Bipartisan coalition supports relief for vets suffering service-related total and permanent disability

DES MOINES, IOWA (May 24, 2019) — Attorney General Tom Miller today joined a group of 51 attorneys-general in urging the US Department of Education to automatically forgive the student loans of veterans who became totally and permanently disabled in connection with their military service. The bipartisan coalition issued its letter as the country prepares to honor fallen troops on Memorial Day. 

Last year, DOE identified more than 42,000 veterans as eligible for student loan-relief due to a service-related total and permanent disability, the attorneys-general note in their letter to Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos. Fewer than 9,000 of those veterans had applied to have their loans discharged by April 2018, however, and more than 25,000 had student loans in default.

The letter calls on DOE to develop a process to automatically discharge the student loans of veterans determined by the Department of Veterans Affairs to be eligible for such relief. While the automatic-discharge process is in development, the letter proposes, DOE should halt debt-collection efforts targeting disabled veterans, and clear their credit-reports of any negative reporting related to their student loans.

“We’re advocating a common-sense approach that would eliminate the burden of unnecessary paperwork and ensure that all eligible disabled veterans can get relief,” AG Miller said.

Under federal law, DOE is required to discharge the federal student-loans of veterans determined by the Department of Veterans Affairs to be unemployable (or totally and permanently disabled) due to a service-connected condition. Although DOE currently requires disabled veterans to take affirmative steps to apply for a loan discharge, those steps are not required by law.

The attorneys-general note that the federal government has taken some steps to make it easier for eligible veterans to secure student loan-relief. According to their letter, however, an automatic-discharge process that gives individual veterans an opportunity to opt out for personal reasons “would eliminate unnecessary paperwork burdens and ensure that all eligible disabled veterans can receive a discharge.”

The letter supporting automatic student loan discharges for totally and permanently disabled veterans received support from enough attorneys general to become formal policy of the National Association of Attorneys General.   

“Proposals for automatic discharges with opt-out rights have bipartisan support in Congress and among leading veterans’ advocacy organizations,” the letter states. The veterans groups supporting such proposals have included: Vietnam Veterans for America, Veterans Education Success, The Retired Enlisted Association, High Ground Advocacy, and Ivy League Veterans Council.

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