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U.S. Supreme Court Won't Halt $6 Billion Student Debt Settlement

Submitted by jhartgen@abi.org on

The U.S. Supreme Court on Thursday refused to halt a legal settlement that would erase more than $6 billion in debt owed by former students of colleges — many of them for-profit institutions — who have said they were misled by schools about academics and job prospects, Reuters reported. The justices turned away a request from three colleges that are challenging a settlement between the U.S. Education Department and borrowers that linked the colleges to claims of "substantial misconduct," an allegation they dispute. Three of the schools identified in the settlement — for-profit Lincoln Educational Services Corp and American National University Inc. as well as nonprofit Everglades College Inc. — challenged the agreement after it was approved by a federal judge in California last November. Around 3,500 borrowers entitled to automatic loan discharge under the settlement attended one of the three schools. The decision was separate from a case pending before the high court over the legality of President Joe Biden's plan to cancel $430 billion in student debt for about 40 million borrowers. A ruling in that case is expected by the end of June.