Banks Skim Millions in Fees From Student Aid Using Debit-Card-Linked Student IDs - CommonDreams.org
Over 9 million students are at risk for increased educational debt, due
to bank-affiliated campus debit cards that come with high fees,
insufficient consumer protections, and few options. Financial
institutions now have affinity partnerships with almost 900 campuses
nationwide, grafting bank products onto student IDs and other campus
cards to become the primary recipient of billions in federal financial
aid to distribute to students.
"Campus debit cards are wolves in sheep's clothing," observed
Rich Williams, U.S. PIRG Higher Education Advocate and report co-author.
"Students think they can access their dollars freely, but instead their
aid is being eaten up in fees."
The Campus Debit Card Trap, a new report released by the U.S. Public
Interest Research Group Education Fund, finds that banks and financial
firms now control or influence federal financial aid disbursement to
over 9 million students by linking checking accounts and prepaid debit
cards to student IDs. For decades, students would receive their aid by
check, without being charged any fees to access their student aid. Now,
students end up paying big fees on their student aid, including
per-swipe fees of $0.50, inactivity fees of $10 or more after 6 months,
overdraft fees of up to $38 and plenty more. Financial institutions
aggressively market or default students into their bank accounts to
maximize these fees.
A well-structured debit card program can provide
benefits to students, but many current programs provide little to no
choice, while high fees on grant and loan money leave students in deeper
debt.
"Every penny of financial aid money should go to educational expenses, not an education in high bank fees," said Williams.
Additional findings from the report include:
1) Millions of students are affected. Almost 900 of the 7,300
campuses participating in the federal financial aid program now have a
banking partnership. Higher One, the biggest financial firm, has
partnerships with 520 colleges that enroll 4.3 million students.
Currently 12.5%, or 1 in 8, of all federal aid recipients nationally
disburse their aid money into a Higher One OneAccount. Wells Fargo, the
biggest bank in the market, partners with 43 campuses that enroll over 2
million students.
Many of the country's largest colleges already have agreements.
Currently, 32 of the 50 largest public 4-year universities, 26 of the
largest 50 community colleges, and 6 of the largest 20 private
not-for-profit schools have debit or prepaid card contracts with a bank
or a financial firm, according to U.S. PIRG Education Fund research.
2) There is big money at stake. The biggest firm in the business,
Higher One, makes 80% of its revenues by siphoning fees from student aid
disbursement cards, totaling $142.5 million of its $176.3 million total
revenues in 2011, according to SEC filings. These fees include ATM and
other transaction fees, overdraft fees, and interchange fees imposed on
merchants who accept cards.
3) The most-impacted students are among the neediest. Students
most reliant on financial aid come from low and moderate income
backgrounds. Roughly 40% of freshmen are first-generation college
students, and 25% of all students are both first generation and low
income.
4) The service appears to be endorsed by the colleges. Huntington
Bank paid $25 million to co-brand and link their checking accounts with
Ohio State University student IDs. Other schools receive substantial
payouts, revenue sharing deals, and large reductions in administrative
costs.
"Many bank contracts require aid recipients to visit the provider's
website before they choose how to receive their aid - into an existing
account, on a check or on a disbursement card -- again implying an
endorsement," added Williams. These relationships create at least the
appearance of a conflict of interest, as schools may be tempted to
choose the arrangement that gives them the most money rather than the
arrangement that gives their students the best deal.
"The campus debit card marketplace is tilted so that students can't get a
fair deal," said Ed Mierzwinski, report co-author and U.S. PIRG
Consumer Program Director. "Campus administrations and policymakers have
the power to clean it up." Mierzwinski also urged the Consumer
Financial Protection Bureau to upgrade consumer protections on prepaid
cards.
The report includes recommendations to colleges and policy makers,
such as taking steps to ensure students have an unbiased choice of where
to bank and that there are no fees charged to access financial aid.
The report also lists tips for ways student consumers can avoid these high fees.
For a full copy of the report click here
CONTACT: US PIRG
Rich Williams, U.S. Public Interest Research Group (U.S. PIRG)
Cell: 602-228-0684
rwilliams@pirg.org
U.S. PIRG, the federation of state Public Interest Research Groups
(PIRGs), stands up to powerful special interests on behalf of the
American public, working to win concrete results for our health and our
well-being. With a strong network of researchers, advocates, organizers
and students in state capitols across the country, we take on the
special interests on issues, such as product safety,political
corruption, prescription drugs and voting rights,where these interests
stand in the way of reform and progress.
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