Students loaded down with debt that are seeking loans to finish school may have found some help yesterday after the U.S. House passed a bill designed to ease the credit squeeze. The timeliness of the measure was highlighted by the same-day announcement by Bank of America that it was pulling out of the private student lending business.
The House overwhelmingly passed HR 5715, or the Ensuring Continued Access to Student Loans Act of 2008, by a vote of 383-27 Thursday. The Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions has been sent a similar bill that is sponsored by Sen. Edward Kennedy, chair of the committee.
The approval of 5715 comes a day after Sen. Chris Dodd (D-Conn.) said in Senate testimony that college students could be scrambling to find funding for their education this fall (“Student Loans Drying Up, Dodd Warns,” April 17).
The legislation could make it easier for college students to get loans despite the exit from the business by such prominent players as BofA, Citi, and others. Dodd said that more than 50 lenders of federally-guaranteed loans and nearly 20 additional private student loan issuers have indicated that they intend to suspend their lending activities.
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Meanwhile, state loan guaranty agencies in Pennsylvania, Michigan, Montana and Texas have closed or put on moratorium their student loan programs, according to Dodd.
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