Wednesday, September 17, 2008

MEFA Resumes Offering Private Loans

MEFA, the Massachusetts Education Financing Authority, announced yesterday that it is once again offering private education loans to families. MEFA has secured $400 million in funds through the sale of bonds.The press release states that with this sale of bonds, MEFA has "completed the most significant private student loan transaction made without state credit support since September of 2007. Disruptions in the capital markets, linked to the sub prime mortgage crisis, delayed lenders nationwide in announcing 2008-2009 academic year education loan availability."

MEFA is offering loans for the current Fall semester, as well as forth upcoming Spring semester.

In a July 28th press release, Executive Director Thomas Graf, announced that MEFA at that ime was unable to offer private education loans, as MEFA had failed to secure financing for the 2008-2009 academic year. Graf stated that MEFA would continue to pursue financing. He explained, " Though the unprecedented and continuing disruptions in the capital markets are creating new and significant challenges for us, we continue to work tirelessly and diligently to raise the financing necessary to offer low-cost education loans."

On April 15th of this year, MEFA announced that it was suspending its participation in the FFELP loan program (Stafford, PLUS and GRADPLUS loans) effective July 1, 2008 and would immediately stop accepting FFELP Consolidation loans. MEFA has not resumed offering FFELP loans.

Tuesday, September 16, 2008

House Approves Extension of Student Loan Access Act

Yesterday the House passed an extension of the Ensuring Continued Access to Student Loans Act, HR 6889, by a vote of 368 to 4. The act which was signed in to law early this summer by President Bush, was a response to the impact the credit crisis has had in the past year on student loan companies and the fear it would effect the availability of student loans through the Federal Family Education Loan Programs (FFELP programs). The FFELP programs include Federal Stafford Loans (Subsidized and Unsubsidized), PLUS Loans and GRADPLUS loans. Since the beginning of the year 134 lenders have exited the FFELP program or suspended some or all of their FFELP programs.

ECASL Act was originally approved for one year in a effort to ensure that families seeking FFELP loans for the 2008-2009 academic year would be able to access these loans during the lending crisis caused by the sub-prime mortgage crisis. The extension is for one year and is an effort to assist families of high school students who are beginning to plan for the 2009-2010 academic year.

With continued announcements of lenders exiting the FFELP program, as well as, loan companies suspending or ending their private loan programs (CampusDoor being the most recently private loan program to end), the extension comes as good news.

This law gives the Secretary of Education the authority to implement the lender of last resort provisions, when a college finds that its students/parents are not able to find a lender to provide FFELP loans. It also allows the Secretary of Education to purchase student loans from lenders, which would result in lenders having the capital needed to offer FFLEP loans.

Thursday, September 11, 2008

Obama outlines broad plan for US education - The Boston Globe

Senator Obama provides a broad overview of his plans for education and responds to plans put forth by Senator McCain in a recent speech he gave in Ohio.