The effects of the sequester have spread to the hallowed halls of education.
Both graduate students and the parents of undergrads have been
quietly receiving letters from the federal Department of Education. The
letters say the fees on their Direct PLUS loans from the government are
being raised as a direct result of the automatic budget cuts that kicked
in this month because Congress and the White House couldn't come to a
fiscal agreement.
"On August 2, 2011, Congress passed the Budget Control Act of 2011,
which put into place automatic federal budget cuts, known as the
'sequester.' While this law does not otherwise change the amount or
terms or conditions of your Direct Loan, it does raise loan fees on
Direct PLUS Loans first disbursed after March 1, 2013," reads a copy of
the letter obtained by FoxNews.com.
"Specifically, the fee on your loan will increase from 4.0 percent of
your loan amount to 4.204 percent. For example, the fee on a $10,000
PLUS loan will increase by $20.40 from $400.00 to $420.40," the letter
continues.
While the increase is slight, many families will still have to
tighten belts on already strained budgets, and some feel that they are
being punished for a stalemate between Democrats and Republicans in
Washington.
"The lack of action on both sides is an atrocity," Kansas resident
Russell Schroeder, who currently has two daughters in college and
received the letter, told FoxNews.com. "Everyone talks about
bipartisanship, but no one gives an inch. ..."
"If I managed our budget like Washington did, my family would be out on the street."
Critics of the recent cutbacks across the country as a result of the
sequester say that the cuts could have been avoided by cutting back on
wasteful spending.
A recent congressional report suggests that federal agencies could
have saved over $65 billion in 2012 had they listened to the audit
recommendations of their respective inspectors general.
In an oversight committee meeting last week, the Department of
Education's inspector general, Kathleen Tighe, testified that there were
"longstanding challenges" in the department's response to audits, which
have identified nearly $200 million in federal student aid fraud since
2009.
And the unnecessary spending seems to be across the board. In spring
2012, the Government Accountability Office released a series of reports
that pointed out programs with excessive costs that could be cut and, in
turn, enhance revenue in the billions.
Schroeder says that even the little increase on an already high loan will make staying within a family budget tough.
"With inflation, this adds up. Five years ago, $25 bought you four
bags of groceries," he said. "Now, you're lucky if it will buy you one
bag. ..."
"We are getting into a desperate time. Every penny we have to spend on something is precious."
The sequester-related loan fee hike comes at a time when student loan
debt has become a hefty strain on family households. It has surpassed
credit card debt in 2010, with Americans owing about $1 trillion and 13
percent of borrowers defaulting on their loans.
And the cuts could affect students even more in the coming academic
year, with a 5 percent cut on funding for federal work study and
supplemental education programs.
"The cut will come from the overall pool of funding, so many schools
will receive less funding and many of them are going to be given a
smaller piece of the pot," Megan McClean, director of policy and federal
relations for the National Association of Student Financial Aid
Administrators, told FoxNews.com. "Schools are sending out award letters
to students saying they have been accepted, but the number will be
lower by the time they start. ..."
"Students are making decisions now with figures that will be less at the start of the next academic year."
By: Perry Chiaramonte, FOXNews.com