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    The Supreme Court declined to allow cheaper student-loan payments for 8 million borrowers through Biden's new repayment plan

    By Ayelet Sheffey,

    2024-08-28

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    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=4Zj3Jk_0vDBFM2t00
    The Supreme Court allowed a block on lower student-loan payments in the SAVE plan to continue.
    • The Supreme Court declined to lift a block on payments through the SAVE student-loan repayment plan.
    • It comes after a group of GOP state attorneys general filed a lawsuit to block key parts of SAVE.
    • This means that millions of borrowers enrolled in SAVE could face higher payments.

    The nation's highest court said millions of student-loan borrowers still can't get lower monthly payments through a key relief program.

    On Wednesday, the Supreme Court said it would not lift a block on key provisions in President Joe Biden's SAVE income-driven repayment plan . The plan is intended to give 8 million enrolled borrowers lower payments and a shorter timeline for debt relief.

    The Supreme Court, in a one-paragraph order , said it would not override a ruling from the 8th Circuit Court of Appeals that blocked the plan in its entirety on July 18 in response to a lawsuit led by Missouri's attorney general, pending a final court decision. The 8th Circuit formally placed a preliminary injunction on the plan in early August.

    The Education Department did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Business Insider on the implications of this ruling.

    However, Solicitor General Elizabeth Prelogar wrote in a response to the Supreme Court that blocking the SAVE plan could come with significant costs to borrowers. The Education Department would be forced to recalculate millions of borrowers' payments, requiring a forbearance period during which interest would not accrue. Borrowers would not make any progress toward forgiveness through Public Service Loan Forgiveness or income-driven repayment plans.

    The Education Department has already placed SAVE borrowers on forbearance following the 8th Circuit's decision, but at the time, it was unclear how long the forbearance would last. The back-and-forth court rulings have promoted confusion among many borrowers who are struggling to plan for their futures.

    "I'm going to have to rebudget all over again," Alan Pedrick, a 41-year-old SAVE borrower, previously told BI . "And this is probably the most difficult time of my life as far as finances go with the cost of housing, the cost of vehicles, gas, food has shot up and now they want to go back and make us start repaying. It's kind of depressing, really."

    Read the original article on Business Insider
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    Comments / 233
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    Vic Sloan
    29d ago
    Like Rocky said, "You want to dance. You got to pay the band, You want to borrow, you got to pay the man." Everybody knows that.
    Melissa Taylor
    08-30
    The PPP loans were so abused, and guess who pays for that? US the taxpayers! It is so unfair that only business people get that kind of relief while people trying to better their lives so they can be privileged enough to make enough to pay taxes can not get a simple student loan relief. it is ridiculous, and Congress and the Supreme Court should be so ashamed to show their face.
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