Close X
Wednesday, December 4, 2024
ADVT 
National

Liberals Write Off $200 Million In Student Loans Feds Will Never Collect

Darpan News Desk, 16 Feb, 2018 01:27 PM
    OTTAWA — The federal government is writing off more than $200 million in outstanding student loan payments that officials will never be able to collect.
     
     
    Recently released spending documents show the government won't collect $203.5 million in debts from 34,240 students.
     
     
    It is the third time in the last four years that the government has had to write off outstanding student loans even as officials make concerted efforts to round up more money from borrowers.
     
     
    The government annually has to write off some of the $19 billion owing in student loans for a number of reasons: a debtor may file for bankruptcy, the debt itself passes a six-year legal limit on collection, or the debtor can't be found.
     
     
    The Liberals have looked to make it easier for graduates to pay off their loans — and the government to collect the cash — by increasing the minimum annual income they have to make before they are required to make debt payments.
     
     
    The limit is now set at $25,000.
     
     
    The most recent annual report on the Canada Student Loans Program said that in the 2014-2015 fiscal year, the government provided 489,000 full-time students with $2.7 billion in loans and a further $20.9 million in loans to 12,100 part-time students.
     
     
    Borrowers typically take between nine and 15 years to fully pay off their loan and the period usually overlaps with when Canadians are most likely to start a family.
     
     
    The Canadian Alliance of Student Associations called on the government late last month to also give new parents a break from student loan payments when they are on parental leave, even if they are receiving employment insurance benefits.
     
     
    Student groups have also asked the Liberals to make higher education more affordable, including requests to provide more financial help to Indigenous students.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    'Don't Patronize Me': Tempers Flare As Old, New B.C. Liberal Leadership Candidates Debate

    'Don't Patronize Me': Tempers Flare As Old, New B.C. Liberal Leadership Candidates Debate
    VANCOUVER — Tempers flared at the B.C. Liberal leadership debate in Vancouver as veterans butted heads over the future of the party with newer faces calling for change.

    'Don't Patronize Me': Tempers Flare As Old, New B.C. Liberal Leadership Candidates Debate

    10 Safeway Stores To Be Shuttered In B.C. As Labour Negotiations Begin

    NEW WESTMINSTER, B.C. — A union representing Safeway employees in British Columbia says 10 stores in the province will be permanently closed as labour negotiations are set to begin.

    10 Safeway Stores To Be Shuttered In B.C. As Labour Negotiations Begin

    CP Rail Fires Conductor Again, This Time After Sexy Social Media Pictures And Posts

    CP Rail Fires Conductor Again, This Time After Sexy Social Media Pictures And Posts
    CALGARY — A Canadian Pacific Railway conductor who was fired following a 2014 derailment in Banff and later reinstated has been dismissed again — this time over social media posts that included several sexy modelling photos.

    CP Rail Fires Conductor Again, This Time After Sexy Social Media Pictures And Posts

    Vancouver Police Charge Five In Bid To Thwart Pop-up Pot Market In City Square

    Vancouver police say they are putting an end to an open-air marijuana market that has grown in recent weeks in a prominent downtown plaza.

    Vancouver Police Charge Five In Bid To Thwart Pop-up Pot Market In City Square

    Snow Storm Left Dozens Stranded At Vancouver Island Ski Resort

    Snow Storm Left Dozens Stranded At Vancouver Island Ski Resort
    Chairlift operations resumed Monday on Vancouver Island's Mount Washington after a weekend snowstorm left dozens stranded.

    Snow Storm Left Dozens Stranded At Vancouver Island Ski Resort

    Man Begins Dog Sled Journey Across Canada: 'We're Going To Face Some Adversities'

    Man Begins Dog Sled Journey Across Canada: 'We're Going To Face Some Adversities'
    A New Brunswick man left northern Manitoba Monday on a highly unlikely journey home — a 3,000-kilometre trek by dog sled.

    Man Begins Dog Sled Journey Across Canada: 'We're Going To Face Some Adversities'