Alltran Education, Inc. v. United States

 In the United States Court of Federal Claims
                                           No. 17-517
                                      Filed: August 2, 2017

*************************************
ALLTRAN EDUCATIONS, INC.,           *                               *              *
                                    *
       Plaintiff,                   *
                                    *
v.                                  *
                                    *
THE UNITED STATES,                  *
                                    *
       Defendant,                   *
                                    *
and                                 *
                                    *
CBE GROUP, INC., PREMIERE           *
CREDIT OF NORTH AMERICA, LLC,       *
GC SERVICES LIMITED PARTNERSHIP, *
FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS, *
INC., VALUE RECOVERY HOLDINGS, *
LLC, and WINDHAM PROFESSIONALS, *
INC.,                               *
                                    *
       Intervenor-Defendants.       *
*************************************

                                            ORDER

       On May 19, 2017, the Department of Education issued a press release that stated the
Secretary of the Department of Education planned to select a single student loan servicer. Court
Exhibit A. On that date, the Government filed a Notice, informing the court that the Department
of Education intended to take Corrective Action, by issuing an amended version of Solicitation
No. ED-FSA-16-R-0009 and conducting a new evaluation to be completed on August 25, 2017.
ECF 41.

        On May 31, 2017, the court issued an Order continuing the May 22, 2017 Preliminary
Injunction in the above captioned bid protest, because the court became aware of a New York Times
article indicating that “the Administration is considering moving responsibility for overseeing
more than $1 trillion in student debt from the Education Department to the Treasury Department.”
Court Exhibit B. Such action would have rendered the bid protest before the court moot.
Therefore, the preliminary injunction was issued to preserve the status quo, until the viability of
the debt collection contracts at issue is resolved. See Litton Sys., Inc. v. Sundstrand Corp., 750
F.2d 952, 961 (Fed. Cir. 1984) (“The function of preliminary injunctive relief is to preserve the
status quo pending a determination of the action on the merits.”).

       On August 1, 2017, however, the Department of Education announced that it was no longer
seeking to select a single student loan servicer and would be pursuing a new proposal that would
award separate contracts to one or more companies. Court Exhibits C, D. Once again, the
Department of Justice has failed to inform the court of these developments.

       Since the date of the Government’s proposed action is only twenty-three days away, the
court orders the Government to provide the court and the parties a status report in the above
captioned case no later than the close of business on August 4, 2017.

       IT IS SO ORDERED.

                                                           s/Susan G. Braden
                                                           SUSAN G. BRADEN
                                                           Chief Judge




                                               2
Court Exhibit A
U.S. Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos Releases Amended Federal St...        https://www.ed.gov/news/press-releases/us-secretary-education-betsy-de...



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           MAY 19, 2017


           Contact: Press Office, (202) 401-1576, press@ed.gov (mailto: press@ed.gov)


           Today, the U.S. Department of Education formally amended Phase II of the federal student loan servicing
           solicitation. The amendment maintains superior customer service and key borrower protections while ensuring the
           project stays on budget, saving taxpayers more than $130 million over the next five years. The amendment further
           clarifies the Department's expectations of the eventual servicer and formally lists all requirements in the
           solicitation.

           U.S. Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos issued the following statement on the new amendment:

           "From day one, my priority as Secretary of Education has been to put students' needs first. This amended
           solicitation does just that. It maintains superior customer service and borrower protections while increasing
           oversight and protecting taxpayers.

           "The federal student loan servicing solicitation we inherited was cumbersome and confusing—with shifting
           deadlines, changing requirements and de-facto regulations that at times contradicted themselves. Internal and
           external stakeholders both agreed it was destined for a massive and unsustainable budget overrun.

           "In order to ensure the best outcome for federal student loan borrowers, it was necessary to rescind the previous
           guidance to free the Department to craft a solution that was more responsive to the needs of both customers and
           taxpayers.

           "With changes in the new amendment, we have simplified the process to ensure meaningful borrower protections
           while saving taxpayers more than $130 million over the next five years. Savings are expected to increase
           significantly over the life of the contract. Borrowers can expect to see a more user-friendly loan servicing interface,
           shorter email and call response times and an improved payment application method that will maximize the benefit
           of each payment the borrower makes. Our amendment makes no changes to repayment plan requirements.

           "I am committed to helping students meet their repayment obligations and reaching their academic goals while
           also making government more effective and efficient."




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           The amendment published today is the ninth amendment to the Department's federal student loan servicing
           solicitation. Federal law and regulations governing the procurement process prohibited Department officials from
           commenting on the new amendment until it was formally published today.

           FACT SHEET: STUDENT LOAN SERVICING RECOMPETE (http://www2.ed.gov/documents/press-releases
           /05192017-loan-servicing-recompete.pdf)

           The full amendment is available at: https://www.fbo.gov/index?tab=documents&tabmode=form&subtab=core&
           tabid=719f4f79f391241bfd02c15f36680081 (https://www.fbo.gov/index?tab=documents&tabmode=form&
           subtab=core&tabid=719f4f79f391241bfd02c15f36680081)


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Court Exhibit B
                      https://nyti.ms/2s10GHH




Trump Administration Considers Moving
Student Loans from Education
Department to Treasury
By JESSICA SILVER-GREENBERG, STACY COWLEY and PATRICIA COHEN MAY 25, 2017
The Trump administration is considering moving responsibility for overseeing more
than $1 trillion in student debt from the Education Department to the Treasury
Department, a switch that would radically change the system that helps 43 million
students finance higher education.

    The potential change surfaced in a scathing resignation memo sent late Tuesday
night by James Runcie, the head of the Education Department’s federal student aid
program. Mr. Runcie, an Obama-era holdover, was appointed in 2011 and
reappointed in 2015. He cut short his term, which was slated to run until 2020, after
clashing with the Trump administration and Betsy DeVos, the education secretary,
over this proposal and other issues.
    Elizabeth Hill, a spokeswoman for the Education Department, declined to
comment on his departure or on talks with Treasury.

    “The secretary is looking forward to identifying a qualified candidate to lead and
restore trust in F.S.A.,” Ms. Hill said, referring to federal student aid.

A shift in handling federal student aid is being weighed as the Trump administration
and Ms. DeVos consider overhauling the Department of Education. Mr. Trump’s
proposed budget for 2018 slashes funding for the department by nearly 50 percent.
Moving one of its core functions to Treasury would significantly diminish the
agency’s power. It could also alter the mission of the student loan program.

    “The reason the federal student aid programs live within the Education
Department is because that’s the agency that has as its goal increasing educational
opportunities within the United States,” said David Bergeron, who left the Education
Department in 2013 after 35 years. “That is not the Treasury Department’s goal. Its
job is to pay for the business of the government.”

    Scrapping or shrinking the Education Department has long been a popular
Republican goal, dating from the Reagan administration. President Trump
embraced the idea, saying in his book “Crippled America” that the department
should either be eliminated or have “its power and reach” cut. In February, a House
Republican introduced a bill to terminate the agency.

    In his resignation memo, a copy of which was obtained by The New York Times,
Mr. Runcie said that senior members of his department had met that day with
Treasury officials and discussed “holding numerous meetings and retreats” to
outline a process for “transferring all or a portion” of the student aid office’s
functions to the Treasury Department.

    “This is just another example of a project that may provide some value but will
certainly divert critical resources and increase operational risk in an increasingly
challenging environment,” Mr. Runcie wrote.

    Moving the federal student aid unit probably would require congressional
action. But even in a fractured Congress, it could win bipartisan support.
    The federal student aid office has been a lightning rod for criticism over the
effectiveness and expense of its debt collection programs. Several government audits
took issue with the department’s handling of its student aid programs. In 2015, for
example, the Government Accountability Office faulted the agency for not doing
enough to make students aware of all their repayment options. The Consumer
Financial Protection Bureau has also pressed for changes in how the department
manages its loan servicers.

    The Education Department backs and originates $1.4 trillion in student loans.
Since 2010, the government has directly funded the loans, cutting out the private
lenders that previously doled out government-backed aid. But the agency outsources
the work of collecting payments on the loans, and the companies it works with have
a troubled record.

    During the Obama administration, the idea of shifting responsibility for the
student loan program to the Treasury Department had some supporters. As the
number and dollar amount of student loans grew, the Education Department found
itself managing more than a trillion dollars in assets, a portfolio bigger than most
banks.

    “The Education Department is a policy shop with a trillion-dollar bank on the
side,” said Rohit Chopra, a former student loan ombudsman at the Consumer
Financial Protection Bureau who also briefly worked for the Education Department.

    For students, the move under consideration could simplify the convoluted
process of applying for federal student aid and repaying loans. A growing number of
borrowers are using income-based repayment plans, which require students to
submit information on their earnings. Putting federal student aid in the same
department as the Internal Revenue Service could make that easier. (A tool intended
to help students automatically import their tax information has been disabled for
months because of a security problem.)

    “I think it’s a good idea,” said James Kvaal, a former deputy under secretary of
education in the Obama administration. “Because the Education Department and
the I.R.S. are separated, we’ve built these clunky systems that get in the way of
      achieving the goals of the income-based program. Linking the two would be much
      easier for students, and have stronger integrity for taxpayers.”

           But critics, including a high level official from Mr. Obama’s Treasury
      Department, warned that the move could hurt students.

           “Moving the agency that is supposed to provide stewardship for student loan
      borrowers to an agency that is working on a shoestring with a skeletal crew strikes
      me as a recipe for a policy disaster,” said Sarah Bloom Raskin, who was the deputy
      Treasury Secretary under President Obama.

           Others worry about how students would fare under the Treasury Department.

           The Treasury Department recently conducted a pilot project in which its
      employees tried to collect on defaulted loans, a job the Education Department
      contracts out to private companies.

           The experiment, which began in mid-2015, did not end well.

           The Treasury Department hoped to increase collection rates and help borrowers
      better understand their repayment options. It failed on both goals. A control group
      of private collectors recovered more money and got more borrowers out of default.

           For now, even without the shift, some at the federal student aid office are
      rattled, according to one person who requested anonymity because he was not
      authorized to speak publicly. After Mr. Runcie resigned, at least one employee was in
      tears, the person said.

      A version of this article appears in print on May 26, 2017, on Page A19 of the New York edition with the
      headline: Plan Would Shift Student Loans to Treasury.




© 2017 The New York Times Company
Court Exhibit C
DeVos drops plan to overhaul student loan servicing - POLITICO   http://www.politico.com/story/2017/08/01/devos-student-loans-241221?...




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Court Exhibit D
DeVos abandons plan to award federal student loan servicing to a single company | PBS ...           Page 1 of 4




DeVos abandons plan to award federal student
loan servicing to a single company
BY ANDREW KREIGHBAUM, INSIDE HIGHER ED  August 2, 2017 at 3:28 PM EDT




U.S. Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos speaks at the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) in
National Harbor, Maryland, February 23, 2017. REUTERS/Joshua Roberts

The Department of Education plans to overhaul its system for federal student loan servicing
for the third time in the last year, officials announced Tuesday.

It will scrap a plan Secretary Betsy DeVos unveiled in May to award servicing of all federal
student loans to a single company. Instead, the department will award separate contracts



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DeVos abandons plan to award federal student loan servicing to a single company | PBS ...   Page 2 of 4



for database housing, system processing and customer service functions to one or more
companies possibly handling direct interactions with borrowers. The department plans to
deliver, meanwhile, on creating a single web portal for borrowers to make payments on
student loans regardless of their borrowers — a change promised by the Obama
administration last year and long sought by student advocates.

“Doing what’s best for students will always be our No. 1 priority,” DeVos said. “By starting
afresh and pursuing a truly modern loan-servicing environment, we have a chance to turn
what was a good plan into a great one.”

Current loan-servicing contracts are set to expire in 2019, but a department spokeswoman,
Liz Hill, said officials fully expect to have the procurement completed and contracts awarded
before then. That’s possible, she said, because of work already put into the process.

It’s not clear how many of the consumer protections included in two separate Obama
administration memos last year — such as requirements for specialized outreach to high-risk
borrowers — would be incorporated into the new procurement process.

The plans to have the new contracts
awarded before current contracts expire
                                                   “By starting afresh and
met with immediate skepticism from some            pursuing a truly modern loan-
observers.                                         servicing environment, we
                                                   have a chance to turn what
“We don’t know the details of the new plan,        was a good plan into a great
or whether it will retain the strong borrower      one.” — Education Secretary
protections included in the first version, but
                                                   Betsy DeVos
restarting the process midway will
absolutely mean delaying any future improvements for borrowers who deserve a better
experience now,” said Clare McCann, the deputy director for federal higher education policy
with New America’s education policy program and a former Obama administration official.

The Office of Federal Student Aid contracts with multiple private companies, nonprofit
servicers and state-based organizations to manage federal student loans. The four major




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servicers are Navient, Great Lakes Educational Loan Services Inc., Nelnet and the
Pennsylvania Higher Education Assistance Agency.

DeVos has taken heat since May from members of Congress and representatives from the
loan-servicing sector over the plan to pick a single servicer that would hire subcontractors to
collect loan payments. Department officials at the time argued that the plan would make
oversight of servicers by the government more efficient.

But the proposal found critics among both Republicans like Senator Roy Blunt of Missouri,
who argued that the system would remove choice and competition, and Democrats like
Massachusetts Senator Elizabeth Warren, who warned against creating a federal contractor
“too big to fail.”

Blunt and Warren were part of a bipartisan group of senators who introduced legislation
ahead of the department’s announcement Tuesday to block the single-servicer plan. Their
bill would instead require the participation of multiple loan servicers.

Wayne Johnson, the chief operating officer at the Office of Federal Student Aid since July,
said the department’s new procurement plan would allow for the introduction of the most
up-to-date technology and practices from the private sector into the loan-servicing system.

“When FSA customers transition to the new
processing and servicing environment in
                                                   Blunt and Warren were part of
2019, they will find a customer-support            a bipartisan group of senators
system that is as capable as any in the            who introduced legislation
private sector,” he said in a statement. “The      ahead of the department’s
result will be a significantly better              announcement Tuesday to
experience for students — our customers —          block the single-servicer plan.
and meaningful benefits for the American
taxpayer.”

Representative Virginia Foxx, a North Carolina Republican and chairwoman of the House
education and workforce committee, has been a frequent critic of the Office of Federal




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Student Aid. A spokesman for Foxx said the department made the right decision to cancel
the single-servicer proposal.

“Mr. Johnson is well aware of Chairwoman Foxx’s concerns with the FSA’s mismanagement,
and moving to a single servicer does not resolve these concerns or promote competition in
the marketplace for borrowers and taxpayers when it comes to repaying student loans,” the
spokesman said. “Chairwoman Foxx looks forward to working with Johnson, Secretary
DeVos and her colleagues in Congress to find a legislative solution that that ensures high-
quality service to borrowers.”

A task force from the National Association of Student Financial Aid Administrators about a
year ago examined challenges for borrowers in the student loan servicing system.

“One of the biggest challenges we identified is the fact that there were multiple servicers
with multiple systems,” said Justin Draeger, president and CEO of NASFAA.

NASFAA was not committed to a loan-servicing system involving either one or multiple
servicers. Draeger said the group’s highest priority is ensuring borrowers have the same
experience paying student loans regardless of their servicer.

Inside Higher Ed is a free, daily online publication covering the fast-changing world of higher
education. Read the original story here.



              Andrew Kreighbaum, Inside Higher Ed
              Andrew Kreighbaum is the federal policy reporter for Inside Higher Ed. Kreighbaum
              worked at The Investigative Reporting Workshop and received his master's in data
              journalism at the University of Missouri. Before getting his master's, Kreighbaum
              spent three years covering government and education at local papers in El Paso,
              McAllen and Laredo, Texas.

              ¬ @kreighbaum




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