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Thursday, February 2, 2012

Info Post
Sallie Mae has been charging borrowers $50 a month to have their private loans placed in forbearance. But thanks to an online petition - started by Stef Graf - that denounced the charges, Sallie Mae is rethinking the fees. Reporter Candice Choi wrote, "The change came after an online petition asking the company to drop the fee collected more than 77,000 signatures on Change.org."

But here's the question: why were they charging a whopping $50 a month in the first place?

And that question leads to even more questions . . .
This list of questions could be endless, so let's stop with those four. Suffice to say, fifty bucks for your average American ain't pocket change. That's why this fee, which was being applied to people who were already struggling to make payments in the first place, makes no sense.

To be clear, the fee isn't being suspended. It is, however, going to be applied to the balance of the loan. How that works is confusing. Because Choi explains, "[Sallie Mae] will now apply the money toward the borrower's loan balance once on-time payments are resumed for six months in a row." So, wait, if the loan is in forbearance, then the $50 they are charging won't apply? The charges will only apply once they begin paying and keep it up for 6 months? Again, how is this fair, and why are they allowed to do this?

Since this piece is laced with so many questions, here are a few more:
  • Why is Sallie Mae, which used to be a GSE (government sponsored entity), still using that name, Sallie Mae? It's no longer a GSE. It's a private company - it severed ties from the government entirely in 2004.  
  • Isn't that name misleading? So many borrowers took out loans with Sallie Mae - perhaps parents who had loans with the company still think it's part of the government. That seems a wee-bit misleading, right?
If the U.S. government hadn't given birth to Sallie Mae, this predatory, no-good company would have gone belly-up years ago. (Mind you, I am not a libertarian or a person who thinks government is the source of all evil - nope, didn't drink the Reaganite coolaid). But, seriously, this company is despised by customers (just do a search on tweets about Sallie Mae). It has been sued time and time again. And just recently, Sallie Mae decided to sue Sallie Mae! So why is it still in business?

All right, enough with the questions.

Sallie Mae has been visiting AEM a lot over these past few days, and that includes several visits from HQ. Who knows who is behind these Internet searches - could just be folks in their call centers who are in debt or sick of working for a dreadful loan shark.

But perhaps the loans sharks, who seem woefully out of touch, will consider the questions above. At least an activist can only hope, right?

Image Credit: "erin is eclectic"

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