Washington,  DC - Congressman Bobby Schilling (IL-17) today voted in favor of a bill  to prevent a scheduled July 1 hike in interest rates on Stafford  student loans.  Under a 2007 law, the interest rate on these subsidized  loans to undergraduate students was decreased from 6.8% to 3.4% through  June 30, at which time under the law the interest rates will increase.   Without Congressional action, these interest rates will return to  previous levels and double on July 1.
 
 "As a parent, the increasing  cost of tuition and students' mounting debt are serious problems to  me," Schilling said.  "Also serious is the fact that once kids graduate  from college, they enter a tough job market where about half of them are  left jobless or are underemployed, in addition to starting out  thousands of dollars in the hole.  Washington should work to ensure that  all Americans, including these young men and women, have the  opportunity to succeed, and that our economy is growing and creating new  jobs for them to pursue."
 
 To pay for the $6 billion,  one-year extension, H.R. 4628, the Interest Rate Reduction Act, cuts  from a program in the Administration's health care reform law that has  been criticized as a 'slush fund' with little oversight or purpose.   Already signed into law is bipartisan legislation that takes money from the fund, and President Obama's Fiscal Year 2013  budget also proposed cutting it by more than $4 billion.  Schilling  joined 214 Republicans and Democrats in supporting low interest rates  for students.
 
 "This bill will keep student  loan rates low without raising taxes on the folks we are asking to lead  us into economic recovery and give these kids jobs," Schilling said.   "I urge the Senate to act on this, and to move on the more than 25  House-passed jobs bills sitting in the Senate that will cut wasteful  spending and help businesses grow and hire new employees, providing more  hope for our unemployed friends, neighbors, and recent graduates."
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