Without action, interest rates on Stafford loans will double, adding an average of $1,000 per year to college cost for 2,205 residents of Framingham
On July 1st, 2,205 Framingham students will see their student loan interest rates double if U.S. Senator Scott Brown and his Republican colleagues in the Senate continue blocking plans to extend the current low interest rates.
At the end of the month, interest rates on new loans are set to double from 3.4% to 6.8%, adding an average of $1,000 each year to the cost of attending college. Republican U.S. Senator Brown has already joined his GOP colleagues in voting to block legislation that would extend the lower rate. Currently, 195,000 students across the Commonwealth receive Stafford loans.
“Scott Brown should stand with Framingham families, not Washington, DC Republicans, and stop blocking efforts to keep loan interest rates low and college affordable for middle-class families.” said Massachusetts Democratic Party Chair John Walsh. “His political games are going to cost 2,205 college students in Framingham an average of $1,000 a year."
Republican Senator Scott Brown has already voted to block legislation that would have extended the current 3.4% interest rate and prevented the rate from spiking to 6.8%. Brown’s own proposal to keep the rate at its current level does not provide anywhere near the $6 billion required to pay for the legislation, according to the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office. Massachusetts college student Brendan Concannon called on Brown today to abandon his phony proposal and stop blocking real efforts to keep rates low.
“My message to Scott Brown is clear – don’t double my rate,” said Concannon, a Bridgewater State University student and South Shore Regional Director of the College Democrats of Massachusetts. “College is expensive enough as it is, I don’t need Washington making it any tougher.”
Kim Poness
12:58 pm on Friday, June 22, 2012
I am so confused. The cost of college is staggering enough without doubling the interest rates on student loans. But . . . does this mean that the interest rates on the loans my son and daughter currently have will double? Or just new loans?
Jim Rizoli
3:46 pm on Friday, June 22, 2012
I would think just new loans.
Any idea why it going up....that is the real consideration point.
Is it teachers salaries? How about seeing what the school thinks about it?
Sometimes we try to put the blame on the wrong people.
Sort it out first and then find out who to blame.
Jim@ccfiile.com
trollingtherizzolis
4:42 pm on Friday, June 22, 2012
we don't have to rely on what you "would think", jim.
we aren't talking about tuition going up - we are talking about interest rates on loans. i pray to jesus you understand this invalidates your rhetorical question regarding teachers' salaries.
interest rates are going up july 1st because in 2007 Democrats passed the College Cost Reduction and Access Act of 2007, which reduced by half the interest rates on subsidized federal Stafford loans. that legislation is now up for renewal and republicans are voting against it. screw it, right, let the poor stay poor and not get an education. we can control them better this way. but yes, please extend tax cuts for the "job creators".
Kim, it's only for borrowing starting july 1st and on.
Kim Poness
9:21 pm on Friday, June 22, 2012
At the end of the day, doubling the interest rate on federally subsidized student loans is akin to adding a tax on education. Is that too far a leap to make? I'm confused (again and still) why the Republicans would vote against this!
@trolling - thanks for the clarification and background. I hope you listen to Susan and change your account to reflect your real name :)
Jim Rizoli
2:46 pm on Saturday, June 23, 2012
Trolling has left the building.
Jim@ccfiile.com
Maria Gutemberg
12:03 pm on Monday, June 25, 2012
hi kim, my pleasure, and i agree with you on the tax on education point.
my account was suspended before i had a chance to change my username, but all is all, and here i am.