Student Loan Borrower Assisstance
  • For Borrowers
    • Basics of Student Loans
      • Student Loans 101
      • Understanding Your Student Loan Situation
      • Federal Loans vs. Private Loans
    • Dealing with Student Loan Debt
      • Repaying Your Loans
      • Pausing Student Loan Payments
      • Default & Debt Collection
      • Loan Cancellation, Forgiveness & Bankruptcy
      • Private Student Loans & Other Education Debt
    • Find Help
      • Student Loan Toolkit
      • Help with Your Student Loans
      • File Complaints
      • Help Videos
      • Surviving Debt
      • Share Your Story
  • For Advocates
    • Tools & Resources to Use with Borrowers
      • Advocate Tools & Resources
      • Student Loan Law
      • Borrower Rights After the Supreme Court Ruling
      • NCLC Digital Library
    • Help with Cases
      • Case Consultation
      • Student Loan Law Listservs
      • Legal Aid Coalition
    • Trainings & Upcoming Events
      • Conference & Legal Aid Trainings
  • Updates & News
    • Student Loan Borrower News
    • Student Loan Reports, Issue Briefs, Resources
    • Subscribe
  • Our Work
    • NCLC’s Student Loan Borrower Assistance Project
    • Contact Us
    • NCLC.org

ICYMI: Fighting for Borrowers’ Rights in Big Sky Country

January 15, 2020

By Persis Yu and Seth Frotman

Right before the holidays, Montana Legal Services Association, National Consumer Law Center, and the Student Borrower Protection Center filed an amicus brief to support Montanans demanding justice for abuses by the Pennsylvania Higher Education Assistance Agency (PHEAA, a/k/a Fedloan Servicing) — a large, student loan servicing company that deprived these borrowers of  their rights under federal law to Income-Driven Repayment (IDR) and Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF).

In this case, the Montana Supreme Court is considering an appeal by student loan borrower and public defender James Reavis, who filed a complaint in Montana court to seek redress after PHEAA miscounted his student loan payments made in an effort to qualify for PSLF. These claims are similar to suits brought by the Massachusetts Attorney General and the New York Attorney General. PHEAA moved to dismiss the case, and the lower court court granted this dismissal, improperly reasoning that Reavis’ state law claims are preempted by federal law.

Our brief agrees with Mr. Reavis and his counsel that the trial court misread federal law, which clearly provides individual borrowers with the ability to use state laws prohibiting unfair and deceptive practices as a legal tool to demand justice from abusive student loan companies.

Our brief lays out the importance of IDR and the PSLF program for borrowers serving in their communities across the country, including in Montana. IDR is the largest and most effective safeguard against financial hardship for low-income student loan borrowers, irrespective of their occupation or employment status.  For borrowers who are unemployed or earn very low wages, IDR offers the promise of a zero dollar monthly “payment.”

For public service workers earning low wages, IDR is also a key component of PSLF. When workers complete ten years of public service and make income-driven loan payments during that time, as required by the program, the government should uphold its end of the bargain and forgive these borrowers’ loans.

However, loan servicers like PHEAA routinely deprive borrowers of these rights and thwart Congress’ intent to forgive these loans, as required by federal law. Borrowers have faced problems in both in enrolling in IDR Plans that help them make lower payments that they can afford in order to qualify for PSLF and in the PSLF applications themselves. For instance, only about 1% of PSLF applicants actually receive the promised discharge. The government is well aware of these problems, with a string of Government Accountability Office reports from 2015 through 2019 documenting the mismanagement of the PSLF Program from its inception. When PSLF does not work how it was intended, police officers, teachers, and other public servants are deprived their right to forgiveness under the lawn.

Because of these widespread issues, causes of action under state law are a critical lifeline for borrowers, especially when federal laws provides no legal recourse and federal agencies have no interest in protecting borrowers.

Because of these widespread issues, causes of action under state law are a critical lifeline for borrowers, especially when federal laws provides no legal recourse and federal agencies have no interest in protecting borrowers.

The fiasco surrounding PSLF illustrates this dynamic well — the Department of Education has repeatedly failed to hold servicers like PHEAA accountable, despite credible allegations of widespread abuse and mismanagement. While PHEAA argues that state laws are preempted, such preemption arguments by student loan servicers have already been rejected in cases brought by state law enforcement officials in Washington, Illinois, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, and Mississippi, and was rejected by the 7th Circuit Court of Appeals in an appeal of a private lawsuit earlier this year.

The Montana Supreme court should reject the trial court’s incorrect holding Reavis.  This decision would align with recent precedent and preserve access to justice for student loan borrowers across Big Sky Country.

###

Persis Yu was a staff attorney at NCLC and the director of NCLC’s Student Loan Borrower Assistance Project until January 2022 . 

Seth Frotman is the Executive Director of the Student Borrower Protection Center. He previously served as Assistant Director and Student Loan Ombudsman at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, where he led a government-wide effort to crack down on abuses by the student loan industry and protect borrowers.

This post originally appeared on December 18, 2019 at: https://protectborrowers.org/fighting-for-borrowers-rights-in-big-sky-country/

    Recent Posts

    Do you have Parent PLUS loans? Act now to lower your payments before options disappear.
    Dec 01, 2025
    New videos to help older people with student loan debt
    Nov 25, 2025
    What’s Happening with the SAVE Plan?
    Oct 29, 2025
    National Consumer Law Center
    facebook
    linkedin
    twitter
    rss

    Student Loan Borrower Assistance is a project of the National Consumer Law Center.

    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Donate
    • Privacy Policy

    © 2025, National Consumer Law Center, Inc., All rights reserved.

    NCLC and National Consumer Law Center are registered trademarks of National Consumer Law Center, Inc.

    Sign up for our newsletter

    Subscribe