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Education A Washington Roundup

Deficit Reduction Act Expected to Drop Student-Loan Funding

By Andrew Trotter — February 14, 2006 1 min read
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Federal student-loan financing is expected to drop by $12.7 billion over the next five years, under a provision in the massive fiscal 2006 budget bill that President Bush signed on Feb. 8.

The Deficit Reduction Act of 2006, which the House approved on a 216-214 vote Feb. 2, would save the money by setting a standard interest rate for student loans at 6.8 percent, even if commercial rates are lower.

The measure, which the Senate approved 52-47 in December, also scales back a 1998 law denying federal financial aid to applicants who indicated they had been convicted of a drug offense.

That ban will no longer cover juvenile offenses, and offenders can regain eligibility by completing certain drug-treatment programs.

In an unexpected twist, a typographical error in the text of the bill passed by the House reportedly requires a technical correction, and speculation abounds that congressional Democrats may try to use the correction to force another vote on the act.

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