- Education Sec. Miguel Cardona outlined his priorities for his department during a Thursday address.
- One of those priorities was college affordability, but broad student-loan forgiveness went unmentioned.
- Cardona did cite targeted loan forgiveness, along with implementing long-term improvements to forgiveness programs.
Education Secretary Miguel Cardona outlined priorities for his department in a speech delivered on Thursday. And while college affordability is a primary focus, broad student-loan forgiveness didn't make the cut.
Cardona delivered his first major address of 2022, during which he laid out how he plans to address four major priority areas for his department: supporting students through pandemic recovery, addressing opportunity and achievement gaps, ensuring higher education leads to successful careers, and making higher education more inclusive and affordable.
On the last item, Cardona acknowledged the soaring costs of college and how it can lead to a lifetime of student debt for some of those who seek a higher education. But he stopped short of detailing a plan for broad relief.
"It is also unacceptable to be burdened with unmanageable loan debt for several decades because you chose to earn a college degree," he said during his address. "Today, too many talented Americans are choosing against enrolling in higher education due to the fear of debt and the feeling that college is out of reach.
Cardona continued: "We maintain a posture of neglect when postsecondary education is out of reach for students and their families. This is un-American."
Here's how Cardona says he plans to tackle college affordability:
- Continue providing targeted student-loan relief to certain groups of borrowers, adding on to the $15 billion already canceled for those defrauded by for-profit schools and those with disabilities
- Enacting stricter enforcement on colleges that mislead and defraud borrowers
- Ensuring borrowers have loan repayment options that match their financial circumstances
- And implementing long-term improvements to loan forgiveness programs like the Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF) program and creating a strong Gainful Employment Rule to ensure borrowers have good job opportunities.
Cardona has already begun to carry out reforms to PSLF and has taken steps to hold universities. But President Joe Biden's campaign promise of $10,000 in student-loan relief for every federal borrower went unmentioned.
Along with the $15 billion in relief Cardona referenced, Biden has also extended the pause on student-loan payments three times, with the most recent extension being through May 1. And during that time, the Education Department prepared a memo on Biden's legal ability to cancel student debt broadly using executive action — but recently released documents found White House officials saw the memo in April and are choosing not to release it.
That prompted 85 Democratic lawmakers on Wednesday to not only call on Biden to release the memo, but to also cancel up to $50,000 in student debt per federal borrower before payments resume on May 1. The White House responded to that letter by noting that "no one has been required to pay a single dime" in federal loans under Biden, while adding that if Congress sends Biden a bill to cancel $10,000 in student debt per borrower — his campaign promise — he would be happy to do so.
It's unclear when, or if, federal borrowers will experience broad relief. When asked about the issue, Cardona has frequently said that "conversations are continuing" on the issue, but he has not commented on the student debt memo and remains focused on the targeted relief he has already begun to carry out — along with ensuring everyone can access a higher education.
"Students, today, with a greater sense of urgency, we re-commit to fulfill the promise to support you as you seek the education that will give you the tools to enjoy life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness," Cardona said. "Let's get to work."