Friday, May 11, 2007

SEIU Report on Nova Student Loan Program Sparks Concern and Underscores Need for Transparency

MIAMI--(BUSINESS WIRE)--A report released today by SEIU unveiled concerns with Nova Southeastern
University’s loan practices that involve
potential conflicts of interest, including many of the same concerns
currently being investigated by the New York Attorney General at other
universities, including a Nova financial aid call center run by a
private lender and additional bureaucracy for students who wish to use
non-preferred lenders.


CONCERNS:



Nova law school dean Joseph D. Harbaugh sits on the board of directors
of Access Group, one of the school’s
preferred lenders. A 2001 report by Harbaugh discussed how he brought
in the Access Group as a consultant for law students to discuss
budgeting and debt, with the goal of keeping student debt down.


As identified in the Miami Herald, Sallie Mae runs a Nova student loan
call center. Sallie Mae also appears to run Nova’s
graduate student loan website. Although the webpage has the NSU logo
and Office of Student Financial Assistance web banner at the top of
the page, the site is run through the Sallie Mae “e-fao.com”
site and says “powered by Sallie Mae”
in the lower right corner.


Students who wish to use a lender other than one on the preferred list
must complete additional paperwork. Nova’s
Guide to Student Financial Aid cautions students that choosing a
lender not listed on Nova’s preferred list
may result in a longer processing time.


Carl Buck, the Vice President of Peterson’s,
a subsidiary of Nelnet, presented a free seminar to Nova students on “The
Secrets of Financial Aid” in Fall 2006.



Nova should take this opportunity to be more transparent in how it
structures its student loans. The Florida state Attorney General has
started an investigation of Florida state schools and is calling on
universities across the state to sign an agreement to manage loans
without conflicts of interest.


A report released today unveiled concerns with Nova Southeastern
University’s loan practices that involve
potential conflicts of interest. SEIU researchers uncovered the
worrisome report on Nova’s student loan
practices as part of the growing concern over Nova’s
commitment to the community, as more than 100 low-wage service workers
were turned away from their jobs after forming a union.


New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo started investigations into the
relationship between colleges and lenders nation-wide, revealing that
preferred lender lists can increase costs for students.

Labels: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home