Pubdate: Fri, 18 Sep 2009 Source: Journal Gazette, The (Fort Wayne, IN) Copyright: 2009 The Journal Gazette Contact: http://www.journalgazette.net/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/908 Author: Sylvia A Smith, Washington editor Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?225 (Students - United States) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Mark+Souder HOUSE BILL SHIFTS STUDENT LENDING WASHINGTON - Students will turn to Uncle Sam, not private lenders, for loans to pay for their college educations, the House voted Thursday. The legislation is a blow to major banks and student loan giant Sallie Mae, which will be cut out of a large part of the $92 billion business. The bill also eases restrictions on students who are convicted of drug possession, erasing a 10-year-old provision authored by Rep. Mark Souder, R-3rd, that limits their access to federally guaranteed student loans. But Souder said he has an agreement with the author of the bill to resurrect the restriction for people convicted of a felony not a misdemeanor possession charge. He said that would probably mean the restriction would apply to people convicted of possession of cocaine and meth but not marijuana. But he said the restriction against loans for students convicted of drug possession likely would not have withstood a court test. Rep. George Miller, D-Calif., chairman of the Education Committee, said he has agreed to negotiate with Souder over the provision after the bill is acted on by the Senate. The legislation keeps the restrictions on loans to students with repeated convictions for selling drugs. The House voted 253-171 to change the lending policy, which has been in effect since the 1970s when the federal government began subsidizing private lenders that make college loans. Souder and Reps. Dan Burton, R-5th, and Mike Pence, R-6th, opposed the bill. Changing the policy so Washington is the direct lender would allow the government to shift tens of billions of dollars in savings to student aid over the next decade, the bill's sponsors said. Republicans said the change would end up costing taxpayers more. Burton said it would kill jobs, including in Indiana, where Sallie Mae employs 2,300 people in Fishers and Muncie. Sallie Mae had warned that stripping it of the student loan business would result in a 30 percent cut in its workforce nationwide. "More than 30,000 private-sector jobs are directly affected by what you're going to do today," Burton told House members. "In the state of Indiana, it's 2,356 jobs. ... I don't understand, at a time of economic difficulty, you want to do something that's going to put more people out of work." Souder, a member of the committee that wrote the bill, said the legislation "is the beginning of the creation of a national bank, and that there is no logical reason why every other lending category won't become a national bank, too. That's the big gulp we are hearing here and in many other areas, a massive government takeover in category after category." But Democrats and President Obama said the legislation will protect student loans from upheaval in the financial markets and will free up money for other student aid. The change will save the government $80 billion over 10 years, according to the Congressional Budget Office. Most of the savings would be used for programs such as Pell grants, which help low-income students pay college tuition. "This plan would end the billions upon billions of dollars in unwarranted subsidies that we hand out to banks and financial institutions," Obama said during a speech to students at the University of Maryland. "Instead, we're going to use that money to guarantee access to low-cost loans, no matter what the economy looks like." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake