is justified by the
benefits of reconsidering the financial
protection provisions and appropriately
balancing the costs to institutions with
protection of borrowers and taxpayers.
With respect to the comment about
closed school discharges, the
Department disagrees with the claim
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that borrowers will bear a $381 million
cost because of the delay. As noted in
the NPRM, the $364 million savings
estimated for FY 2017 occurred because
the Department did not execute the
modification for cohorts 2014–2016
anticipated in the President’s Budget
(PB) for 2018 because of the change of
the effective date of the 2016 final
regulations. The difference in the $381
million estimated for the three-year
automatic discharge in the 2016 final
regulations and the $364 million
estimate for the modification in this rule
is that the $381 million was based on PB
2017 loan model assumptions and the
modification to be executed was based
on the PB 2018 assumptions. Under the
credit reform scoring rules applicable to
the student loan programs, the
unexecuted modification created
savings that needed to be recognized.
This budget scoring requirement does
not affect borrowers or their eligibility
for a closed school discharge. Borrowers
can avoid any uncertainty about the
timing of receiving a closed school
discharge or costs associated with a
delay in receipt of such discharge by
submitting a closed school discharge
application at any time. Any costs or
savings associated with changes in the
automatic discharge provision as a
result of the current negotiated
rulemaking are outside the scope of the
analysis of the delay, and we will
address any related issues raised by
commenters in response to the NPRM
for the proposed rule resulting from the
current rulemaking process.
Changes: None.
Comment: Some commenters
expressed their belief that the delay is
not aligned with Congressional intent,
citing 20 U.S.C. 3402, and is contrary to
the public interest.
Discussion: In 20 U.S.C. 3402,
Congress states that the establishment of
a Department of Education is in the
public interest, will promote the general
welfare of the United States, will help
ensure that education issues receive
proper treatment at the Federal level,
and will enable the Federal government
to coordinate its education activities
more effectively.
In its execution of these
responsibilities, and consistent with 20
U.S.C. 3402, the Department has
determined that the public interest is
best served by a delay in the effective
date of the 2016 final regulations.
Changes: None.
Comments: Some commenters
expressed concerns that the Department
did not follow required rulemaking
processes in delaying the effective date
of the 2016 final regulations. These
concerns alleged specific statutory and
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APA violations. First, commenters
stated that the Department’s justification
to waive negotiated rulemaking was
insufficient. Second, commenters wrote
that we did not provide sufficient
justification for the delay. One
commenter said that the NPRM fails to
identify any specific deficiencies in the
2016 final regulations, or findings and
rationale that support revising those
regulations. Third, a commenter stated
that the minor cost savings detailed in
the RIA were insufficient justification to
delay the rule. In addition, one
commenter stated that further
negotiated rulemaking on the 2016 final
regulations was redundant and wasteful.
Discussion: The Department adhered
to all applicable laws in promulgating
this final rule. First, with regard to
waiver of negotiated rulemaking, section
492(b)(2) of the HEA provides that the
Secretary may waive negotiated
rulemaking if she determines that there
is good cause to do so, and publishes
the basis for such determination in the
Federal Register at the same time as the
proposed regulations in question are
first published. In the NPRM, the
Department properly articulated the
good cause supporting our waiver of the
HEA’s negotiated rulemaking
requirement. The NPRM explained that
the original catalyst for the delay was
the CAPPS litigation, filed on May 24,
2017, and that it would not have been
possible for the Department to engage in
negotiated rulemaking and publish final
regulations after that date (much less
after October 24, 2017, the date the
NPRM was published), and prior to July
1, 2018 (the current effective date of the
2016 final regulations). Negotiated
rulemaking on this discrete issue simply
was not practicable. It is a timeconsuming and resource-intensive
process, and could not practicably be
completed by July 1, 2018.
Negotiated rulemaking typically takes
the Department well over 12 months to
complete. The statute requires the
Department to hold public hearings
before commencing any negotiations.
Based upon the feedback the
Department receives during the
hearings, the Department then identifies
those issues on which it will conduct
negotiated rulemaking, announces
those, and solicits nominations for nonFederal negotiators. Negotiations
themselves are typically held over a 3
month period. Following the
negotiations, the Department then
prepares a notice of proposed
rulemaking and submits the proposed
rule to OMB for review. The proposed
rules are then open for public comment
for 30–60 days. Following the receipt of
public comments, the Department then
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prepares a final regulation and submits
it to OMB for review.
With the completion of all of these
steps taking well over 12 months, it
would not have been feasible for the
Department to complete negotiated
rulemaking on the delayed effective date
by July 1, 2018. Indeed, it would not
have been feasible even if the
Department had commenced the process
on May 24, 2017, when it learned of the
CAPPS litigation. Thus, the Department
had good cause to waive that
requirement.
Regarding the comment that we did
not provide sufficient justification to
propose delay of the effective date of the
2016 final regulations, the Department
is in the process of developing proposed
revisions to the borrower defense
regulations through the negotiated
rulemaking process. As a result of the
timing of the negotiated rulemaking and
the effect of the master calendar
requirement, any regulations resulting
from the negotiated rulemaking cannot
become effective before July 1, 2019.
Therefore, the Department proposed in
the NPRM to delay the effective date of
the 2016 final regulations to July 1,
2019. This would prevent a scenario in
which the 2016 final regulations might
become effective for a short period of
time before new regulations resulting
from the current borrower defense
rulemaking process take effect, a result
which likely would lead to a great deal
of confusion and difficulty for
borrowers and schools alike.
Accordingly, the Department articulated
a reasonable and sufficient justification
to propose a delay of a final rule.
Also with regard to the comment that
the NPRM fails to identify any specific
deficiencies in the 2016 final
regulations, the APA and applicable
case law require only that an agency’s
rulemaking justify the particular action
or actions to be taken by that rule. This
final rule does not amend the substance
of the 2016 final regulations; it merely
changes the effective date of the 2016
final regulations and is fully supported
based on the information provided in
the NPRM and in this final rule.
Amending the substance of the 2016
final regulations (or prior borrower
defense regulations) would require a
separate rationale. We are separately
conducting a negotiated rulemaking
process to address the substance of the
borrower defense regulations, and any
resulting NPRM will provide a rationale
for proposed changes.
The NPRM at issue here proposed
only a delay of the effective date of the
2016 final regulations; it did not
propose any other changes and therefore
the Department was not required to
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solicit comment on any matters other
than the effective date. Also contrary to
the commenter’s assertions, the number
of comments received in response to an
NPRM has no bearing on the sufficiency
of the Department’s solicitation of
public engagement. The APA requires
the Department to ‘‘give interested
persons an opportunity to participate’’
and consider ‘‘the relevant matter
presented,’’ not to reach a certain
threshold of comments before it may
proceed with the rulemaking process. 5
U.S.C. 553(c). The Department
requested comments that covered the
scope of our rulemaking—delay of an
effective date—and considered each
applicable comment received in
promulgating this final rule.
The regulatory impact analysis in the
NPRM estimated the quantified
economic effects and net budget impact
of the delay, and projected that the
delay would result in a net cost savings.
However, the delay was not proposed
solely on the basis of those calculations.
Executive Order 13563 requires the
Department to, in part, ‘‘propose or
adopt a regulation only upon a reasoned
determination that its benefits justify its
costs (recognizing that some benefits
and costs are difficult to quantify).’’ Just
as the commenters note harms to
borrowers that cannot be definitively
quantified, not all benefits of the delay
are measurable in monetary terms.
Delaying the effective date as proposed
in the NPRM will preserve the
regulatory status quo while the
Department reconsiders the substance of
its regulations governing borrower
defense, preventing borrowers and
institutions alike from being subject to
an uncertain, quickly changing set of
regulatory requirements. The
Department undertook the required
analysis and determined that the
benefits of the delay would justify the
costs.
With regard to the comment about
redundancy and wastefulness, we have
substantive concerns about the 2016
final regulations. In light of that,
negotiated rulemaking and publication
of an NPRM with request for further
public comment is the statutorily
required path to ensure public input
and potentially make substantive
changes to the Department’s regulations.
After careful consideration, we
determined the benefits of proceeding
with negotiated rulemaking to properly
analyze the borrower defense
regulations outweighed the costs of
doing so.
Changes: None.
Comment: Some commenters also
argued that the CAPPS lawsuit is an
inappropriate basis for the delay
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because CAPPS’ litigation addresses
only some of the regulatory provisions
being delayed, but the notices
effectuating the delay included many
regulatory provisions, including those
related to closed school discharge.
Discussion: The CAPPS litigation is
not the basis for the delay proposed in
the NPRM, although it was the reason
for the initial delay of the 2016 final
regulations’ effective date. We further
note that contrary to the commenter’s
assertion, CAPPS’ complaint expressly
prays for an order declaring ‘‘that the
entirety of the Final Rule is contrary to
the Constitution,’’ and asks that the
Court enjoin the Department from
‘‘taking any action whatsoever pursuant
to the final regulations,’’ indicating that
its challenge is broader than the
commenters portray.
Changes: None.
Comment: Some commenters
supported the proposal in the NPRM.
One commenter asserted that the 2016
final regulations’ intention missed the
mark and created an unnecessarily
complex and costly system that is
confusing to students, unfair to
institutions, and puts taxpayers on the
hook for huge costs. The commenter
also suggested that maintaining the
regulatory status quo under the 1994–95
standard is critical to the public interest
and that requiring institutions to use
their time and finances to implement
the expensive 2016 final regulations
while another rulemaking is occurring
would be burdensome and contrary to
the goals of Executive Order 13777,
which is intended to help alleviate the
regulatory burdens on the American
people. This same commenter
emphasized that the delay will help to
maintain an existing, easily understood
process—especially for students seeking
redress under the current State lawbased standard.
Commenters asserted that the delay of
selected provisions of the 2016 final
regulations would mitigate uncertainty
about the potential impact of the
regulations, especially in light of
ongoing litigation, the master calendar
requirement, and ongoing negotiated
rulemaking.
One commenter asserted that the
Department properly used Section 705
of the APA to avoid substantial harm to
students. The commenter suggested that
if some of the provisions of the 2016
final regulations went into effect and
were quickly struck down by a court,
the result would be chaotic, particularly
if the subsequent regulatory framework
change occurred in the course of an
award year. The commenter asserted
further that the ongoing negotiated
rulemaking is justified based on the
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need to improve the borrower defense
regulations as part of a regulatory reset.
This commenter argued that because the
reset could lead to significant changes,
it would be nonsensical, even aside
from the litigation, to implement new
regulations for a full or for part of an
award year only to change them after
the current negotiated rulemaking
process is complete.
One commenter asserted that the
arbitration and class action provisions
in the 2016 final regulations would
require institutions to incur significant
costs in changing multiple policies and
procedures and amending existing and
future enrollment agreements, retraining staff, litigating new cases, and
sending notices to borrowers that
existing class action waivers or
arbitration provisions will not be
enforced. According to the commenter,
the implementation of these
requirements would divert resources
from students and would require the
further diversion of resources if schools
were required to retrain staff and litigate
the effects of the temporary ban on past
agreements with students, including
those signed during the interim period,
if the regulations were to change as a
result of the current rulemaking process.
The commenter also stated that the
financial responsibility provisions that
require, in some circumstances, an
institution to obtain a letter of credit or
some type of financial protection would
impose a significant burden on schools
because a letter of credit is difficult to
obtain and the additional cost could
cause many schools, including some
historically black colleges and
universities, to close. The commenter
also argued that the delay is appropriate
because schools may need to establish
different compliance measures if the
current negotiated rulemaking process
modifies the financial responsibility
provisions. In such event, the
commenter stated that the temporary
implementation of these provisions
would lead to potentially unnecessary
compliance and training costs for
schools to accommodate different rules.
The commenter also argued that the
repayment rate provisions which would
require proprietary schools with a
certain loan repayment rate to distribute
a warning to students and prospective
students might damage the reputation of
such schools and impact such schools’
ability to draw students and raise funds.
The commenter argued that the delay
would prevent any disruptions as
changes to the requirements are
considered during the negotiated
rulemaking process.
Finally, the commenter stated its view
that given the significant expansion of
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borrower defense under the 2016 final
regulations and the changes to the
borrower defense regulations that may
result from the Department’s current
rulemaking effort, the additional delay
is required to prevent confusion for
students and the expenditure of school
resources on implementing the different
borrower defense standards and
procedures when those resources could
otherwise be used to enhance student
experiences.
Discussion: While comments
regarding the effect of the 2016 final
regulations are outside of the scope of
the NPRM, the Department agrees that
the delay will provide clarity for
institutions and students, as well as
save institutions from incurring the
costs and expending the resources
necessary to comply with the
requirements under the 2016 final
regulations that would potentially be in
effect for only a short period of time.
Changes: None.
Executive Orders 12866, 13563, and
13771
Regulatory Impact Analysis
Under Executive Order 12866, it must
be determined whether this regulatory
action is ‘‘significant’’ and, therefore,
subject to the requirements of the
Executive Order and subject to review
by the Office of Management and
Budget (OMB). Section 3(f) of Executive
Order 12866 defines a ‘‘significant
regulatory action’’ as an action likely to
result in a rule that may—
(1) Have an annual effect on the
economy of $100 million or more, or
adversely affect a sector of the economy,
productivity, competition, jobs, the
environment, public health or safety, or
State, local, or Tribal governments or
communities in a material way (also
referred to as an ‘‘economically
significant’’ rule);
(2) Create serious inconsistency or
otherwise interfere with an action taken
or planned by another agency;
(3) Materially alter the budgetary
impacts of entitlement grants, user fees,
or loan programs or the rights and
obligations of recipients thereof; or
(4) Raise novel legal or policy issues
arising out of legal mandates, the
President’s priorities, or the principles
stated in the Executive order.
The Department estimates the
quantified annualized economic and net
budget impacts of the delay of the
effective date to be ¥$26.9 million in
reduced costs to institutions and the
Federal government. These reduced
costs result from the delay of the
borrower defense provisions of the 2016
final regulations as they would apply to
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the 2017 to 2019 loan cohorts, as well
as from the delayed paperwork burden
on institutions and the delayed
execution of the closed school
automatic discharge. This final
regulatory action is a significant
regulatory action subject to review by
OMB under section 3(f) of Executive
Order 12866.
We have also reviewed this final rule
under Executive Order 13563, which
supplements and explicitly reaffirms the
principles, structures, and definitions
governing regulatory review established
in Executive Order 12866. To the extent
permitted by law, Executive Order
13563 requires that an agency—
(1) Propose or adopt regulations only
on a reasoned determination that their
benefits justify their costs (recognizing
that some benefits and costs are difficult
to quantify);
(2) Tailor its regulations to impose the
least burden on society, consistent with
obtaining regulatory objectives and
taking into account—among other things
and to the extent practicable—the costs
of cumulative regulations;
(3) In choosing among alternative
regulatory approaches, select those
approaches that maximize net benefits
(including potential economic,
environmental, public health and safety,
and other advantages; distributive
impacts; and equity);
(4) To the extent feasible, specify
performance objectives, rather than the
behavior or manner of compliance a
regulated entity must adopt; and
(5) Identify and assess available
alternatives to direct regulation,
including economic incentives—such as
user fees or marketable permits—to
encourage the desired behavior, or
provide information that enables the
public to make choices.
Executive Order 13563 also requires
an agency ‘‘to use the best available
techniques to quantify anticipated
present and future benefits and costs as
accurately as possible.’’ The Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs of
OMB has emphasized that these
techniques may include ‘‘identifying
changing future compliance costs that
might result from technological
innovation or anticipated behavioral
changes.’’
We are issuing this final rule only on
a reasoned determination that its
benefits justify its costs. Based on the
analysis that follows, the Department
believes that this final rule is consistent
with the principles in Executive Order
13563.
We also have determined that this
regulatory action does not unduly
interfere with State, local, or Tribal
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governments in the exercise of their
governmental functions.
In accordance with both Executive
Orders, the Department has assessed the
potential costs and benefits, both
quantitative and qualitative, of this
regulatory action.
The quantified economic effects and
net budget impact associated with the
delayed effective date are not expected
to be economically significant.
Effects of Delay
As indicated in the RIA published
with the 2016 final regulations on
November 1, 2016, those final
regulations were economically
significant with a total estimated net
budget impact of $16.6 billion over the
2017–2026 loan cohorts in the primary
estimate scenario, including a cost of
$381 million for cohorts 2014–2016
attributable to the provisions for a threeyear automatic closed school discharge.
However, as noted in the RIA for the
NPRM published October 24, 2017, the
analysis of the net budget impact in this
final rule is limited to the effect of
delaying the effective date of the 2016
final regulations from July 1, 2018, to
July 1, 2019, and does not account for
any potential changes in the 2016 final
regulations or administrative updates to
existing processes and procedures
related to borrower defense claims.
As the net budget impact is based on
the net present value of the cash flows
of the relevant cohorts over 40 years,
delaying the 2016 final regulations until
July 1, 2019, will have limited effect, as
discussed below.
Even with the change in the effective
date to July 1, 2019, borrowers will still
be able to submit claims. The provisions
of the 2016 final regulations pertaining
to the process for review and
determination of claims were not
limited to specific cohorts designated by
the effective date so the delay will not
result in specific cohorts of borrowers
being excluded from the process in
effect when the claim is made. Loans
made before July 1, 2017, were always
subject to the State law-based standard,
and borrowers’ ability to bring claims
under that standard is unchanged by the
delay. For claims filed after the effective
date of the regulations for loans made
on or after July 1, 2019, the Federal
standard established in the 2016 final
regulations would apply. As discussed
previously, the Department interprets
all references to ‘‘July 1, 2017’’ in the
text of the final regulations to mean the
effective date of the final regulations. As
a result, the delay in the effective date
means that loans made between July 1,
2018, and June 30, 2019, will be subject
to the current State law-based standard.
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As we noted in the 2016 final
regulations, the Federal standard was
designed to address much of the
conduct already covered by the State
law-based standard, so the vast majority
of discharge claims associated with
loans made between July 1, 2017, and
the delayed effective date could be
made under the current, State law-based
standard as well. (81 FR 76057)
Some commenters suggested that
borrowers will be harmed by the delay,
either through uncertainty as to how
claims will be handled, the application
of statutes of limitation, or processing
delays. Commenters also expressed
concerns about the processing of
existing claims and the effect of the
delay on their resolution. The
Department does not agree that the
delay of the effective date of the 2016
final regulations will affect the
processing of existing claims. Existing
claims were always subject to the State
law-based standard in the current
regulations. Efforts to improve the
efficiency of claims processing are
ongoing and are not contingent upon
implementation of the 2016 final
regulations.
The Department maintains that the
loans affected by the delay from July 1,
2018 to July 1, 2019 are those issued
between those dates and for which any
potential borrower defense claims will
now be evaluated under the State lawbased standard. These loans have not
been made yet, and the NPRM and this
final rule clarify that the State law-based
standard will apply to them—this
provides borrowers certainty regarding
the standard that will be applied to their
claims. Some commenters noted the
difference in the annualized estimate for
the primary and baseline scenarios and
suggested the delay will cost borrowers
approximately two billion dollars. As
explained in the Net Budget Impact, the
Department estimates the cost of the
delay to be much less than two billion
dollars given that there is significant
overlap between the current State lawbased standard and the Federal standard
from the 2016 final regulations and that
claims associated with these loans will
be handled under the process in place
when their claim is made. The
Department does not believe that the
delay will result in reversion to the
baseline scenario assumptions for the
borrower percentage so the effect on
borrowers will be much lower than the
commenters suggested. Additionally,
the figures in the Accounting Statement
for the 2016 final regulations would
more appropriately be characterized as
the costs associated with a single loan
cohort and not the costs associated with
a fiscal year, so the change in the
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effective date would not result in the
two billion dollar difference as it
reflects just one year of the 40-year life
of the cohort. The Department has
updated its Accounting Statement in
this final rule so the effects presented in
this RIA show the impact on the
affected loan cohorts by fiscal year.
As discussed in the Analysis of
Comments and Changes the potential
effects on borrowers include possible
reduced access to courts from the delay
in the arbitration and class action
waiver provisions while statutes of
limitation are running. We think it is
likely that these provisions will be
overturned in the CAPPS litigation and
are concerned about the confusion to
borrowers that would result. We believe
the harm that would occur outweighs
any benefits of these provisions. We
note that a borrower may submit a
borrower defense claim to the
Department with respect to his or her
Federal loans at any time without regard
to arbitration agreements or class action
waiver clauses in agreements between
the borrower and the school, as the loan
is between the Federal government and
the borrower.
In addition to borrowers, institutions
are also affected by the delayed effective
date. As indicated in the RIA for the
2016 final regulations, institutions
would bear the major costs of
compliance, paperwork burden, and
providing financial protection to the
Department. In terms of cost savings for
institutions, the estimated annual
paperwork burden was approximately
$9.4 million in the first year after the
2016 final regulations were to take
effect. In the revised scenario developed
to estimate the effect of this delay in the
effective date, estimated transfers from
institutions to students, via the Federal
government, would be reduced by
approximately $9.3 million for the 2017
and 2018 loan cohorts because of the
slight reduction in claims from the
application of the State law-based
standard and the change in the effective
date of the financial protection
provisions as reflected in the
assumptions presented in Table 1. The
costs of providing financial protection
were not quantified in the RIA for the
2016 final regulations, and the
Department has no additional data to
estimate costs institutions may avoid
from the delayed effective date of the
financial protection provisions. Given
the limited history of borrower defense
claims and recovery actions and
numerous factors that affect the cost for
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individual institutions, the Department
believed that quantifying the cost of
providing financial protection would
provide a false sense of precision. As
noted in the 2016 final regulations and
the NPRM, there are several ways for
institutions to provide financial
protection to the Department, including
some that may be developed in the
future. The price of this protection
would likely vary by the size of the
institution and the institution’s existing
financial relationships with parties who
could provide the financial protection.
Other key elements that contribute to
the uncertain cost of financial
protection overall are the distribution of
borrower defense claims, the type of
institutions involved, the applicability
of specific financial protection triggers,
and the Department’s pursuit of
recoveries. The Department recognizes
that the delayed effective date will
postpone the impact of the financial
protection provisions on institutions.
This would be a fraction of the total
protection expected to be generated
under the rule as some of the triggers are
tied to the production of certain
performance measures such as gainful
employment rates and there would be
some time, possibly months, between
the effective date and the next release of
rates. The recovery assumption always
assumed some ramping up of financial
protection as different metrics became
available for application, so the change
in effective date will affect the early
years when recoveries were assumed to
be smaller. Borrowers are not affected
by institutions’ delay in incurring the
costs of financial protection, and the
Department believes it is worth the cost
to taxpayers from reduced recoveries
described in the Net Budget Impact in
the RIA to reconsider the financial
protection provisions and appropriately
balance the costs to institutions with
protection of borrowers and taxpayers.
Net Budget Impact
As described in the NPRM, to
estimate the net budget impact of the
delay in the effective date to July 1,
2019, the Department developed a
scenario that revised the primary
estimate assumptions from the 2016
final regulations for the affected 2017 to
2019 cohorts, as was done for the oneyear delay described in the IFR. The
Department has reviewed the comments
it received, particularly those about the
potential impacts and estimation of the
effects of the delay and responded in the
Analysis of Comments and Changes
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6467
section and this RIA. However, the
Department believes that the
assumptions for the scenario to estimate
the net budget impact on the student
loan program from the delay from July
2018 to July 2019 remain appropriate
and reasonable.
As before, the Department applies an
assumed level of school conduct that
could generate borrower defense claims,
borrower claims success, and recoveries
from institutions (respectively labeled
as Conduct Percent, Borrower Percent,
and Recovery Percent in Table 1) to the
PB 2018 loan volume estimates to
generate the estimated net borrower
defense claims for each loan cohort,
loan type, and sector. The assumptions
for the primary scenario from the 2016
final regulations were the basis for the
PB2018 baseline that assumed the final
regulations would go into effect on July
1, 2017. The scenario developed for the
NPRM is designed to capture the
incremental change from the one-year
delay in the IFR associated with the
further one-year delay in the effective
date to July 1, 2019. Compared to the
scenario developed for the IFR,
recoveries are reduced by an additional
two percent for the 2017 and 2018
cohorts, all of the 2018 cohort is subject
to the State law-based standard, and the
affected portion of the 2019 cohort is
subject to the current, State law-based
standard and reduced recoveries at the
five percent level used for the one-year
delay in the IFR. Table 1 presents
assumptions for the primary estimate
from the final regulations and the
revised estimate for the delay from July
1, 2018 to July 1, 2019, in the effective
date. In this scenario, the conduct
percent is 90 percent of the primary
scenario from the final regulations and
the borrower percent is the same. The
financial protection provided was
always expected to increase over time,
so the delayed effective date in the near
term is not expected to significantly
affect the amount of recoveries over the
life of any particular loan cohort,
limiting any net budget impact from the
delay. To estimate the potential
reduction in recoveries related to the
proposed delayed effective date, we
reduced recoveries for the affected
portion of the 2017 and 2018 cohorts by
seven percent for the private not-forprofit and proprietary sectors and by
five percent for the 2019 cohort. As in
the 2016 final regulations and the IFR,
recoveries from public institutions were
held constant at 75 percent across
scenarios.
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TABLE 1—REVISED ASSUMPTIONS FOR ONE-YEAR DELAY FROM JULY 1, 2018 TO JULY 1, 2019
2017
2018
2019
Cohort
Pub/Priv NFP
Conduct Percent:
Final Primary .....................................
Delay to 2019 ...................................
Borrower Percent:
Final Primary .....................................
Delay to 2019 ...................................
Prop
Pub/Priv NFP
Prop
Pub/Priv NFP
Prop
3.0
2.7
20
18
2.4
2.16
16
14.4
2.0
1.8
13.6
12.24
35
35
45
45
36.8
36.8
47.3
47.3
36.8
36.8
47.3
47.3
Pub
Recovery Percent:
Final Primary .....................................
Delay to 2019 ...................................
Priv/Prop
75
75
The net budget impact associated
with these effects of the one-year delay
in the effective date on the borrower
defense provisions only is
approximately ¥$46.1 million from the
2017 to 2019 loan cohorts.
As the amount and composition of
borrower defense claims and estimated
recoveries over the lifetime of the
relevant loan cohorts are not expected to
change greatly due to the delayed
effective date, the Department does not
estimate an economically significant net
budget impact from the delay itself,
with a potential net budget impact
related to borrower defense claims of
¥$46.1 million in reduced costs for the
affected cohorts. This represents the
incremental change associated with the
one-year delay from July 1, 2018, to July
1, 2019. If compared to the PB 2018
baseline, the savings would be
approximately ¥$78.8 million.
The closed school automatic
discharge provisions were the other
significant source of estimated net
budget impact in the 2016 final
regulations. Under credit reform
scoring, the modification to older
cohorts for the automatic discharge
provision estimated to cost $364 million
was expected to occur in FY 2017 in the
PB 2018. As a result of the delay in the
effective date, the Department will not
execute the modification in FY 2017.
Moving the execution of the
modification beyond FY 2017 will
require a new cost analysis with
economic assumptions from the fiscal
year of the execution. This will result in
Public
23.8
22.134
Priv/Prop
75
75
a change of cost, but at this point it is
not possible to know the discount rates
in future fiscal years, so the cost of the
modification will be determined in the
year that it is executed. While the actual
cost of the future modification cannot be
determined at this time, the Department
did approximate the effect of the delay
by shifting the timing of the relevant
discharges back by a year and
recalculating a modification using the
discount rates and economic
assumptions used for the calculation of
the PB2018 modification. When
calculated in this manner, the delay in
the modification to July 2018 described
in the IFR resulted in estimated savings
of less than $10 million. Using the same
approach, the delay to July 2019 is
expected to save approximately $15
million above the savings from the
initial one-year delay.
As the delay does not change the
substance of the automatic discharge,
we would expect the amount and
composition of loans affected by the
automatic discharge not to change
significantly. The closed school threeyear automatic discharge provisions
were applicable to loans made on or
after November 1, 2013, and were not
linked to the effective date of the final
regulations. Therefore, delaying the
effective date of those provisions will
not change the set of loans eligible for
this automatic discharge. Additionally,
borrowers would have the ability to
apply for a closed school discharge
before July 1, 2019, if they did not want
to wait for the automatic discharge to be
Pub
Priv/Prop
23.8
22.134
75
75
23.8
24.871
implemented. For future cohorts, the
delay is not significant as the three-year
period will fall beyond the delayed
effective date. Any significant change to
the estimated net budget impact
associated with the closed school
automatic discharge depends on any
substantive changes made to the
provisions as a result of the current
rulemaking process and changes to
economic assumptions when the
modification is executed.
Consistent with Executive Order
13771 (82 FR 9339, February 3, 2017),
we have determined that this rule will
result in cost savings. Therefore, this
rule would be considered an Executive
Order 13771 deregulatory action.
Accounting Statement
In evaluating whether a regulation is
economically significant, a key
consideration is whether the annual
effect in any given year is over $100
million.
To evaluate this, the Department
looked at the difference in the
undiscounted cash flows related to the
death, disability, and bankruptcy (DDB)
claims in which borrower defense
claims are included for the one-year
delay established in the IFR and the
one-year delay scenario established in
this notice and described under the
heading ‘‘Net Budget Impact’’. The
difference from subtracting this delay
scenario from the IFR one-year delay
scenario for the 2017 to 2019 loan
cohorts is summarized in Table 2.
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TABLE 2—DIFFERENCE IN UNDISCOUNTED NET CASHFLOWS FOR THE 2017 TO 2019 LOAN COHORTS FROM THE ONEYEAR DELAY IN 2016 BORROWER DEFENSE RULE TO JULY 1, 2019
FY 2017
FY 2018
FY 2019
FY 2020
FY 2021
FY 2022
FY 2023
FY 2024
FY 2025
FY 2026
159
7,489
496,637
637,361
538,468
6,004,802
9,525,520
4,668,143
2,156,009
3,003,657
Change in DDB Cashflow .....
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Table 3 shows the effects when those
differences in the DDB cashflows are
discounted at 7 and 3 percent and
annualized.
Category
Benefits
Institutions may not incur compliance costs or costs of obtaining financial protection until the rule is in effect ...
Not Quantified
Category
Costs
7%
Continued use of State-law based standard
Delay in providing consumer information about institutions’ performance and practices
Potential decreased awareness and usage of closed school and false certification discharges
3%
Not Quantified
¥9.5
Savings associated with delay in compliance with paperwork requirements .........................................................
Category
Transfers
7%
Reduction in transfers from the Federal government to affected borrowers in the 2017 to 2019 cohorts that
would have been partially borne by affected institutions via reimbursements ....................................................
Reduced reimbursements from affected institutions to affected students, via the Federal government as loan
cohorts 2017 to 2019 are subject to the existing borrower defense regulation ..................................................
Delay in closed school automatic discharge implementation from 2018 to 2019 ..................................................
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
As indicated in the Paperwork
Reduction Act section published in the
2016 final regulations, the assessed
estimated burden was 253,136 hours,
affecting both institutions and
individuals, with an estimated cost of
$9,458,484. The table below identifies
Regulatory section
OMB Control No.
3%
¥3.5
¥3.8
¥1.2
¥14.8
¥1.3
¥14.8
the regulatory sections, OMB Control
Numbers, estimated burden hours, and
estimated costs of those final
regulations.
Burden hours
Estimated cost
$36.55/hour
institution,
$16.30/hour
individual
1845–0022
1845–0004
1845–0022
1845–0022
1845–0020
1845–0020
1845–0142
1845–0142
1845–0143
1,953 ......................................................................
5,346 ......................................................................
3,028 ......................................................................
60,560 ....................................................................
5,784 ......................................................................
1,838 ......................................................................
249 (Individuals) .....................................................
800 (Institutions) .....................................................
179,362 ..................................................................
71,382
195,396
110,673
2,213,468
211,405
67,179
4,059
29,240
6,555,681
Total ...................................................................................................
258,920 ..................................................................
9,458,484
Cost savings due to delayed effective date excluding 682.211 early implementation allowed.
Burden remaining .....................................................................................
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668.14 .....................................................................
668.41 .....................................................................
668.171 ...................................................................
668.175 ...................................................................
682.211 ...................................................................
682.402 ...................................................................
685.222 ...................................................................
685.222 ...................................................................
685.300 ...................................................................
¥9.51
253,136 ..................................................................
9,247,079
5,784 ......................................................................
211,405
This final rule delays the effective
date of the implementation of all of the
cited regulations and will result in a
cost savings in the total amount of
$9,458,484. However, 34 CFR
682.211(i)(7) which was included in the
2016 final regulations, regarding
mandatory forbearance based on a
borrower defense claim, with an
estimated 5,784 hours and $211,405
cost, was designated for early
implementation. Lenders may have
elected early implementation and,
therefore, those specific costs and hours
remain applicable and have been
subtracted from the overall estimated
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cost savings. Based on the delayed
effective date of July 1, 2019, the revised
estimated annual cost savings to
institutions and individuals is
$9,247,079 ($9,458,484¥$211,405) with
an estimated burden hours savings of
253,136 (258,920¥5,784).
Accessible Format: Individuals with
disabilities may obtain this document in
an accessible format (e.g., braille, large
print, audiotape, or compact disc) on
request to the contact person listed
under FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
CONTACT.
Electronic Access to this Document:
The official version of this document is
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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 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.
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Specifically, through the advanced
search feature at this site, you can limit
your search to documents published by
the Department.
List of Subjects
34 CFR Part 668
Administrative practice and
procedure, Colleges and universities,
Consumer protection, Grant programs—
education, Loan programs—education,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Selective Service System,
Student aid, Vocational education.
34 CFR Part 674
Loan programs—education, Reporting
and recordkeeping requirements,
Student aid.
34 CFR Parts 682 and 685
Administrative practice and
procedure, Colleges and universities,
Loan programs—education, Reporting
and recordkeeping requirements,
Student aid, Vocational education.
Dated: February 9, 2018.
Betsy DeVos,
Secretary of Education.
[FR Doc. 2018–03090 Filed 2–9–18; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 4000–01–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[EPA–R06–OAR–2017–0435; FRL–9973–
23—Region 6]
Approval and Promulgation of Air
Quality Implementation Plans;
Arkansas; Infrastructure State
Implementation Plan Requirements for
the National Ambient Air Quality
Standards
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
Pursuant to the Federal Clean
Air Act (CAA or the Act), the
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
SUMMARY:
is approving State Implementation Plan
(SIP) revisions submitted by the State of
Arkansas to address the requirements of
sections 110(a)(1) and (2) of the Clean
Air Act (CAA or Act) for the 2006 and
2012 fine particulate matter (PM2.5)
National Ambient Air Quality Standards
(NAAQS), 2008 lead (Pb) NAAQS, 2008
ozone (O3) NAAQS, 2010 nitrogen
dioxide (NO2) NAAQS, and the 2010
sulfur dioxide (SO2) NAAQS. Under
CAA sections 110(a)(1) and 110(a)(2),
each state is required to submit a SIP
that provides for the implementation,
maintenance, and enforcement of a
revised primary or secondary NAAQS.
CAA sections 110(a)(1) and (2) require
each state to make a new SIP
submission within three years after EPA
promulgates a new or revised NAAQS
for approval into the existing federallyapproved SIP to assure that the SIP
meets the applicable requirements for
such new and revised NAAQS. This
type of SIP submission is commonly
referred to as an ‘‘infrastructure SIP or
‘‘i-SIP.’’
DATES: This final rule is effective on
March 16, 2018.
ADDRESSES: The EPA has established a
docket for this action under Docket ID
No. EPA–R06–OAR–2017–0435. All
documents in the docket are listed on
the https://www.regulations.gov website.
Although listed in the index, some
information is not publicly available,
e.g., Confidential Business Information
or other information whose disclosure is
restricted by statute. Certain other
material, such as copyrighted material,
is not placed on the internet and will be
publicly available only in hard copy
form. Publicly available docket
materials are available either
electronically through https://
www.regulations.gov or in hard copy at
the EPA Region 6, 1445 Ross Avenue,
Suite 700, Dallas, Texas 75202–2733.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Nevine Salem, (214) 665–7222,
salem.nevine@epa.gov. To inspect the
hard copy materials, please schedule an
appointment with her or Bill Deese at
(214) 665–7253.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Throughout this document ‘‘we,’’ ‘‘us,’’
and ‘‘our’’ means the EPA.
I. Background
The background for this action is
discussed in detail in our November 20,
2017 proposal (82 FR 55065). In that
action, we proposed to approve the
Arkansas i-SIP submittal dated March
24, 2017 to address the requirements of
sections 110(a)(1) and (2) of the Act for
the 2006 and 2012 PM2.5 NAAQS, 2008
lead (Pb) NAAQS, 2008 ozone (O3)
NAAQS, 2010 nitrogen dioxide (NO2)
NAAQS, and the 2010 sulfur dioxide
(SO2) NAAQS. Under CAA sections
110(a)(1) and 110(a)(2), each state is
required to submit a SIP that provides
for the implementation, maintenance,
and enforcement of a revised primary or
secondary NAAQS. CAA sections
110(a)(1) and (2) require each state to
make a new SIP submission within
three years after EPA promulgates a new
or revised NAAQS for approval into the
existing federally-approved SIP to
assure that the SIP meets the applicable
requirements for such new and revised
NAAQS.
We received an anonymous public
comment on December 18, 2017 on the
proposed rulemaking action. The
comment is posted to the docket (EPA–
R06–OAR–2017–0435). The commenter
raised concerns about the accuracy of
agricultural and wild fires emissions
inventory. Such comment is irrelevant
and is outside the scope of this specific
rule making action.
II. Final Action
As detailed in the proposal action,
EPA is approving the majority of the
March 24, 2017, Arkansas i-SIP
submittal, which addresses the
requirements of CAA sections 110(a)(1)
and (2) as applicable to the 2006 PM2.5,
2008 Pb, 2008 O3, 2010 SO2, 2010 NO2,
and 2012 PM2.5 NAAQS. Table 1
outlines the specific actions 1 we are
approving in this final rulemaking.
TABLE 1—FINAL ACTIONS ON THE ARKANSAS INFRASTRUCTURE SIP SUBMITTAL FOR VARIOUS NAAQS
daltland on DSKBBV9HB2PROD with RULES
Element
2006 PM2.5
2008 Pb
2008 Ozone
2010 NO2
2010 SO2
2012 PM2.5
(A): Emission limits and other control measures ..............................................
(B): Ambient air quality monitoring and data system .......................................
(C)(i): Enforcement of SIP measures ...............................................................
(C)(ii): PSD program for major sources and major modifications ....................
(C)(iii): Permitting program for minor sources and minor modifications ...........
A*
A*
A*
A*
A*
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
1 Note that regarding CAA 110(D)(i)(II) Visibility
Protection—(‘‘prong 4’’) for the 2006 PM2.5, EPA
previously proposed disapproval at 80 FR 38419
(July 6, 2015) for an earlier SIP submittal dated
September 21, 2009. However, in the State’s March
24, 2017 submittal, Arkansas submitted revisions to
VerDate Sep<11>2014
18:30 Feb 13, 2018
Jkt 244001
address CAA 110(D)(i)(II) (‘‘prong 4’’) for the 2006
PM2.5 that supersede the September 21, 2009
submittal. In Table 1 below, we are making an
administrative correction to the table as was
originally proposed. We are making an
administrative correction to note a minor change
PO 00000
Frm 00020
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
from ‘‘No submittal’’ to ‘‘No action’’ for the 2006
PM2.5 (‘‘prong 4’’). We will address the 2006 PM2.5
NAAQs 110(a)(2)(D)(i)(II)(‘‘prong 4’’) element in a
future rule making.
E:\FR\FM\14FER1.SGM
14FER1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 83, Number 31 (Wednesday, February 14, 2018)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 6458-6470]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2018-03090]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION
34 CFR Parts 668, 674, 682, and 685
[Docket ID ED-2017-OPE-0112]
RIN 1840-AD28
Student Assistance General Provisions, Federal Perkins Loan
Program, Federal Family Education Loan Program, William D. Ford Federal
Direct Loan Program, and Teacher Education Assistance for College and
Higher Education Grant Program
AGENCY: Office of Postsecondary Education, Department of Education.
ACTION: Final regulations.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Secretary delays, until July 1, 2019, the effective date
of selected provisions of the final regulations entitled Student
Assistance General Provisions, Federal Perkins Loan Program, Federal
Family Education Loan (FFEL) Program, William D. Ford Federal Direct
Loan Program, and Teacher Education Assistance for College and Higher
Education Grant Program (the 2016 final regulations), published in the
Federal
[[Page 6459]]
Register on November 1, 2016. The Secretary is delaying the 2016 final
regulations to ensure that there is adequate time to conduct negotiated
rulemaking and develop revised regulations. The provisions for which
the effective date is being delayed are listed in the SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION section of this document. The original effective date of
the 2016 final regulations, published November 1, 2016, was July 1,
2017. The effective date was delayed by a document issued under section
705 of the Administrative Procedure Act (the 705 Document). The
Department announced in an interim final rule (IFR) issued on October
24, 2017, that, under the Department's interpretation of the Higher
Education Act, the effective date could be no earlier than July 1,
2018.
DATES: As of February 14, 2018, the effective date for the amendments
to or additions of: Sec. Sec. 668.14(b)(30), (31), and (32); 668.41(h)
and (i); 668.71(c); 668.90(a)(3); 668.93(h), (i), (j); 668.171; 668.175
(c) and (d) and (f) and (h); Appendix C to Subpart L of Part 668;
674.33(g)(3) and (g)(8); 682.202(b)(1); 682.211(i)(7); 682.402(d)(3),
(d)(6)(ii)(B)(1) and (2), (d)(6)(ii)(F) introductory text,
(d)(6)(ii)(F)(5), (d)(6)(ii)(G), (d)(6)(ii)(H) through (K), (d)(7)(ii)
and (iii), (d)(8), and (e)(6)(iii); 682.405(b)(4); 682.410(b)(4) and
(b)(6)(viii); 685.200(f)(3)(v) and (f)(4)(iii); 685.205(b)(6);
685.206(c); 685.212(k); 685.214(c)(2), (f)(4) through (7);
685.215(a)(1), (c)(1) through (c)(8), and (d); 685.222; Appendix A to
Subpart B of Part 685; and 685.308(a), published November 1, 2016, at
81 FR 75926, and delayed on June 16, 2017 (82 FR 27621) and October 24,
2017 (82 FR 49114), is further delayed until July 1, 2019.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: George Alan Smith, U.S. Department of
Education, 400 Maryland Ave. SW, Mail Stop 294-34, Washington, DC
20202. Telephone: (202) 453-7757 or by email at:
[email protected].
If you use a telecommunications device for the deaf (TDD) or a text
telephone (TTY), call the Federal Relay Service (FRS), toll free, at 1-
800-877-8339.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: On October 24, 2017 (82 FR 49114), the
Department of Education (Department) published an IFR giving notice
that under its interpretation of section 482 of the Higher Education
Act of 1965, as amended (HEA) (20 U.S.C. 1089), also known as the
``master calendar requirement,'' selected provisions of the 2016 final
regulations would have an effective date of July 1, 2018. (82 FR 49114)
The original effective date of the 2016 final regulations (November 1,
2016 at 81 FR 75926) was July 1, 2017. On June 16, 2017, a 705 Document
(82 FR 27621) delayed the effective date of certain provisions of the
2016 final regulations until a legal challenge by the California
Association of Private Postsecondary Schools (CAPPS) is resolved. See
Complaint and Prayer for Declaratory and Injunctive Relief, California
Association of Private Postsecondary Schools v. DeVos, Civil Action No.
1:17-cv-00999 (D.D.C. May 24, 2017). As explained in the IFR, because
the 2016 final regulations have been postponed by the 705 Document
beyond July 1, 2017, they cannot become effective earlier than July 1,
2018, to comply with the master calendar requirement. (82 FR 49115-
49116).
Also on June 16, 2017, the Department announced its intent to
convene a committee to develop proposed regulations to revise the
existing regulations on borrower defense to repayment of Federal
student loans and other matters (82 FR 27640), the same topics
addressed in the 2016 final regulations. Under the master calendar
requirement, a regulatory change that has been published in final form
on or before November 1 of the year prior to the start of an award
year--which begins on July 1 of any given year--may take effect only at
the beginning of the next award year, or in other words, on July 1 of
the next year. In light of this requirement, the regulations resulting
from negotiated rulemaking could not be effective before, at the
earliest, July 1, 2019.
Accordingly, the Department published a notice of proposed
rulemaking (NPRM) proposing to delay the effective date of the 2016
final regulations until July 1, 2019 (October 24, 2017 at 82 FR 49155).
This notice adopts that proposal, delaying the effective date of the
2016 final regulations, to continue to preserve the regulatory status
quo, until July 1, 2019. The Department will continue to process
borrower defense claims under the existing regulations that will remain
in effect during the delay so that borrowers may continue to apply for
the discharge of all or a part of their loans.
Based on the above considerations, the Department delays until July
1, 2019, the effective date of the following provisions of the final
regulations in title 34 of the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR):
Sec. 668.14(b)(30), (31), and (32) Program participation
agreement.
Sec. 668.41(h) and (i) Reporting and disclosure of information.
Sec. 668.71(c) Scope and special definitions.
Sec. 668.90(a)(3) Initial and final decisions.
Sec. 668.93(h), (i), and (j) Limitation.
Sec. 668.171 General.
Sec. 668.175(c), (d), (f), and (h) Alternative standards and
requirements.
Part 668 subpart L, Appendix C.
Sec. 674.33(g)(3) and (g)(8) Repayment.
Sec. 682.202(b)(1) Permissible charges by lenders to borrowers.
Sec. 682.211(i)(7) Forbearance.
Sec. 682.402(d)(3), (d)(6)(ii)(B)(1) and (2), (d)(6)(ii)(F)
introductory text, (d)(6)(ii)(F)(5), (d)(6)(ii)(G), (d)(6)(ii)(H)
through (K), (d)(7)(ii) and (iii), (d)(8), and (e)(6)(iii) Death,
disability, closed school, false certification, unpaid refunds, and
bankruptcy payments.
Sec. 682.405(b)(4)(ii) Loan rehabilitation agreement.
Sec. 682.410(b)(4) and (b)(6)(viii) Fiscal, administrative, and
enforcement requirements.
Sec. 685.200(f)(3)(v) and (f)(4)(iii) Borrower eligibility.
Sec. 685.205(b)(6) Forbearance.
Sec. 685.206(c) Borrower responsibilities and defenses.
Sec. 685.212(k) Discharge of a loan obligation.
Sec. 685.214(c)(2) and (f)(4) through (7) Closed school discharge.
Sec. 685.215(a)(1), (c)(1) through (c)(8), and (d) Discharge for
false certification of student eligibility or unauthorized payment.
Sec. 685.222 Borrower defenses.
Part 685 subpart B, Appendix A Examples of borrower relief.
Sec. 685.300(b)(11), (b)(12), and (d) through (i) Agreements
between an eligible school and the Secretary for participation in the
Direct Loan Program.
Sec. 685.308(a) Remedial actions.
Note: Section 668.90 has been redesignated as Sec. 668.91 and
Sec. 668.93 has been redesignated as Sec. 668.94 pursuant to the
borrower defense procedural rule, published January 19, 2017 at 82
FR 6253 (the borrower defense procedural rule).
As noted in the IFR, the Department interprets all references to
``July 1, 2017'' in the text of the above-referenced regulations to
mean the effective date of those regulations. The regulatory text
included references to the specific July 1, 2017, date in part to
provide clarity to readers in the future as to when the regulations had
taken effect. Because the regulations did not take effect on July 1,
2017, we would, in connection with this delay of the effective date,
read those regulations as referring to the new effective date
established by this rule, i.e., July 1, 2019.
[[Page 6460]]
This delay of the effective date of the 2016 final regulations does
not delay the effective dates of the regulatory provisions published in
81 FR 75926 which: (1) Expand the types of documentation that may be
used for the granting of a discharge based on the death of the
borrower; (2) amend the regulations governing the consolidation of
Nursing Student Loans and Nurse Faculty Loans so that they align with
the statutory requirements of section 428C(a)(4)(E) of the HEA; (3)
amend the regulations governing Direct Consolidation Loans to allow a
borrower to obtain a Direct Consolidation Loan regardless of whether
the borrower is also seeking to consolidate a Direct Loan Program or
FFEL Program loan, if the borrower has a loan type identified in 34 CFR
685.220(b); (4) address severability; and (5) make technical
corrections. In the 2016 final regulations, 34 CFR 682.211(i)(7) and
682.410(b)(6)(viii) were designated for early implementation, at the
discretion of each lender or guaranty agency. That designation remains
effective.
Public Comment: In response to our invitation in the NPRM, 14
parties submitted comments on the delay of the effective date. We do
not discuss comments or recommendations that are beyond the scope of
this regulatory action or that would require statutory change.
Analysis of Comments and Changes
An analysis of the comments and of any changes to this regulatory
action since publication of the NPRM follows.
A number of commenters opposed the proposed rule to delay the
effective date of selected provisions of the 2016 final regulations
until July 1, 2019, stating that such delay (1) would harm student loan
borrowers and, in some cases, taxpayers; (2) is unnecessary and
unaligned with the mission of the Department of Education; (3) is not
justifiable on the grounds that there is pending litigation as
referenced in the NPRM; and (4) would not be compliant with the
Administrative Procedure Act (APA). However, several commenters
supported the delay because they believed, collectively, that a further
delay would (1) relieve the regulatory burden on institutions; (2)
mitigate uncertainty about the potential impact of the current
regulations; and (3) prevent unnecessary harm and disruption to
postsecondary educational institutions. We discuss and respond to these
comments in greater detail below.
Comments: Several commenters stated that a further delay of the
2016 final regulations would harm borrowers because they would continue
to be subject to the predatory practices of certain institutions
without those institutions being held accountable through the financial
responsibility standards and disclosures and student warnings contained
in the 2016 final regulations. The commenters argued that the Secretary
should protect and provide relief to borrowers who attended
institutions of higher education that misrepresented their program
offerings, or that employed deceptive marketing or recruiting tactics,
instead of delaying the 2016 final regulations. The commenters claimed
that a further delay would ensure that borrowers who apply or have
applied for a loan discharge based on a borrower defense would be
required to wait for new rules to go into effect before receiving
consideration of their claims under the process established by the 2016
final regulations while interest, collection costs and financial
distress continued to mount. The commenters also stated that a further
delay of the pre-dispute arbitration and class action waiver provisions
of the 2016 final regulations would leave students without access to
the courts, while statutes of limitation run. Several commenters also
argued that a further delay of the rule would harm student loan
borrowers because borrowers would be denied access to the many
provisions in the 2016 final regulations that are beneficial to
borrowers, including provisions that provide:
--Automatic closed school discharges for borrowers who were enrolled in
schools that closed on or after November 13, 2013, and who did not
enroll in another school within three years of their school's closure;
--A second level of Departmental review for closed school discharge
claims that were denied by a guaranty agency;
--An expansion of the conditions under which a FFEL or Direct Loan
borrower may qualify for a false certification discharge;
--A clear process, based on new Federal standards, that establishes a
borrower's procedural rights and describes how the Department will
consider individual and group borrower defense discharge claims and
pending requests for forbearance or suspension of collection on loans
that are subject to borrower defense claims;
--Prohibitions on schools' ability to enforce pre-dispute arbitration
agreements and class action waivers as to borrower defense-related
claims for students receiving Direct Loans;
--Institutional financial responsibility triggers to protect the
Federal government from losses that may arise from borrower defense
claims and sudden school closures; and,
--Institutional financial protection disclosures for prospective and
enrolled students to assist students in making informed choices about
where to matriculate.
One commenter asserted that further delaying the 2016 final
regulations would perpetuate existing harms experienced by borrowers,
such as poor credit ratings resulting from debt that borrowers
accumulated that the borrower may be able to discharge based on a
borrower defense.
One commenter argued that further delay in the effective date harms
borrowers because the delay creates uncertainty in how the Department
will treat future borrower defense claims. The commenter asserted that
while borrowers can wait for the outcome of the new rulemaking effort
for clarity on the process, waiting has risks for borrowers as well,
including the application of statutes of limitations which may limit
the loan amount that may be discharged. The same commenter noted that
Direct Loan borrowers with loans issued during the delay cannot avail
themselves of the Federal standard in the 2016 final regulations; these
borrowers will be limited to the State law standard. Finally, this
commenter stated that although the Department claimed that borrowers
would not be harmed by the further delay of the effective date of the
2016 final regulations because borrower defense claims would continue
to be processed under existing regulations, the Department's own impact
analysis estimates a reduction in student loan discharges of nearly two
billion as a result of the further delay. Citing a July 2017 letter
from the Department's Acting Under Secretary to Senator Richard Durbin,
the commenter stated that the Department had not approved borrower
defense applications since January 20, 2017, and that there were at
least 64,000 outstanding borrower defense applications as of the date
of the letter. The commenter noted that the number of unprocessed
claims has since risen to 95,000, and that a further delay of the 2016
final regulations will exacerbate the lack of expediency in the
Department's borrower defense discharge process to the detriment of
borrowers who continue to wait for relief.
Discussion: The Department does not agree that borrowers will be
significantly harmed by changing the effective date of the 2016 final
[[Page 6461]]
regulations to July 1, 2019. While the Department acknowledges that
certain benefits of the 2016 final regulations will be delayed, it has
determined that those benefits are outweighed by the administrative and
transaction costs for regulated entities and borrowers of having those
regulations go into effect only to be changed a short while later.
First, the 2016 final regulations did not create the borrower defense
regime but modified the pre-existing borrower defense regulations, in
place since 1995. Those pre-existing regulations remain in effect, as
does the statute that allows borrowers to assert defenses to repayment.
Therefore, borrowers can continue to apply for relief from payment of
loans under this existing process, and the Department is committed to
processing those applications in a timely manner. Second, the instant
rule merely delays the marginal benefits of the 2016 final regulations
for a brief period of time (an additional year), it does not revoke
them.
The Department does not share the commenters' concern that
borrowers will be subject to certain institutions' predatory practices
absent the 2016 final regulations. Because the current borrower defense
regulations will remain in effect, borrowers will continue to be able
to submit claims to the Department and have their claims processed in
accordance with the HEA and those current regulations. Borrowers will
not need to wait for new rules to go into effect to have a borrower
defense claim considered. We do not anticipate that borrowers will be
harmed by the current process because we routinely grant forbearances,
and stop collection activities on defaulted loans, to borrowers while
their discharge claims are under review. We acknowledge the commenter's
concern regarding the number of pending claims before the Department.
However, in the time since the commenter submitted the comment, the
Department has issued decisions on borrower defense claims and we will
continue to accept and process borrower defense claims.
In the event that the borrower defense regulations currently being
negotiated result in discharge standards for a borrower defense claim
different from the current standards, the new standards would apply
only to loans first disbursed on or after the effective date of those
regulations. Claims filed as to loans first disbursed before July 1,
2019, which would include currently pending claims and claims filed
between the date of this final rule and July 1, 2019, will continue to
be processed under the current standard for borrower defense claims.
We further disagree with commenters who claimed that the July 1,
2019 effective date would harm borrowers because the Federal standard
established in the 2016 final regulations would not be in effect. As we
noted in the 2016 final regulations, the Federal standard was designed
to address much of the conduct covered by the State law-based standard
so the vast majority of claims made by borrowers whose loans were first
disbursed between July 1, 2017, and July 1, 2019, could be evaluated
and discharges provided under the current State law-based standard. (81
FR 75937-75941). Any benefits to borrowers associated with having the
Federal standard in place during that time period are outweighed by the
confusion and disruption that would result from allowing the 2016 final
regulations to take effect during a time when they are subject to a
legal challenge and when the Department is reevaluating its borrower
defense regulations generally. In addition to causing confusion for
borrowers, implementing a different standard for a potentially short
period of time could delay the processing of claims. One of the goals
of the 2016 final regulations was to provide borrowers with more
consistency and clarity about their borrower defense claims. (81 FR
39339-39340). Under the circumstances, the delay of the effective date
of the 2016 final regulations provides greater clarity and consistency
for borrowers, as well as a more streamlined process, than
implementation of the rule under the current schedule.
With respect to the comment about a two billion dollar reduction in
claims based on the difference in the primary and baseline scenarios
from the net budget impact in the 2016 final regulations, as noted in
the Regulatory Impact Analysis (RIA), the Department estimates the
savings resulting from the delay to be much less. The savings resulting
from the delay are mainly driven by slight differences between the
State law-based standards in the current regulations and the Federal
standards from the 2016 final regulations if they were applicable to
loans disbursed between July 1, 2018, and July 1, 2019. Since we have
always maintained that there would be significant overlap between the
State law-based and Federal standards from the 2016 final regulations,
the differences are estimated to be minor. The provisions of the 2016
final regulations pertaining to the process for review and
determination of claims were not limited to specific cohorts designated
by the effective date so the delay will not result in specific cohorts
of borrowers being excluded from the process in effect when the claim
is made. Additionally, the figures in the Accounting Statement for the
2016 final regulations would more appropriately be characterized as the
costs associated with a single cohort and not the costs associated with
a fiscal year. As part of its ongoing efforts to improve the utility of
student loan information, the Department has updated its Accounting
Statement presentation to better align with OMB Circular A-4, so the
effects presented in this document do show the impact on the affected
cohorts by fiscal year. The Net Budget Impact section of the RIA
presents the assumptions about the effect of the delay.
With regard to the financial protection disclosures, the 2016 final
regulations provided that before the disclosures would be required, the
Secretary would conduct consumer testing to inform the identification
of events for which disclosure would be required and to determine the
form of the disclosure. In light of the fact that the 2016 final
regulations provided for a future process before the disclosure
requirement could be implemented, we do not believe a delayed effective
date would significantly change what would occur in this regard during
the period of the delay. In other words, because we did not anticipate
the financial protection disclosures having a significant impact
immediately following the 2016 final regulations' effective date, we
believe the incremental effect of delaying those provisions is minimal.
We address the comments related to institutional financial
responsibility triggers in more detail in the RIA.
Moreover, there are other existing protections for borrowers,
including periodic reviews and site visits by Department employees to
title IV participating institutions to monitor regulatory compliance;
and the activities of the enforcement unit within FSA charged with
taking actions against parties participating in title IV, HEA programs
to enforce compliance. In addition to the Department, other entities
also act to protect students, borrowers, and taxpayers, such as the
States through State law enforcement activities and other Federal
agencies whose jurisdictions may overlap with, or affect, the higher
education sector.
Finally, we note that borrowers may continue to apply for closed
school and false certification discharges under the current
regulations. With regard to the comments relating to the grounds for
false certification discharge, as we stated in the notice of proposed
[[Page 6462]]
rulemaking that preceded the 2016 final regulations, these changes
reflect statutory changes relating to false certification discharges
for the lack of a high school diploma or its equivalent and for a
disqualifying status. As a result, the Department's authority for false
certification discharges on these grounds remains unchanged. (81 FR
39377-39378). In addition, under the current regulations, the Secretary
has the authority to provide false certification discharges without an
application based on information in the Secretary's possession. The
2016 final regulations explicitly provided that such information may
include evidence that the school has falsified the Satisfactory
Academic Progress of its students. Because the current regulation does
not limit the information that may be considered by the Secretary to
provide a false certification discharge without an application, we do
not believe a delay of the 2016 revision to this provision will harm
borrowers. With regard to a second level of review of a guaranty
agency's determinations on closed school discharge requests, borrowers
may raise any dispute with a guaranty agency to the Department's
Federal Student Aid Ombudsman Group.
The Department acknowledges the commenters' concern that the window
under applicable statutes of limitation for some borrowers to file
lawsuits may end during the period covered by the delay of the 2016
final regulations' prohibitions on institutions' use of pre-dispute
arbitration and class action waiver contractual provisions. However, as
acknowledged in the 705 Document, serious questions regarding the
legality of these provisions of the final regulations exist and these
provisions are among the regulations directly challenged in the CAPPS
litigation. The Department thinks that it is likely that the
arbitration and class action waiver provisions will be overturned.
Should the Department's regulations prohibiting schools from enforcing
pre-dispute arbitration agreements and class action waivers be
invalidated by the court, there would be significant confusion from
borrowers and schools who may have engaged in court litigation on the
basis of the prohibitions as to the enforceability of those agreements.
We believe the harm from having these provisions take effect in the
face of the CAPPS challenge is too great and outweigh any benefits
these provisions would have. Further, we note that a borrower may
continue to apply for relief, from the Department under the current,
State-law based borrower defense to repayment regulations, irrespective
of whether the borrower has a pre-dispute arbitration agreement with
the school or an agreement to waive involvement in class action
lawsuits.
We also note that the pre-dispute arbitration and class action
waiver provisions of the 2016 final regulations would require some
institutions to change their policies and procedures and to amend their
enrollment agreements. In addition, re-training staff and sending
notices to borrowers informing them of the changed class action waivers
and pre-dispute arbitration provisions would impose administrative
costs on institutions. If pre-dispute arbitration requirements and
class action waivers are addressed through the current rulemaking
process, institutions would need to repeat or reverse these steps to
address any requirements that would go into effect on July 1, 2019.
Maintaining the regulatory status quo with respect to pre-dispute
arbitration agreements and class action waivers will reduce the
administrative burden on schools and lessen confusion for borrowers who
would be affected by these changes.
The Department further believes that implementing the 2016 final
regulations at this time would cause significant confusion around
borrower defenses generally that would be unfair to students and
schools. Without a delay, if the current rulemaking process results in
a different standard for borrower defense claims, there would be three
separate sets of standards for borrower defense claims: the State-law
based standard that is currently in effect; standards for loans
disbursed between July 1, 2018, and July 1, 2019; and standards for
loans disbursed on or after July 1, 2019. This would be more confusing
for borrowers than the potential for two different standards--one for
loans disbursed before July 1, 2019, and one for loans disbursed on or
after July 1, 2019. Providing for an effective date of July 1, 2019,
will allow the Department and the negotiating committee to develop new
borrower defense regulations that would protect students from the most
serious predatory practices, provide clear and evenhanded rules for
students, colleges and universities to follow, and constrain the costs
to taxpayers.
The Department's processing of borrower defense claims is not
affected by the effective date of the 2016 final regulations, as the
current regulations remain in effect. While the process for reviewing
claims and the standard under which they are reviewed would have
changed under the 2016 final regulations, the Department does not
expect that the length of time required to review individual claims
would have changed significantly if the 2016 final regulations had gone
into effect as originally scheduled. With regard to group claims, the
Department has granted group claims under the existing regulations.
While the 2016 final regulations provided a regulatory process for
granting group borrower defense claims, the Secretary had and continues
to have the authority, and has exercised that authority, to grant group
claims under the borrower defense regulations currently in effect.
Changes: None.
Comment: Some commenters claimed that the delay hurts American
taxpayers because the 2016 final regulations would hold institutions
that commit fraud monetarily accountable for their actions in cases of
student loan discharges, rather than requiring taxpayers to absorb the
costs of borrower defense discharges.
Discussion: As noted earlier in this section, the delay of the
effective date of the 2016 final regulations will allow the Department
to develop new borrower defense regulations that may be more beneficial
to American taxpayers than the 2016 final regulations. We do not
believe the delay will harm American taxpayers because the Department
may assess liability for borrower defense claims on schools now, under
the current regulations in effect. The financial protection triggers in
the 2016 final rule were designed to increase the likelihood of
recovering funds from institutions as claims come in over the life of
the cohort, especially from institutions that might have significant
exposure or that end up closing as a result of the financial risks
identified by the triggers. The Department estimated that recovery
activity would ramp up as the triggers were implemented, as reflected
in the recovery assumption in the 2016 final rule (81 FR 76057), so a
delay in the early years of recovery activity is not estimated to have
a significant effect, as indicated by the change in the recovery
assumption presented in this RIA. With the Department's authority to
seek recoveries unchanged because of the change in effective date, we
believe the possibility of slightly reduced recovery rates for a short
period is warranted to further the goals of providing clarity by
maintaining the regulatory status quo during this interim period. We
note that the borrower defense procedural rule, which provided a
regulatory framework for assessing liabilities against schools for
which a borrower defense claim was successful, was published in the
Federal Register on January 19, 2017,
[[Page 6463]]
and those regulations have been effective since that date.
Changes: None.
Comment: One commenter asserted that the data provided for the
impact of the delays in the effective date of the 2016 final
regulations were inadequate because the cost of providing financial
protection was not quantified in the RIA of the 2016 final regulations
and the NPRM preceding this final rule; and there is no additional data
to estimate the costs institutions may avoid from the delayed effective
date of the financial protection provisions.
Another commenter pointed out that if the effective date of the
2016 final regulations was not delayed, the Department estimated that
$381 million in loans would be forgiven between July 1, 2017, and July
1, 2019. The commenter noted that the Department does point out that
the Federal government will save this money by delaying the effective
date but does not point out that borrowers will end up absorbing the
cost. The commenter noted that the Department could change the current
regulations and not include the new closed school discharge provisions,
and noted that even a temporary delay causes financial stress that can
trap some borrowers in poverty. Moreover, borrowers who default on
their loans because they are not discharged would not be eligible for
further financial aid.
Discussion: The Department appreciates the comments about the RIA
for the NPRM preceding this final rule. In that RIA, the Department
acknowledged that the costs of providing financial protection were not
quantified in the RIA for the 2016 final regulations and that there is
no additional data to estimate those costs. That fact, however, does
not mean that we have not sufficiently justified this delay.
As discussed in the RIA for this final rule with respect to the
delay of the financial protection provisions, several factors will
affect the cost for individual institutions, including: the level of
institutional conduct giving rise to borrower defense claims, the
applicability of certain financial protection triggers, the financial
strength of the institution, the manner in which the institution
provides financial protection to the Department, and the potential
development of financial products aimed at providing this protection.
The Department believes that individual institutions are best
positioned to evaluate their potential exposure to borrower defense
claims, their financial relationships with parties who could provide
financial protection, and the cost of providing protection. Along with
the uncertainty about the projected amount of claims as recognized in
the different sensitivity runs presented in the RIA for the 2016 final
regulations, the Department believes that quantifying the cost of
providing financial protection would provide a false sense of
precision. Rather than producing a number that would be inapplicable to
most institutions, the Department focused on explaining the regulations
and providing data about the provisions for which it had information
such as the cohort default rate (CDR), 90/10 revenue requirement,
fluctuation in title IV aid, withdrawal rate, and accreditor action
triggers. The 2016 final regulations did not present information about
the provisions related to U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission or
stock exchange actions, gainful employment, the withdrawal of owner's
equity from an institution, teach-outs, State licensing, financial
stress tests, an institution's violation of a loan agreement, or
pending borrower defense claims. Additionally, given that the known
borrower defense claims at the time were from a small number of
institutions and many had not been approved or disapproved, it is
unclear how the distribution of successful borrower defense claims at
institutions would match up with the distribution of institutions'
performance on the financial responsibility triggers for which the
Department had some information.
As is further discussed in the RIA for this final rule, the
Department recognizes that the delayed effective date will postpone the
impact of the financial protection provisions on institutions. This
impact was not quantified for the same reasons described above, but
would be a fraction of the total protection expected to be generated
under the rule as some of the triggers are tied to the production of
certain performance measures and would not have kicked in immediately
under the 2016 regulations. Successful claims made by borrowers will be
paid regardless of the limited delay in the date for requiring
institutions to provide financial protection, and the Department
believes the cost to taxpayers of the slightly reduced recoveries
described in the Net Budget Impact in the RIA is justified by the
benefits of reconsidering the financial protection provisions and
appropriately balancing the costs to institutions with protection of
borrowers and taxpayers.
With respect to the comment about closed school discharges, the
Department disagrees with the claim that borrowers will bear a $381
million cost because of the delay. As noted in the NPRM, the $364
million savings estimated for FY 2017 occurred because the Department
did not execute the modification for cohorts 2014-2016 anticipated in
the President's Budget (PB) for 2018 because of the change of the
effective date of the 2016 final regulations. The difference in the
$381 million estimated for the three-year automatic discharge in the
2016 final regulations and the $364 million estimate for the
modification in this rule is that the $381 million was based on PB 2017
loan model assumptions and the modification to be executed was based on
the PB 2018 assumptions. Under the credit reform scoring rules
applicable to the student loan programs, the unexecuted modification
created savings that needed to be recognized. This budget scoring
requirement does not affect borrowers or their eligibility for a closed
school discharge. Borrowers can avoid any uncertainty about the timing
of receiving a closed school discharge or costs associated with a delay
in receipt of such discharge by submitting a closed school discharge
application at any time. Any costs or savings associated with changes
in the automatic discharge provision as a result of the current
negotiated rulemaking are outside the scope of the analysis of the
delay, and we will address any related issues raised by commenters in
response to the NPRM for the proposed rule resulting from the current
rulemaking process.
Changes: None.
Comment: Some commenters expressed their belief that the delay is
not aligned with Congressional intent, citing 20 U.S.C. 3402, and is
contrary to the public interest.
Discussion: In 20 U.S.C. 3402, Congress states that the
establishment of a Department of Education is in the public interest,
will promote the general welfare of the United States, will help ensure
that education issues receive proper treatment at the Federal level,
and will enable the Federal government to coordinate its education
activities more effectively.
In its execution of these responsibilities, and consistent with 20
U.S.C. 3402, the Department has determined that the public interest is
best served by a delay in the effective date of the 2016 final
regulations.
Changes: None.
Comments: Some commenters expressed concerns that the Department
did not follow required rulemaking processes in delaying the effective
date of the 2016 final regulations. These concerns alleged specific
statutory and
[[Page 6464]]
APA violations. First, commenters stated that the Department's
justification to waive negotiated rulemaking was insufficient. Second,
commenters wrote that we did not provide sufficient justification for
the delay. One commenter said that the NPRM fails to identify any
specific deficiencies in the 2016 final regulations, or findings and
rationale that support revising those regulations. Third, a commenter
stated that the minor cost savings detailed in the RIA were
insufficient justification to delay the rule. In addition, one
commenter stated that further negotiated rulemaking on the 2016 final
regulations was redundant and wasteful.
Discussion: The Department adhered to all applicable laws in
promulgating this final rule. First, with regard to waiver of
negotiated rulemaking, section 492(b)(2) of the HEA provides that the
Secretary may waive negotiated rulemaking if she determines that there
is good cause to do so, and publishes the basis for such determination
in the Federal Register at the same time as the proposed regulations in
question are first published. In the NPRM, the Department properly
articulated the good cause supporting our waiver of the HEA's
negotiated rulemaking requirement. The NPRM explained that the original
catalyst for the delay was the CAPPS litigation, filed on May 24, 2017,
and that it would not have been possible for the Department to engage
in negotiated rulemaking and publish final regulations after that date
(much less after October 24, 2017, the date the NPRM was published),
and prior to July 1, 2018 (the current effective date of the 2016 final
regulations). Negotiated rulemaking on this discrete issue simply was
not practicable. It is a time-consuming and resource-intensive process,
and could not practicably be completed by July 1, 2018.
Negotiated rulemaking typically takes the Department well over 12
months to complete. The statute requires the Department to hold public
hearings before commencing any negotiations. Based upon the feedback
the Department receives during the hearings, the Department then
identifies those issues on which it will conduct negotiated rulemaking,
announces those, and solicits nominations for non-Federal negotiators.
Negotiations themselves are typically held over a 3 month period.
Following the negotiations, the Department then prepares a notice of
proposed rulemaking and submits the proposed rule to OMB for review.
The proposed rules are then open for public comment for 30-60 days.
Following the receipt of public comments, the Department then prepares
a final regulation and submits it to OMB for review.
With the completion of all of these steps taking well over 12
months, it would not have been feasible for the Department to complete
negotiated rulemaking on the delayed effective date by July 1, 2018.
Indeed, it would not have been feasible even if the Department had
commenced the process on May 24, 2017, when it learned of the CAPPS
litigation. Thus, the Department had good cause to waive that
requirement.
Regarding the comment that we did not provide sufficient
justification to propose delay of the effective date of the 2016 final
regulations, the Department is in the process of developing proposed
revisions to the borrower defense regulations through the negotiated
rulemaking process. As a result of the timing of the negotiated
rulemaking and the effect of the master calendar requirement, any
regulations resulting from the negotiated rulemaking cannot become
effective before July 1, 2019. Therefore, the Department proposed in
the NPRM to delay the effective date of the 2016 final regulations to
July 1, 2019. This would prevent a scenario in which the 2016 final
regulations might become effective for a short period of time before
new regulations resulting from the current borrower defense rulemaking
process take effect, a result which likely would lead to a great deal
of confusion and difficulty for borrowers and schools alike.
Accordingly, the Department articulated a reasonable and sufficient
justification to propose a delay of a final rule.
Also with regard to the comment that the NPRM fails to identify any
specific deficiencies in the 2016 final regulations, the APA and
applicable case law require only that an agency's rulemaking justify
the particular action or actions to be taken by that rule. This final
rule does not amend the substance of the 2016 final regulations; it
merely changes the effective date of the 2016 final regulations and is
fully supported based on the information provided in the NPRM and in
this final rule. Amending the substance of the 2016 final regulations
(or prior borrower defense regulations) would require a separate
rationale. We are separately conducting a negotiated rulemaking process
to address the substance of the borrower defense regulations, and any
resulting NPRM will provide a rationale for proposed changes.
The NPRM at issue here proposed only a delay of the effective date
of the 2016 final regulations; it did not propose any other changes and
therefore the Department was not required to solicit comment on any
matters other than the effective date. Also contrary to the commenter's
assertions, the number of comments received in response to an NPRM has
no bearing on the sufficiency of the Department's solicitation of
public engagement. The APA requires the Department to ``give interested
persons an opportunity to participate'' and consider ``the relevant
matter presented,'' not to reach a certain threshold of comments before
it may proceed with the rulemaking process. 5 U.S.C. 553(c). The
Department requested comments that covered the scope of our
rulemaking--delay of an effective date--and considered each applicable
comment received in promulgating this final rule.
The regulatory impact analysis in the NPRM estimated the quantified
economic effects and net budget impact of the delay, and projected that
the delay would result in a net cost savings. However, the delay was
not proposed solely on the basis of those calculations. Executive Order
13563 requires the Department to, in part, ``propose or adopt a
regulation only upon a reasoned determination that its benefits justify
its costs (recognizing that some benefits and costs are difficult to
quantify).'' Just as the commenters note harms to borrowers that cannot
be definitively quantified, not all benefits of the delay are
measurable in monetary terms. Delaying the effective date as proposed
in the NPRM will preserve the regulatory status quo while the
Department reconsiders the substance of its regulations governing
borrower defense, preventing borrowers and institutions alike from
being subject to an uncertain, quickly changing set of regulatory
requirements. The Department undertook the required analysis and
determined that the benefits of the delay would justify the costs.
With regard to the comment about redundancy and wastefulness, we
have substantive concerns about the 2016 final regulations. In light of
that, negotiated rulemaking and publication of an NPRM with request for
further public comment is the statutorily required path to ensure
public input and potentially make substantive changes to the
Department's regulations. After careful consideration, we determined
the benefits of proceeding with negotiated rulemaking to properly
analyze the borrower defense regulations outweighed the costs of doing
so.
Changes: None.
Comment: Some commenters also argued that the CAPPS lawsuit is an
inappropriate basis for the delay
[[Page 6465]]
because CAPPS' litigation addresses only some of the regulatory
provisions being delayed, but the notices effectuating the delay
included many regulatory provisions, including those related to closed
school discharge.
Discussion: The CAPPS litigation is not the basis for the delay
proposed in the NPRM, although it was the reason for the initial delay
of the 2016 final regulations' effective date. We further note that
contrary to the commenter's assertion, CAPPS' complaint expressly prays
for an order declaring ``that the entirety of the Final Rule is
contrary to the Constitution,'' and asks that the Court enjoin the
Department from ``taking any action whatsoever pursuant to the final
regulations,'' indicating that its challenge is broader than the
commenters portray.
Changes: None.
Comment: Some commenters supported the proposal in the NPRM. One
commenter asserted that the 2016 final regulations' intention missed
the mark and created an unnecessarily complex and costly system that is
confusing to students, unfair to institutions, and puts taxpayers on
the hook for huge costs. The commenter also suggested that maintaining
the regulatory status quo under the 1994-95 standard is critical to the
public interest and that requiring institutions to use their time and
finances to implement the expensive 2016 final regulations while
another rulemaking is occurring would be burdensome and contrary to the
goals of Executive Order 13777, which is intended to help alleviate the
regulatory burdens on the American people. This same commenter
emphasized that the delay will help to maintain an existing, easily
understood process--especially for students seeking redress under the
current State law-based standard.
Commenters asserted that the delay of selected provisions of the
2016 final regulations would mitigate uncertainty about the potential
impact of the regulations, especially in light of ongoing litigation,
the master calendar requirement, and ongoing negotiated rulemaking.
One commenter asserted that the Department properly used Section
705 of the APA to avoid substantial harm to students. The commenter
suggested that if some of the provisions of the 2016 final regulations
went into effect and were quickly struck down by a court, the result
would be chaotic, particularly if the subsequent regulatory framework
change occurred in the course of an award year. The commenter asserted
further that the ongoing negotiated rulemaking is justified based on
the need to improve the borrower defense regulations as part of a
regulatory reset. This commenter argued that because the reset could
lead to significant changes, it would be nonsensical, even aside from
the litigation, to implement new regulations for a full or for part of
an award year only to change them after the current negotiated
rulemaking process is complete.
One commenter asserted that the arbitration and class action
provisions in the 2016 final regulations would require institutions to
incur significant costs in changing multiple policies and procedures
and amending existing and future enrollment agreements, re-training
staff, litigating new cases, and sending notices to borrowers that
existing class action waivers or arbitration provisions will not be
enforced. According to the commenter, the implementation of these
requirements would divert resources from students and would require the
further diversion of resources if schools were required to retrain
staff and litigate the effects of the temporary ban on past agreements
with students, including those signed during the interim period, if the
regulations were to change as a result of the current rulemaking
process.
The commenter also stated that the financial responsibility
provisions that require, in some circumstances, an institution to
obtain a letter of credit or some type of financial protection would
impose a significant burden on schools because a letter of credit is
difficult to obtain and the additional cost could cause many schools,
including some historically black colleges and universities, to close.
The commenter also argued that the delay is appropriate because schools
may need to establish different compliance measures if the current
negotiated rulemaking process modifies the financial responsibility
provisions. In such event, the commenter stated that the temporary
implementation of these provisions would lead to potentially
unnecessary compliance and training costs for schools to accommodate
different rules.
The commenter also argued that the repayment rate provisions which
would require proprietary schools with a certain loan repayment rate to
distribute a warning to students and prospective students might damage
the reputation of such schools and impact such schools' ability to draw
students and raise funds. The commenter argued that the delay would
prevent any disruptions as changes to the requirements are considered
during the negotiated rulemaking process.
Finally, the commenter stated its view that given the significant
expansion of borrower defense under the 2016 final regulations and the
changes to the borrower defense regulations that may result from the
Department's current rulemaking effort, the additional delay is
required to prevent confusion for students and the expenditure of
school resources on implementing the different borrower defense
standards and procedures when those resources could otherwise be used
to enhance student experiences.
Discussion: While comments regarding the effect of the 2016 final
regulations are outside of the scope of the NPRM, the Department agrees
that the delay will provide clarity for institutions and students, as
well as save institutions from incurring the costs and expending the
resources necessary to comply with the requirements under the 2016
final regulations that would potentially be in effect for only a short
period of time.
Changes: None.
Executive Orders 12866, 13563, and 13771
Regulatory Impact Analysis
Under Executive Order 12866, it must be determined whether this
regulatory action is ``significant'' and, therefore, subject to the
requirements of the Executive Order and subject to review by the Office
of Management and Budget (OMB). Section 3(f) of Executive Order 12866
defines a ``significant regulatory action'' as an action likely to
result in a rule that may--
(1) Have an annual effect on the economy of $100 million or more,
or adversely affect a sector of the economy, productivity, competition,
jobs, the environment, public health or safety, or State, local, or
Tribal governments or communities in a material way (also referred to
as an ``economically significant'' rule);
(2) Create serious inconsistency or otherwise interfere with an
action taken or planned by another agency;
(3) Materially alter the budgetary impacts of entitlement grants,
user fees, or loan programs or the rights and obligations of recipients
thereof; or
(4) Raise novel legal or policy issues arising out of legal
mandates, the President's priorities, or the principles stated in the
Executive order.
The Department estimates the quantified annualized economic and net
budget impacts of the delay of the effective date to be -$26.9 million
in reduced costs to institutions and the Federal government. These
reduced costs result from the delay of the borrower defense provisions
of the 2016 final regulations as they would apply to
[[Page 6466]]
the 2017 to 2019 loan cohorts, as well as from the delayed paperwork
burden on institutions and the delayed execution of the closed school
automatic discharge. This final regulatory action is a significant
regulatory action subject to review by OMB under section 3(f) of
Executive Order 12866.
We have also reviewed this final rule under Executive Order 13563,
which supplements and explicitly reaffirms the principles, structures,
and definitions governing regulatory review established in Executive
Order 12866. To the extent permitted by law, Executive Order 13563
requires that an agency--
(1) Propose or adopt regulations only on a reasoned determination
that their benefits justify their costs (recognizing that some benefits
and costs are difficult to quantify);
(2) Tailor its regulations to impose the least burden on society,
consistent with obtaining regulatory objectives and taking into
account--among other things and to the extent practicable--the costs of
cumulative regulations;
(3) In choosing among alternative regulatory approaches, select
those approaches that maximize net benefits (including potential
economic, environmental, public health and safety, and other
advantages; distributive impacts; and equity);
(4) To the extent feasible, specify performance objectives, rather
than the behavior or manner of compliance a regulated entity must
adopt; and
(5) Identify and assess available alternatives to direct
regulation, including economic incentives--such as user fees or
marketable permits--to encourage the desired behavior, or provide
information that enables the public to make choices.
Executive Order 13563 also requires an agency ``to use the best
available techniques to quantify anticipated present and future
benefits and costs as accurately as possible.'' The Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs of OMB has emphasized that these
techniques may include ``identifying changing future compliance costs
that might result from technological innovation or anticipated
behavioral changes.''
We are issuing this final rule only on a reasoned determination
that its benefits justify its costs. Based on the analysis that
follows, the Department believes that this final rule is consistent
with the principles in Executive Order 13563.
We also have determined that this regulatory action does not unduly
interfere with State, local, or Tribal governments in the exercise of
their governmental functions.
In accordance with both Executive Orders, the Department has
assessed the potential costs and benefits, both quantitative and
qualitative, of this regulatory action.
The quantified economic effects and net budget impact associated
with the delayed effective date are not expected to be economically
significant.
Effects of Delay
As indicated in the RIA published with the 2016 final regulations
on November 1, 2016, those final regulations were economically
significant with a total estimated net budget impact of $16.6 billion
over the 2017-2026 loan cohorts in the primary estimate scenario,
including a cost of $381 million for cohorts 2014-2016 attributable to
the provisions for a three-year automatic closed school discharge.
However, as noted in the RIA for the NPRM published October 24,
2017, the analysis of the net budget impact in this final rule is
limited to the effect of delaying the effective date of the 2016 final
regulations from July 1, 2018, to July 1, 2019, and does not account
for any potential changes in the 2016 final regulations or
administrative updates to existing processes and procedures related to
borrower defense claims.
As the net budget impact is based on the net present value of the
cash flows of the relevant cohorts over 40 years, delaying the 2016
final regulations until July 1, 2019, will have limited effect, as
discussed below.
Even with the change in the effective date to July 1, 2019,
borrowers will still be able to submit claims. The provisions of the
2016 final regulations pertaining to the process for review and
determination of claims were not limited to specific cohorts designated
by the effective date so the delay will not result in specific cohorts
of borrowers being excluded from the process in effect when the claim
is made. Loans made before July 1, 2017, were always subject to the
State law-based standard, and borrowers' ability to bring claims under
that standard is unchanged by the delay. For claims filed after the
effective date of the regulations for loans made on or after July 1,
2019, the Federal standard established in the 2016 final regulations
would apply. As discussed previously, the Department interprets all
references to ``July 1, 2017'' in the text of the final regulations to
mean the effective date of the final regulations. As a result, the
delay in the effective date means that loans made between July 1, 2018,
and June 30, 2019, will be subject to the current State law-based
standard. As we noted in the 2016 final regulations, the Federal
standard was designed to address much of the conduct already covered by
the State law-based standard, so the vast majority of discharge claims
associated with loans made between July 1, 2017, and the delayed
effective date could be made under the current, State law-based
standard as well. (81 FR 76057)
Some commenters suggested that borrowers will be harmed by the
delay, either through uncertainty as to how claims will be handled, the
application of statutes of limitation, or processing delays. Commenters
also expressed concerns about the processing of existing claims and the
effect of the delay on their resolution. The Department does not agree
that the delay of the effective date of the 2016 final regulations will
affect the processing of existing claims. Existing claims were always
subject to the State law-based standard in the current regulations.
Efforts to improve the efficiency of claims processing are ongoing and
are not contingent upon implementation of the 2016 final regulations.
The Department maintains that the loans affected by the delay from
July 1, 2018 to July 1, 2019 are those issued between those dates and
for which any potential borrower defense claims will now be evaluated
under the State law-based standard. These loans have not been made yet,
and the NPRM and this final rule clarify that the State law-based
standard will apply to them--this provides borrowers certainty
regarding the standard that will be applied to their claims. Some
commenters noted the difference in the annualized estimate for the
primary and baseline scenarios and suggested the delay will cost
borrowers approximately two billion dollars. As explained in the Net
Budget Impact, the Department estimates the cost of the delay to be
much less than two billion dollars given that there is significant
overlap between the current State law-based standard and the Federal
standard from the 2016 final regulations and that claims associated
with these loans will be handled under the process in place when their
claim is made. The Department does not believe that the delay will
result in reversion to the baseline scenario assumptions for the
borrower percentage so the effect on borrowers will be much lower than
the commenters suggested. Additionally, the figures in the Accounting
Statement for the 2016 final regulations would more appropriately be
characterized as the costs associated with a single loan cohort and not
the costs associated with a fiscal year, so the change in the
[[Page 6467]]
effective date would not result in the two billion dollar difference as
it reflects just one year of the 40-year life of the cohort. The
Department has updated its Accounting Statement in this final rule so
the effects presented in this RIA show the impact on the affected loan
cohorts by fiscal year.
As discussed in the Analysis of Comments and Changes the potential
effects on borrowers include possible reduced access to courts from the
delay in the arbitration and class action waiver provisions while
statutes of limitation are running. We think it is likely that these
provisions will be overturned in the CAPPS litigation and are concerned
about the confusion to borrowers that would result. We believe the harm
that would occur outweighs any benefits of these provisions. We note
that a borrower may submit a borrower defense claim to the Department
with respect to his or her Federal loans at any time without regard to
arbitration agreements or class action waiver clauses in agreements
between the borrower and the school, as the loan is between the Federal
government and the borrower.
In addition to borrowers, institutions are also affected by the
delayed effective date. As indicated in the RIA for the 2016 final
regulations, institutions would bear the major costs of compliance,
paperwork burden, and providing financial protection to the Department.
In terms of cost savings for institutions, the estimated annual
paperwork burden was approximately $9.4 million in the first year after
the 2016 final regulations were to take effect. In the revised scenario
developed to estimate the effect of this delay in the effective date,
estimated transfers from institutions to students, via the Federal
government, would be reduced by approximately $9.3 million for the 2017
and 2018 loan cohorts because of the slight reduction in claims from
the application of the State law-based standard and the change in the
effective date of the financial protection provisions as reflected in
the assumptions presented in Table 1. The costs of providing financial
protection were not quantified in the RIA for the 2016 final
regulations, and the Department has no additional data to estimate
costs institutions may avoid from the delayed effective date of the
financial protection provisions. Given the limited history of borrower
defense claims and recovery actions and numerous factors that affect
the cost for individual institutions, the Department believed that
quantifying the cost of providing financial protection would provide a
false sense of precision. As noted in the 2016 final regulations and
the NPRM, there are several ways for institutions to provide financial
protection to the Department, including some that may be developed in
the future. The price of this protection would likely vary by the size
of the institution and the institution's existing financial
relationships with parties who could provide the financial protection.
Other key elements that contribute to the uncertain cost of financial
protection overall are the distribution of borrower defense claims, the
type of institutions involved, the applicability of specific financial
protection triggers, and the Department's pursuit of recoveries. The
Department recognizes that the delayed effective date will postpone the
impact of the financial protection provisions on institutions. This
would be a fraction of the total protection expected to be generated
under the rule as some of the triggers are tied to the production of
certain performance measures such as gainful employment rates and there
would be some time, possibly months, between the effective date and the
next release of rates. The recovery assumption always assumed some
ramping up of financial protection as different metrics became
available for application, so the change in effective date will affect
the early years when recoveries were assumed to be smaller. Borrowers
are not affected by institutions' delay in incurring the costs of
financial protection, and the Department believes it is worth the cost
to taxpayers from reduced recoveries described in the Net Budget Impact
in the RIA to reconsider the financial protection provisions and
appropriately balance the costs to institutions with protection of
borrowers and taxpayers.
Net Budget Impact
As described in the NPRM, to estimate the net budget impact of the
delay in the effective date to July 1, 2019, the Department developed a
scenario that revised the primary estimate assumptions from the 2016
final regulations for the affected 2017 to 2019 cohorts, as was done
for the one-year delay described in the IFR. The Department has
reviewed the comments it received, particularly those about the
potential impacts and estimation of the effects of the delay and
responded in the Analysis of Comments and Changes section and this RIA.
However, the Department believes that the assumptions for the scenario
to estimate the net budget impact on the student loan program from the
delay from July 2018 to July 2019 remain appropriate and reasonable.
As before, the Department applies an assumed level of school
conduct that could generate borrower defense claims, borrower claims
success, and recoveries from institutions (respectively labeled as
Conduct Percent, Borrower Percent, and Recovery Percent in Table 1) to
the PB 2018 loan volume estimates to generate the estimated net
borrower defense claims for each loan cohort, loan type, and sector.
The assumptions for the primary scenario from the 2016 final
regulations were the basis for the PB2018 baseline that assumed the
final regulations would go into effect on July 1, 2017. The scenario
developed for the NPRM is designed to capture the incremental change
from the one-year delay in the IFR associated with the further one-year
delay in the effective date to July 1, 2019. Compared to the scenario
developed for the IFR, recoveries are reduced by an additional two
percent for the 2017 and 2018 cohorts, all of the 2018 cohort is
subject to the State law-based standard, and the affected portion of
the 2019 cohort is subject to the current, State law-based standard and
reduced recoveries at the five percent level used for the one-year
delay in the IFR. Table 1 presents assumptions for the primary estimate
from the final regulations and the revised estimate for the delay from
July 1, 2018 to July 1, 2019, in the effective date. In this scenario,
the conduct percent is 90 percent of the primary scenario from the
final regulations and the borrower percent is the same. The financial
protection provided was always expected to increase over time, so the
delayed effective date in the near term is not expected to
significantly affect the amount of recoveries over the life of any
particular loan cohort, limiting any net budget impact from the delay.
To estimate the potential reduction in recoveries related to the
proposed delayed effective date, we reduced recoveries for the affected
portion of the 2017 and 2018 cohorts by seven percent for the private
not-for-profit and proprietary sectors and by five percent for the 2019
cohort. As in the 2016 final regulations and the IFR, recoveries from
public institutions were held constant at 75 percent across scenarios.
[[Page 6468]]
Table 1--Revised Assumptions for One-Year Delay From July 1, 2018 to July 1, 2019
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2017 2018 2019
Cohort -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Pub/Priv NFP Prop Pub/Priv NFP Prop Pub/Priv NFP Prop
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Conduct Percent:
Final Primary....................................... 3.0 20 2.4 16 2.0 13.6
Delay to 2019....................................... 2.7 18 2.16 14.4 1.8 12.24
Borrower Percent:
Final Primary....................................... 35 45 36.8 47.3 36.8 47.3
Delay to 2019....................................... 35 45 36.8 47.3 36.8 47.3
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Pub Priv/Prop Public Priv/Prop Pub Priv/Prop
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Recovery Percent:
Final Primary....................................... 75 23.8 75 23.8 75 23.8
Delay to 2019....................................... 75 22.134 75 22.134 75 24.871
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The net budget impact associated with these effects of the one-year
delay in the effective date on the borrower defense provisions only is
approximately -$46.1 million from the 2017 to 2019 loan cohorts.
As the amount and composition of borrower defense claims and
estimated recoveries over the lifetime of the relevant loan cohorts are
not expected to change greatly due to the delayed effective date, the
Department does not estimate an economically significant net budget
impact from the delay itself, with a potential net budget impact
related to borrower defense claims of -$46.1 million in reduced costs
for the affected cohorts. This represents the incremental change
associated with the one-year delay from July 1, 2018, to July 1, 2019.
If compared to the PB 2018 baseline, the savings would be approximately
-$78.8 million.
The closed school automatic discharge provisions were the other
significant source of estimated net budget impact in the 2016 final
regulations. Under credit reform scoring, the modification to older
cohorts for the automatic discharge provision estimated to cost $364
million was expected to occur in FY 2017 in the PB 2018. As a result of
the delay in the effective date, the Department will not execute the
modification in FY 2017.
Moving the execution of the modification beyond FY 2017 will
require a new cost analysis with economic assumptions from the fiscal
year of the execution. This will result in a change of cost, but at
this point it is not possible to know the discount rates in future
fiscal years, so the cost of the modification will be determined in the
year that it is executed. While the actual cost of the future
modification cannot be determined at this time, the Department did
approximate the effect of the delay by shifting the timing of the
relevant discharges back by a year and recalculating a modification
using the discount rates and economic assumptions used for the
calculation of the PB2018 modification. When calculated in this manner,
the delay in the modification to July 2018 described in the IFR
resulted in estimated savings of less than $10 million. Using the same
approach, the delay to July 2019 is expected to save approximately $15
million above the savings from the initial one-year delay.
As the delay does not change the substance of the automatic
discharge, we would expect the amount and composition of loans affected
by the automatic discharge not to change significantly. The closed
school three-year automatic discharge provisions were applicable to
loans made on or after November 1, 2013, and were not linked to the
effective date of the final regulations. Therefore, delaying the
effective date of those provisions will not change the set of loans
eligible for this automatic discharge. Additionally, borrowers would
have the ability to apply for a closed school discharge before July 1,
2019, if they did not want to wait for the automatic discharge to be
implemented. For future cohorts, the delay is not significant as the
three-year period will fall beyond the delayed effective date. Any
significant change to the estimated net budget impact associated with
the closed school automatic discharge depends on any substantive
changes made to the provisions as a result of the current rulemaking
process and changes to economic assumptions when the modification is
executed.
Consistent with Executive Order 13771 (82 FR 9339, February 3,
2017), we have determined that this rule will result in cost savings.
Therefore, this rule would be considered an Executive Order 13771
deregulatory action.
Accounting Statement
In evaluating whether a regulation is economically significant, a
key consideration is whether the annual effect in any given year is
over $100 million.
To evaluate this, the Department looked at the difference in the
undiscounted cash flows related to the death, disability, and
bankruptcy (DDB) claims in which borrower defense claims are included
for the one-year delay established in the IFR and the one-year delay
scenario established in this notice and described under the heading
``Net Budget Impact''. The difference from subtracting this delay
scenario from the IFR one-year delay scenario for the 2017 to 2019 loan
cohorts is summarized in Table 2.
Table 2--Difference in Undiscounted Net Cashflows for the 2017 to 2019 Loan Cohorts From the One-Year Delay in 2016 Borrower Defense Rule to July 1, 2019
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2017 FY 2018 FY 2019 FY 2020 FY 2021 FY 2022 FY 2023 FY 2024 FY 2025 FY 2026
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Change in DDB Cashflow........................................ 159 7,489 496,637 637,361 538,468 6,004,802 9,525,520 4,668,143 2,156,009 3,003,657
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 6469]]
Table 3 shows the effects when those differences in the DDB
cashflows are discounted at 7 and 3 percent and annualized.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Category Benefits
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Institutions may not incur compliance
costs or costs of obtaining financial
protection until the rule is in effect. Not Quantified
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Category Costs
------------------------------------------------------------------------
7% 3%
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Continued use of State-law based
standard
Delay in providing consumer information
about institutions' performance and
practices Not Quantified
Potential decreased awareness and usage
of closed school and false
certification discharges
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Savings associated with delay in -9.5 -9.51
compliance with paperwork requirements.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Category Transfers
------------------------------------------------------------------------
7% 3%
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Reduction in transfers from the Federal -3.5 -3.8
government to affected borrowers in the
2017 to 2019 cohorts that would have
been partially borne by affected
institutions via reimbursements........
Reduced reimbursements from affected -1.2 -1.3
institutions to affected students, via
the Federal government as loan cohorts
2017 to 2019 are subject to the
existing borrower defense regulation...
Delay in closed school automatic -14.8 -14.8
discharge implementation from 2018 to
2019...................................
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
As indicated in the Paperwork Reduction Act section published in
the 2016 final regulations, the assessed estimated burden was 253,136
hours, affecting both institutions and individuals, with an estimated
cost of $9,458,484. The table below identifies the regulatory sections,
OMB Control Numbers, estimated burden hours, and estimated costs of
those final regulations.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Estimated cost
$36.55/hour
Regulatory section OMB Control No. Burden hours institution,
$16.30/hour
individual
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
668.14..................................... 1845-0022 1,953........................ 71,382
668.41..................................... 1845-0004 5,346........................ 195,396
668.171.................................... 1845-0022 3,028........................ 110,673
668.175.................................... 1845-0022 60,560....................... 2,213,468
682.211.................................... 1845-0020 5,784........................ 211,405
682.402.................................... 1845-0020 1,838........................ 67,179
685.222.................................... 1845-0142 249 (Individuals)............ 4,059
685.222.................................... 1845-0142 800 (Institutions)........... 29,240
685.300.................................... 1845-0143 179,362...................... 6,555,681
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total..................................................... 258,920...................... 9,458,484
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cost savings due to delayed effective date excluding 682.211 253,136...................... 9,247,079
early implementation allowed.
Burden remaining.............................................. 5,784........................ 211,405
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
This final rule delays the effective date of the implementation of
all of the cited regulations and will result in a cost savings in the
total amount of $9,458,484. However, 34 CFR 682.211(i)(7) which was
included in the 2016 final regulations, regarding mandatory forbearance
based on a borrower defense claim, with an estimated 5,784 hours and
$211,405 cost, was designated for early implementation. Lenders may
have elected early implementation and, therefore, those specific costs
and hours remain applicable and have been subtracted from the overall
estimated cost savings. Based on the delayed effective date of July 1,
2019, the revised estimated annual cost savings to institutions and
individuals is $9,247,079 ($9,458,484-$211,405) with an estimated
burden hours savings of 253,136 (258,920-5,784).
Accessible Format: Individuals with disabilities may obtain this
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audiotape, or compact disc) on request to the contact person listed
under FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT.
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
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well as all other documents of this Department published in the Federal
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You may also access documents of the Department published in the
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[[Page 6470]]
Specifically, through the advanced search feature at this site, you can
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List of Subjects
34 CFR Part 668
Administrative practice and procedure, Colleges and universities,
Consumer protection, Grant programs--education, Loan programs--
education, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Selective Service
System, Student aid, Vocational education.
34 CFR Part 674
Loan programs--education, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements,
Student aid.
34 CFR Parts 682 and 685
Administrative practice and procedure, Colleges and universities,
Loan programs--education, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements,
Student aid, Vocational education.
Dated: February 9, 2018.
Betsy DeVos,
Secretary of Education.
[FR Doc. 2018-03090 Filed 2-9-18; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 4000-01-P